Are you ready to unleash your inner woman and discover a whole new world of self-expression?
Crossdressing can help you break free from gender norms and embrace your true self.
In this blog post, we’ll explore the top 10 benefits of crossdressing that can transform your life.
There’s a lot to be said for embracing your femininity and all the perks that come with it!
Top 10 Benefits of Crossdressing
1. Embracing both sides
Crossdressing lets you bring out the best of both genders and incorporate them into your own personality.
2. Motivation to look good
When you’re crossdressing, you naturally want to look great, right? That’s why it can inspire you to take better care of yourself, stay in shape, and prioritize self-care.
3. Better understanding of women
Crossdressing helps you see things from a woman’s perspective, which can make you more understanding and empathetic towards them.
4. Finding a community
When you embrace crossdressing, an added bonus is that you can tap into online or local communities. These communities can help you feel accepted and supported.
5. Fidelity and integrity
Now, I hope you’d never cheat on anyone, but there’s an interesting twist here. When YOU are “the other woman,” it can reinforce your commitment to being faithful.
6. Discovering your true self
Crossdressing is an amazing journey of self-discovery. It’s a chance to dig deep and uncover parts of yourself you may not have fully explored.
7. Unleashing your uniqueness
Normal is overrated, right? Crossdressing makes you stand out from the crowd and be an intriguing, fascinating individual.
8. Embracing differences
Crossdressing teaches you to accept and appreciate those who don’t fit into society’s norms. It broadens your perspective, promotes inclusivity, and shows you the beauty of diversity.
9. Stress relief
Crossdressing offers a fantastic and harmless way to relieve stress. It’s like stepping into a different role and enjoying a fulfilling activity that helps you unwind and take care of yourself.
10. Boosting creativity and courage
Crossdressing requires creativity, resourcefulness, and a dose of courage. It’s all about stepping out of your comfort zone, trying new things, and embracing the unexpected.
Final Thoughts
I hope you are now convinced that crossdressing can be a healthy and highly beneficial part of your life.
Do you agree with my list or have any other benefits of crossdressing to add? Please share in the comments below!
Love,
Lucille
I would add 2 benefits. I think that facing all of our fears around transition, helps us to deal with other fears we have in general. Also I would say that we find out first hand that all things are indeed possible, so it instills confidence in other areas of life. Thank you for posting this!
I feel so comfortable in a nighty; my whole body seems to tingle. I haven’t gotten a head cold since I wear a bra every day.
Cindy
Hi Lucille, I agree it makes you far more compassionate and caring for others and I’n not ashamed of it
Hi Lucille, Of the benefits that you listed the main one for me would be “It offers a healthy and non-destructive way to relieve stress”. In addition to that, dressing as a woman allows me to feel feminine and sexy in a safe way — I like to get dressed up and go shopping online or browse Flickr or YouTube or check my email. Wearing heels, garters, stockings, petticoats, a wig, etc. gets me in the mood for some girly fun.
I’ve seen a couple comments about the older we get, the stronger the feelings about our situation get. AMEN.
We (well me anyways) look at women differently. Not as something to chase but the shape. The walk. The way they carry themselves. And nothing makes disgusted like seeing a born girl wearing shabby pajamas with a sweat shirt and fuzzy slippers out to the store. Dang girl. If I was born with those attributes I’d dress them right! Take pride in yourselves.
Seems rather ironic we spend the time by ourselves to look as good as possible in private yet they barely run their fingers through their hair.
Hi Bren
I’m not sure when you posted your thoughts, but it’s 2017.
I’m also older 59 now. I have to agree with your point about how GG’s dress. Not all of them, but a majority of women. I find myself watching women now. (discretely). Admiring how some of these women dress, and feel sad for how the state of dress for women has declined in the last few decades. I remember going downtown, seeing women and men dressed so nicely.
Anyway hon just thought you should know your opinion is shared with some of us gurls.
Much love ❤
Tina D. H.
Dear Lucille,
Being TG has been a curse to me my whole life. While I love wearing skirts and blouses and all the other trappings of the female persona the bottom line is that I have always wished that I was born a girl and not a man. My only escape is to pretend when in the confines of my home when no one is around but the dog. Yes I do agree that it makes me a better person in general, because I have a better understanding of people in general, but it still breaks my heart that I can never be the woman that I know I am deep inside. Your comments 1, 3, 6, 8 and 10 definatly apply in my life. But fifty years is a long time to pretend and it makes you very good at hiding the truth, but it seems the more years go by the worse it hurts. I’m so happy that you do what you do and I really wish I was 30 years younger because I think that if I hadn’t been “born in the fifties” my life would have taken a whole different path.
Sincerely,
Dori
I agree with all of the above listed reasons and I kind of have an interesting story about number 4. A few months ago my mother caught me dressing “en femme” and threatened to castrate me on the spot. After this she told my uncle that I am transgender and he promptly told me that if I continued that he would kill me. Well yesterday he called me on the phone and apologized and said “No matter what kind of person you become I will still allways love you; and give an arm for you and use the other three to beat the person I had to cut it off for.”
Dear Lucille, Thankyou for all of your help and understanding to wards our community over the years. I’m sure that thinking of being transgender as a positive rather then a negative is absolutly the mindset to have. For myself, I can’t believe that I wasted most of my adult life trying to be the man that I could never be, in constant fear that today I would be outed,never experancing the joy and peace of mind that you have when you are just yourself and not trying to be someone else. I have come to realize that with the change in attitudes today, making it possible to support yourself, that being transgender is a definate bonus. I love my life now and have loved it since the day that I decided to live fulltime as the Transwoman that I am. The thing that I am starting to wonder about is weather I really need SRS to compleat my journey. I am starting to wonder if just HRT and legal changes (name,ect.) are good enough. Its not that I don’t dream of going “all the way”, Its just that I am happy with who I am now and I just wonder if SRS will bring any higher level of fulfilment. In any case, I do feel that being “Trans” is a bonus. When I imagine myself in Past lives, future lives, or even when I imagine getting a re-do in this life, I am always a transwoman, I just transition earlier in life. I wonder, Are there “Trans Souls”? I feel certain that I am one. Somehow, it seems good to have had experanced being a man, BUT being a woman is Far and away the better of the two. Femininely Yours…..Marilu Rose