How Mental Illness Becomes Identity: Tumblr, a Callout Post, Part 2

by Helena

Helena is a 21-year-old woman who identified first as nonbinary, and later as a transgender man, from 2013 through 2018. In 2016, she began medical transition by taking testosterone, and detransitioned two years later. During her teen years, Helena was an avid member of several Tumblr “communities”: trans/gender identity, eating disorders, and self-harm.

This piece is the second in a series of articles that analyze aspects of Tumblr Helena has observed as detrimental to the massive numbers of youth who call the site their virtual home. The focus of this article is the self-harm and pro-anorexia Tumblr worlds. Part 1 is here.

Helena can be found on Twitter @lacroicsz and is a member of the Pique Resilience Project, a group of four detransitioned/desisted women creating multimedia content about their experiences.


In Part 1, I described a few elements of Tumblr’s design that compromise the perception and communication of its users. Now we will take a look at some of the ways Tumblr’s unique atmosphere has given life to dangerous subcultures that have engulfed the lives of countless young people, mostly girls, in the last decade.

Introverted, angst-ridden, struggling adolescents across the globe are now faced with the risk of becoming inundated with content from self-harm blogs, pro-anorexia blogs, social-justice blogs that encourage self-diagnosis of mental illness, the use of mental illness as social currency, and gender identity ideology that is even more logically flawed and emotionally driven than in the mainstream. In this piece, I will discuss the self-harm community, and the pro eating-disorder community, both of which I have had personal experience belonging to. The community surrounding gender identity and dysphoria, the one with which I am most familiar, will be discussed in depth in Part 3.

Self-Harm Tumblr

The community of bloggers that filmed and shared photos, gifs, and written glorifications of self-harm behavior, often called “self-harm Tumblr” or “self-harm blogs,” was nearly eradicated when Tumblr prohibited the practice in 2012, but the long-term impact of such a dark and abnormal presence on the character of the site–and the teenagers who use(d) it–are still very evident. During their heyday, these blogs permeated Tumblr with graphic, slow motion, black-and-white gifs of razors slicing through flesh or dramatic quotes about suicide that were available simply by typing “self-harm” or “suicide” into the search bar.

Here’s how it worked: Imagine you’re a sad teenage girl circa 2012. Maybe you hate your body, or you’re conflicted about your sexuality, or you don’t fit in with your peers, or your home life is disordered. You’ve started using Tumblr a lot; you love that you can search anything you’re thinking of in the moment and instantly be gratified with awesome fan art of your favorite characters or updates on your favorite TV shows. But on this day, it’s not your teen idol or some BBC show that’s on your mind. Instead, it’s painful thoughts of self-hatred or even suicide. Maybe it’s the crushing feeling that your parents don’t love you. Maybe they’re too busy fighting to reassure you they probably do. Whatever it is, it’s not good, and like with everything else, you don’t have many places to turn to with this kind of thing. Your parents won’t understand, you don’t want to bother your best friend with your complaining for the umpteenth time that day, and listening to emo songs isn’t hittin’ like usual. So you do what you always do when you’re lonely and stimulated: you go on Tumblr. You type “depression” in the search bar, and a thousand posts like this come up:

Feels good. Feels validating. All that energy vibrating in your chest is matched by the black-and-white moving picture on the screen in front of you. You scroll down, and what do you know, there’s more. An infinite supply, always updating, because thousands of people just like you are posting more and more of these depression-aesthetic memes every day.

Now let’s say that at some point you do begin to self harm. Maybe you saw it in a music video, or your best friend started doing it, or you even saw it in a Tumblr gif, but through whatever means, the thought of venting your feelings into your own skin with a razor blade finds its way into your head. Or maybe you want to self harm, the desire is burning within you, but you’re scared. Not to worry, go back to Tumblr and type in “self harm” or “cutting.” You’ll get another infinite supply of addictive, dopamine machine guns. But this time, they’re bloody. A lot of them are matched with captions that strike you as relatable. The gore is mesmerizing, you can’t look away. There’s something about watching blood pour or ooze (whether from your own self harm or from one of these gifs) that feels analgesic. Before you know it, you’ve been lying there in your bed for hours, body limp except for your thumb stroking your smartphone’s screen as you scroll through these countless images.

If you’ve never self harmed before, this might make you wanna try. Click here to view some examples of Tumblr self-harm posts, but be warned–they are graphic. These images, and the act of self harm, will make you feel better for a moment by flooding your body with endorphins as it resonates with and then tries to cope with the  stinging pain, but the second another stressor, another hopeless thought comes your way, you have to go back again. It’s a deal with the devil, but there’s a reason so many kids have been seduced into shaking his hand.

No one is born with the desire to slice their flesh every time they feel upset, and previously, self-harming behavior was seen only in the most severe psychiatric cases. Ordinary teenage girls were not cutting themselves to the point of hospitalization a few generations ago, and the statistics reflect that. According to a study released in 2017 which evaluated ER visits for nonfatal injuries amongst adolescents from 2001 to 2015, rates of ER visits among youth “showed no statistically significant trend until 2008, increasing 5.7% annually thereafter and reaching 303.7 per 100 000 population in 2015. Age-adjusted trends for males overall and across age groups remained stable throughout 2001-2015. Overall age-adjusted rates for females demonstrated no statistically significant trend before 2009, yet increased 8.4% yearly from 2009 to 2015. After 2009, rates among females aged 10 to 14 years increased 18.8% per year—from 109.8 per 100, 000 in 2009 to 317.7 in 2015. Rates among females aged 15 to 19 years showed a 7.2% increase on average per year during 2008-2015.” (Mercado et. al.)

Note the statistic that the rates of female self-injury hospitalizations were stagnant until 2008, when they suddenly began increasing. Keep in mind that correlation does not equal causation, and cultural phenomena seldom have one clear explanation, but the fact that Tumblr was launched in 2007, and really picked up speed in 2008, should not go ignored in this discussion.

These self-harm blogs were not simply the online diaries of depressed teenagers, but a thriving community in which mental illness became identity. The images, and the captions that accompany them, often reinforced depressive ruminations, such as: No one cares about the self harmer, the self harmer will be depressed forever, and suicide and self harm are justifiable ways of coping with negative emotions. It is this way of thinking, this immersion in depressive thought, and the resentment and alienation that results from suffocating yourself in this maladaptive coping mechanism on a constant basis, that paved the way for later subgroups surrounding mental illness.

Pro-Anorexia Tumblr

“Pro-Ana” culture existed years before Tumblr, with the first pro-Ana websites emerging in the 1990s, when the already existing real-life pro-Ana movement moved online. The issue was brought to public attention in 2001 when Oprah Winfrey discussed it on her television show, and the world was shocked to learn that not only was anorexia a prevalent threat to young girls, but that many of these girls seemed overjoyed to be suffering from it.

Since the pro-Ana movement has been so widespread for so long, there’s actually quite a bit of literature and research on the topic of social contagion and eating-disorder “symptom pooling,” that is, when sufferers of the same mental illness band together and form an echo chamber that exacerbates the symptoms of the illness. This article from the Social Issues Research Centre gives a good introduction to the inner workings of popular pro-ED websites, and much more information is available online. Pro-Ana culture is known for its users’ belief that they are not sick, but simply being themselves and making a lifestyle choice to be more “disciplined” than people who do not choose to be anorexic. The name “Ana,” as opposed to using the terms “anorexia” or “eating disorder,” personifies the illness almost as a goddess to be worshipped.

Pro-Ana ideology is one contradiction after the next, with users glorifying the illness, how it has empowered them, how in-control and serene they feel when they starve, how much better their life is since finding their pro-Ana friends, and how they “trigger” each other to victory–yet, in the next breath, advising that “if you don’t have an ED, turn away now. You don’t want to be like me.” It is a highly addictive formula of community, purpose, coping mechanisms, and a simultaneous god and victim complex.

While all of this is pretty standard for pro-Ana communities, the Tumblr pro-Ana community is unique. It doesn’t (and never did) have the same degree of vitriol, and has always been heavier on victimization. While some pro-Ana communities see themselves as a quasi-political class who have the right to starve themselves because that’s what they believe is right for them, the Tumblr pro-Ana community treats anorexia more like the mental illness it is. This doesn’t come close to solving the problem, though, since Tumblr has some twisted attitudes towards mental illness in the first place. Whereas other pro-Ana communities focus on the sheer act of starvation as fulfillment through self-mastery, the Tumblr pro-Ana community sets its sights on the end goals of the perpetual diet. Many of them view it less as a lifestyle choice for the rest of their lives, but more as a necessary evil to achieve a standard of living that is tolerable to them. They focus on what they will be able to do when they are thin, how they will look, and how much better life will be. Then, they can stop starving (or so they believe)– almost as if their anorexia is a transition to a different existence, a new body, a new life (the parallels with the trans/gender dysphoric Tumblr communities are quite obvious here).

There is a heartbreaking air of hopefulness in the anorexic community on Tumblr. They are not pro-Ana because they chose it to feel superior, they are pro-Ana because they feel they must be. They cannot survive another day seeing their reflections, and the fat they see on their bodies (even when there is none left) is more than aesthetically displeasing to them: it contains the very cause of all of their suffering. Every moment of pain since birth has been because they are too fat, they eat too much, they’re too out of control–as if losing a dangerous amount of weight would resolve the mental patterns that drove them to take such self-destructive measures in the first place.

Tumblr pro-Ana is a much more hopeful, naive pro-Ana culture than others online. It was born of the original culture in the 1990s, but influenced by the unique attitude Tumblr has developed towards self-harming behavior and mental illness. Users will repeat again and again, “no one chooses to be anorexic…” “if I could stop being this way I would…” and to a certain extent, this is true. No one can “snap out” of an eating disorder, but the Tumblr culture goes beyond acknowledging the difficulty of recovery. Anorexia is viewed not as a lifestyle choice, like in other pro-Ana communities, but as an inescapable battle bestowed upon these girls that they must fight, else they will never be happy. They were born to be redeemable failures, out-of-control gluttons, and every miserable moment traces back to the pounds that could be lost. Their only hope at survival is to beat their bodies into submission to rid themselves of the visible, tangible, evidence of their curse: fat. This is how anorexia ceases to be defined as a mental illness, ceases to be defined as a “lifestyle”, and begins its definition as an identity. It transcends the material and becomes spiritual. Some people are just born to suffer like this, and they have to learn to love it.

To an outsider, it seems convoluted. Unbelievable, even. It is so far removed from sanity that it is difficult for me to explain in a way that will convey even a fraction of the many ideological layers that have developed within Tumblr’s pro-Ana community. But to them, at least to the extent they are able to convince themselves, it’s not that crazy. It makes sense: you’re a fat ugly failure and you have to do something about it! Extreme normalization of this truly dangerous behavior has always existed in pro-Ana circles, where anorexics even go so far as to see their path as superior to a non-anorexic existence. On other pro-Ana sites, this looks like intense competition, purposefully “triggering” others by being heartlessly demeaning and catty, and exchanging tips on how to hide the severity of their illness from parents, friends, and doctors (including within inpatient psychiatric facilities).

On Tumblr, the approach is similar but less aggressive. “Meanspo” (meaning something to the tune of “mean thinspo,” a type of post in which the writer purposefully writes triggering, mean, messages but warns the reader beforehand) is distinguished from other posts, because as opposed to other communities’ competitive, vicious nature, the Tumblr pro-Ana community is soft and friendly. They understand themselves as a large congregation of friends, helpless in the face of the symptoms they share, and the only way to help each other is to be very sweet and lose as much weight as possible, to stave off the demons.

And if you’re not in the mood to be called a fat pig, don’t worry, there’s “sweetspo”: thinspo that is kind and loving, something these girls might not usually experience. Or if they do, they don’t feel worthy of accepting this love from anybody but Ana. But don’t get it twisted, Ana is only nice in the context of getting you back on track to lose weight. No “you don’t deserve to do this to yourself,” no “you don’t have to torture your body to avoid suffering.” There is no option presented by the pro-Ana community that does not fit within the confines of the ideology; rather, comforting sentiments are used to strengthen the sense of emotional isolation and dependency members of the community feel.

Something that has always been intriguing about the pro-Ana movement is its propensity for viewing itself almost as a minority group of sorts. On the original forum platforms for pro-Ana discussion, this manifested in members believing anorexia is a “lifestyle”, and that their choices deserve to be respected. A “good Ana doesn’t die”, and doctors or loved ones who attempt to intervene are violating the autonomy of the anorexic. With this came a militancy designed to keep girls in line and constantly living and spreading the lifestyle, because an easygoing, accepting atmosphere would not achieve results. This is why the pro-Ana social contagion reached the levels it did in the 1990s and early 2000s; it was a fierce battleground where the narrative proclaimed that only the strong survive, and the strongest will place first. But really it was the resulting group belligerence that emerged from this narrative, rather than the any truth to the narrative itself, that carried so many young women and girls through years of self destruction.

Other ideological groups on Tumblr are also popularly associated with a similar militancy, but the core dysfunctions of these groups, including the Tumblr pro-Ana community, are unique in the way they create psychological dependence. Other pro-Ana communities would create this dependence by fostering a competitive atmosphere in which it would be unacceptable to fall behind. Members were expected to display their starting weight, current weight, progress, and goal weights on every post and comment in the form of a signature. There would be daily threads requesting Anas to post their food intake diaries, and it would be an absolute disgrace to answer that you had Granny Smith apple slices, chicken breast, and 2.5 tootsie rolls when other girls only drank cucumber icewater all day. If you couldn’t run with the Alphas, the whole pack left you behind, it was that simple. In contrast, emotional dependency is created on Tumblr more through curating the pro-Ana community as a (conditionally!) loving and accepting oasis where everyone can feel “included” as an Ana, even if they aren’t underweight and even binge sometimes! Isn’t that nice?

Like pathological groups elsewhere on Tumblr, everyone is valid and included. You don’t need to lose any weight to be anorexic, it’s the thought that counts.

Now, don’t get me wrong, you can have a pretty severe eating disorder and not be stick-thin and struggle to lose weight as quickly as you would like, but it wouldn’t clinically be anorexia. Combinations of symptoms from anorexia, bulimia, avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder, and binge eating disorder are considered an Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (or, EDNOS), and the concept used to be reasonably acceptable on other pro-Ana sites. Being hardcore anorexic (avoidant of food) or, to a lesser extent, bulimic (compensating for food not avoided by purging) was preferable (as long as it showed results), but the attitude that everyone must be included or else they won’t feel like they have a real eating disorder fundamentally contradicts the competitive nature of the ideology. On the non-Tumblr pro-Ana sites, girls who were overweight were encouraged to take up the lifestyle, but they were essentially second-class citizens compared to the veterans who had managed to maintain a low or underweight BMI, and they would not be considered sufficiently anorexic until they had proven their disorder. On Tumblr, young girls have managed to reconstruct mental disorder into a family just as complex, passionate, and loving as any real one can hope to be.

 

 

As of this writing, the self-harm and pro-ED cultures online have been forced to withstand quite a bit of censorship. Tumblr blogs that post gory content are deleted, and pro-Ana content is monitored, though to a lesser extent; explicit pro-Ana content can still be found. To evade Tumbler censorship, users employ special tags to find each other, like #not pro just using tags, or #anarexya. The culture has morphed to encompass “thinspo” that is less about skeletal, sickly bodies and more about conventionally attractive, slim Instagram models, and lots of memes (see the tag #proedmemes). Memes and aesthetically pleasing photos of pretty women (and in some cases, trans men) motivate this new generation of eating-disordered females, without showing off the glaring red flags of past generations, where the disordered behavior was purposefully exaggerated, rather than hidden away for preservation. When explicit visual content is impermissible, the disordered females must rely more heavily on emotionally based community interaction to motivate themselves to engage in painful, unnatural behavior like starving or purging; in way, it makes these communities even more inviting.  For more examples, see the below gallery of current pro-Ana content.


I hope everyone is now sufficiently disturbed by the goings-on in the online communities comprised of teenage girls, and the disorders they have manifested in our society. The risk of being devoured and digested by these poisonous digital chambers and their respective ideologies extends to your daughters, sisters, granddaughters, and cousins. They lie open in waiting for any unsuspecting, naive young girl whose emotional terrain is still unknown and unfamiliar. The similarities between the self-harm, eating-disorder, and gender-identity ideological communities cannot be overstated, and we would be fools to ignore the role of Tumblr.com in the shocking and drastic increases in adolescent female gender dysphoria that have presented over the last five or so years.

In Part 3, I hope to do some measure of justice to the labyrinthine ideological shenanigans of this virtual community. Something in our culture has created the perfect storm for the explosion of gender-identity ideology, and as a detective would prioritize searching a suspected criminal’s bedroom, Tumblr may as well be the first place we look for clues.

32 thoughts on “How Mental Illness Becomes Identity: Tumblr, a Callout Post, Part 2

  1. Who knew what they saw on the internet then? but my daughter was in that age group and tumblr year bracket. How could 3 children in her school year level transition in the same year?

  2. While this kind of tumblr content is dangerous in itself, I also wonder what was going on in the rest of these girls’ lives to make such a destructive and suffocating but endlessly “loving” virtual community seem so attractive. Again, I’m reminded of the growing scholarship about cult involvement and its particular appeal to intelligent, educated, altruistic but vulnerable young people who are struggling for a sense of belonging and a purpose in life. Thanks for these posts, they are very thought provoking.

    • I was involved with ed communities back in the early 2000s. Due to my eating disorder I was already isolated but I was not in any mood to get better. In my day to day life I felt like a freak, perpetually different, unable to fit in even with my closest friends unless I adopted some kind of persona. I imagine I felt the way about my forums the way people who devote themselves to a team sport or a hobby feel: understood and connected.

      • And now we are dealing with the after effects of all the affirmation.. it’s like a cancer. My 20 year old daughter does not fit in with anyone.. all the friends that encouraged her are not her friends any longer and she/he has no belonging in any friendship groups. Boys and girls.. it’s a real life terrible mess atm

  3. Helena- first I want to say that your writings and insights blow me away. You are so young and yet your insight into life is beyond what even many adults struggle with. I have to say this post was very hard to read for me. I knew things were screwed up on social media but I had no idea the depth of truly disturbing content. I agree with so many points bought up in this post. When I was in high school (many years ago) I only knew of one girl who self harmed. She was a deeply disturbed girl and it’s sad to say but the other girls steered clear of her. Now it’s an explosion. It’s almost normal. Same with naked selfies. Same with depression and anxiety. Every time I hear we need to bring awareness to mental health I think how naive that really is. These teenage girls ARE aware of mental health. They ARE seeking therapy now more than ever. So what’s changed? 1.social media that enables everyone to self diagnose and allows endless hours of ruminating and 2. Therapy a lot of times isn’t working because instead of empowering these suffering girls therapists are telling them they have chemical imbalances and then they are placed on drugs. It makes me so furious!!! We are taking away these young people’s ability for resilience and hope. The answer is always outside of themselves dependent on drugs or society. It’s heartbreaking to watch but I have seen so many teen girls get sucked into not just the trans trap but the mental illness trap as well. And it’s all a trap! Sometimes I feel like there is no one left with any common sense but then I read all of these young adults who made it through to the other side and found their own power and then I feel hope💜. Thank you

  4. Helena,

    Truly, you are a scholar. And your writing deserves a larger audience.
    Thank you for illuminating this dark vortex of the internet.
    Many parents feel as though they have lost their child to something dark, nebulous, and identity-engulfing on the internet.
    We have.
    Thank you for sharing your extensive knowledge of pro-self-harm Tumblr

  5. Thinking back about 2005 pro-ana communities, I now suspect that a few adult creeps (male or female) must be also monitoring this type of content. Probably out of fetishism even.
    Some of the girls’ reactions didn’t match with girl-girl bullying and interactions. Girls don’t set up sites, know about IT techniques and don’t have an extensive knowledge of internet practices: they learn in the group… Where helpers are suspiciously absent.

  6. Hi Helena,

    What do you think will happen to these girls if Tumblr is shut down? I have read that it’s not at all profitable.

  7. I have literally never ever seen a more accurate analysis of the Tumblr ED/self harm “community”, as someone swallowed up and spat out by them. And wouldn’t you know it, my heavy use of Tumblr in 2013-2015 also correlated with rapid onset gender dysphoria out of nowhere!! Makes you think.

  8. Manipulation of language, altering of personality and reality, empowering online strangers over personal decisions and alienation of family; these are the hallmarks of our “brave” children “living their truth” as they chase an illusion of a new shiny personality and life. It is the perfect storm of of social justice (allies who get to feel good about themselves while risking nothing) groupthink and sadly incredible, intelligent young women who have so much to offer out society and do not see their worth. The pain of watching my daughter and her 2 childhood best friends (who have both started taking the harmful drug testosterone) is indescribable. I, who know her best have been portrayed as a bigot by Superintendents and legislators. I have championed pride for my other gay child and supported Planned Parenthood for 30 years. Now I am expected to be silent while young women harm themselves. What is wrong with me that I question the rationale of 3 best friends “living this truth” that takes healthy tissue, degrades healthy organs, and their spirits all while intravenously hooked up to Tumblr and the rhetoric of complete strangers? Where is my compassion as the damaged organs, altered bodies and lost childhoods wake up at 45 and wonder where the gatekeepers were?

  9. Just yesterday on Twitter somebody re-tweeted a bunch of these meanspo things asking us to report them. I reported them. Got a reply from Twitter today. It’s the type where they say these are the tweets you reported and shows pictures of them and then just thanks you for helping make Twitter better. They did not break the Twitter rules. 🤦🏻‍♀️ What a world.

    I knew “pro Ana“ existed 😳 but I didn’t know it was like this. Very useful explication. Reminds me of what little I know about Mad Liberation. Trying to make a psychological problem into a social identity. And then the transgender movement/subculture is just another one of these. Good to know.

  10. “No one chooses to be anorexic…” “If I could stop being this way I would…”
    Let me just make a slight change…
    “No one chooses to be trans…” “If I could stop being trans I would…”
    In both cases, the person seems to be saying they were “born this way” and thus there’s literally no other option for them other than obeying their feelings.
    Your post reminded me of something. I once watched a video of a transgender man explaining how things were before they transitioned. They said that they used to have an eating disorder years ago, but “now they know why” they had one. That’s ridiculous! People don’t suffer from eating disorders because their bodies are “wrong”, but rather because they have troubled lives, resulting in poor mental health.

  11. i think this will be an unpopular opinion, but i believe that there is so little true community in our world, or perhaps that there is a definite and perceived lack of feeling that there is community; it’s in large part what drives young girls and women to these online echo chambers.

    tumblr, along with ‘gossip’ sites like PULL or LCF, are to my mind no less damaging and destructive to a woman’s psyche than the sites and spaces where boys are taught incel culture. after my own experiences on tumblr and female chan boards, it is simple to see why women begin to hate their bodies and sexualities. underneath the initial lovebombing, every behavior which is empathic or attempts to inspire fellow feeling, all this is viewed as repellent, old, and standing in the way of personal progress. mental health is itself viewed as aberrant and not desirable. a regular girl who does not label herself in some way with regard to her mind, her sexuality or her body is viewed negatively. identity is shaped not by any positive quality, but by illness and perceived defects. in fact, you’re actively encouraged to sift through a number of ailments as though looking through your closet. when you settle on the one which projects the qualities you think are most suitable, you can then ‘identify yourself’ which carries the same weight as coming out did, and is expected to be treated with the same importance by any and all onlookers.

    tumblr and sites like it are breeding grounds for factitious disorder, or what used to be called munchausen’s. i believe there’s a link between all these things: self-harm, anorexia, transgenderism, inceldom. you could just unplug the internet, but these ideas are almost memetic at this point and are spread simply via contact with other people. it’s frightening, an idea spread virally that has the effect of causing a girl to have ‘top surgery’ and to ruin her body and mind with chemicals. like a bad horror movie.

    we see what happens to those who break ranks, either through desistance or plain old speaking up. i’m scared for myself and my friends and don’t know where to look for hope. the church? no way, but at least they seem to have some sense of belonging that’s rooted in who and what you can be, and by helping others instead of this creepy navel gazing. i do not know how to change this.

    • I will follow up with an even more unpopular opinion. For decades, we have been chipping away at two institutions that have historically provided, belonging and community: the church and the family. I do college campus, ministry, and what we are offering to students provides the meaning, value, identity, and purpose that every human being longs for. These students know that they are accepted and loved by their Creator, that their identity is found in Christ, and that their lives here on earth are filled with rich meaning and purpose. They know they are loved unconditionally and they are part of a spiritual family. Some of them have even gradually and voluntarily given up social media. The need for it lessens as their affections and attentions are focused upward and outward. So many people want to deny Christianity a place at the table, but I would posit that these folks have never encountered true Christianity.

  12. Vivian- I don’t think what you have said is an unpopular opinion at all. I think you have made very important observations. I don’t know how to change these harmful things either. Sometimes I feel no hope. But we have to keep speaking . Even if it feels like no one hears. At least we speak our truth. I really feel so sad for this generation of young people. My best advice to you would be to get off social media go do in the real world. Talk to real women face to face. Listen to the stories of your mothers, aunts, grandmothers. Speak your mind and have firm boundaries for how you will let others treat you. You sound like an intelligent and kind person. I hope you find a way to find peace and love in this world.

    • My 20y/o FTM has been taking HRT since 18 and is at her worst anxiety. All her friends who encouraged her at school have now left her and moved on..none of them include her. She/he has no friendship groups as girls left her and she really had not too much boy groups.. its a fucken mess atm and she/ he is isolated and feeling very alone.

  13. This scenario very closely reflects what happened with my niece. Very intellectually gifted but introverted and almost ASD… very involved with online communities. Anorexic. Self-harm. Then trans. Social contagion aspect worries me.

  14. “Kids” don’t self-harm. Girls do.

    Also, I see the gif “I hurt to feel good” in your piece in reference to the self-harm on Tumblr. I am reminded of how the self-harm cults align with the “beauty” and “sex pozzie” lies that condition girls to dissociate or even reverse their actual feelings of bodily pain and pleasure. Female socialization is really acceptance and integration of cognitive dissonance, with the end point being that the average cerca-21st century above-poverty-class teenage girl somehow has tricked herself into believing that starving, cutting, ” sex work” aspirations, being bikini waxed, and getting violently penetrated actually “feels good” now, while a gourmet meal, a hug, a hike in nature, a creative pursuit, and a masturbatory orgasm is not only useless or laughable, but also counterproductive to her future young womanhood.

    I remember hearing girls insist that rice cakes were better than French fries as well as the catch phrase “beauty is suffering”. That was almost two decades ago and it was bad enough–I couldn’t imagine how bad it was going to get.

    In the current environment, the vast increase in teenage trans females is only a symptom of a problem that affects even the most femininity-complying, seemingly “normal” and “perky” cheerleader. While effeminate gay males are adored in liberal high schools, girls who don’t conform to the new porn-soaked, happily masochistic normative femaleness–whether butchy, brainy, boy-ambivalent, or just with healthy boundaries and interests not centered around pop culture and grooming–are sexually harassed as “just needing some ‘dicc'” and socially ostracized. The lack of learning social skills at this level can cripple those of us, not in college (because it’s a wider group of people), but once we try to start a career. Because who do you think is interviewing for these positions?

    Meanwhile, wagging tongues will continue to blame the lack of women in high ranking positions/surplus of those quitting or on the “Mommy Track” despite the larger percentage of female grads in that field as indicative of how “laydeez not meant to jobz”.

    Girls in high school know that their male classmates aren’t going to stop thinking of them as either prospective male incontinence toilets OR ugly man-hating dykes, either of which ruin the camaraderie and brotherhood of their chosen career. Why, they’d be stealing food from the mouths of their children, and should use their own mouths to do something else, har har!!!

    Most girls don’t even get to be children anymore in this era, and even if they have great parents (like mine!) who didn’t rob me of letting me be myself during what was the happiest years of my life, adolescence (as well as the porn-soaked society/media, entitled male classmates, horizontal-hostility-dealing female classmates, and (internalized) misogynistic teachers) will soon make them hurt even if they can’t exactly explain where it hurts. This is because the pain is systemic, normalized, and even reconceptualized as pleasure everywhere they look. And if a girl dares to say “I don’t like it”, or the shorthand, “I’m not a girl”, she’s told how ridiculous she is. And then all three prototypes are pitted against one another: Libfem vs Radfem vs Transfemale.

    Meanwhile, if males hadn’t replaced universal financial terrorism with universal sadosexual terrorism in the past thirty years (and if the majority of women didn’t object, while many would coo over how much they were empowerfulized being a “sub”, and loved being sexxxy and weren’t icky prudes or anti-beadyessem dykes or anti-“kink” or anti-sex “work”), the three types–and all females–would have gained in income, safety, status, respect, and rights, rather than the opposite.

    • There is a frightening amount of truth in what you posted. Scarier still, is if the current environment in the US were to get just a little more worse, then it will be seen by quite a few, that thanks to the brigade and porn…that women are only good for the aspects you listed. Which is what Atwood has alluded to, in her books.

    • Yes, there is a lot of insight here. I think girls aren’t allowed to say that they don’t like the culture’s current “sex positive“ messages and lifestyle and the only alternative they’re given is to say they’re not a girl. I highly recommend Louise Perry’s book “the case against the sexual revolution.” It is one of the most groundbreaking books I have ever read.

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