It’s amazing how much our names shape our identities. Some names feel like a perfect fit from the start, while others never quite resonate with us.
However, crossdressers and transgender women have the unique opportunity to choose their own feminine names.
Every great MTF name has a story behind it, and I’d love to hear YOURS.
How did you choose your feminine name?
Please tell us your story in the comments below, and if you can, share a photo too. It’s always lovely to put a face to a name!
Love,
Lucille
First I didn’t want any name anyone I knew had… Then Victoria sounded powerful and encouraging (“Victory” in Spanish ). Not just a name but also a statement.
VICTORY…
YOU REPRESENT THE NAME VERY WELL.
Love the look, very classy, strong, Victoreous!
Dr. T.J.
good name
i knew i was a women when i was 2years old
i love wears women clothes i order mine at sears
My original name that i chose was Stella as in “Stella the Fella”…
When I confessed my cross-dressing to my Sister in Law and she asked if I had I name, Ii was beaming with pride as I told her…
She shook her head and said that is far to manly and decided that I should be called Tampax, tammy for short which was much more girly and it has stuck in the 20+ years since 🙂
The same as I always knew I was a girl. I always knew I was a girl since I was young and always knew my real name was lisa. For some reason it always made me feel so much a women. Lisam
The same as I always knew I was a girl.I always new I was a girl since I was young and always knew my real name was lisa. For some reason it always made be feel so much aa women. Lisa.
I was named by a lady in Ireland who called me her teddibear and has been encouraging me in showing who I am. The name has morphed into ‘teddi’ and I have walked into the woman I feel.
Once while I was talking to my mother, she said that if she had a daughter, she would call her Ana Lorena. Since I don’t like compound names, I took off the Ana and became Lorena. In a certain way I’m the daughter my mother never had!
My first name was the counterpart to my former male name. My last name was because I worked at a hospital in New York, an AIDS nurse named Joanne became my role model as a woman. She was gracious, kind, wore the most perfect outfits, and pretty and I took it in honor of her. 🙂