lwhjp

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 20 hours ago

Aww thank you, I love flowers! That's so kind <3

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 1 day ago

and it looks fabulous!

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Started last year at 40. I just jumped in at the deep end, buying and wearing only clothes marketed to women. I started with reasonably androgynous outfits and experimented with more femme stuff at home. To start with I had no idea what I was doing, but trying stuff out and copying other women has slowly gotten me to the point where at least I'm kind of happy with how I look.

Voice also, I watched a few videos to get an idea of the basics and just started doing it 24/7. I feel a bit bad for my coworkers who had to put up with a frankly terrible voice at first. Listening to recordings I think it sounds pretty good now.

And you probably pass a lot better than you think. I've certainly had times in the past where I was obviously read as a woman and didn't quite believe it. But now I can kind of see it myself, and nobody bats an eye when I use the women's bathroom or whatever.

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Hope the move goes OK! Stay safe <3

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 14 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Achievement Unlocked

Congrats? Comiserations? Let's get that thing lopped off, then ✂️

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 7 points 1 week ago

Just to make sure I cook my tofu in estrogen gel sauce.

(Don't actually do this please)

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 10 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

Update!

So I saw the psychiatrist. I have to write three pages on "why I want to be a girl", visit the clinic regularly to check I'm still presenting fem, and then in six months if I haven't changed my mind I get my permission slip. Oh, and I have to visit urology so they can look in my pants. Then I get to join the hospital wait list...

Pretty dumb, but as hoops to jump through go, it could be a lot worse.

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 14 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I've been having a pretty good day today, in fact. In town so dressed up pretty fancy. I had some down time in between getting some more holes made in my ears and the main reason for my trip, so I wandered the women's section at the department store.

Kind of a weird mix of "these stores are selling clothes I'm actually interested in, yay" excitement and "they're going to clock me any moment and kick me out" anxiety. Anyway I bought some rather expensive earrings which I'm looking forward to wearing. Oh, and when I went to the bathroom everyone ignored me. Ah, Japan :3

Off now to try to convince a psychiatrist that I'm Trans Enough™ to issue a recommendation for GAS. Wish me luck!

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 8 points 2 weeks ago

I wonder what water feels like, said the fish :3

 

Did you ever daydream that you're a wizard? Or maybe an astronaut, or a superhero, or a secret agent? Perhaps when you snapped back to reality, you were left with an internal grin and a feeling of "heh, that would have been cool. Oh, well." Let's assume in your fantasy you were an astronaut, because although they exist, you probably aren't one.

Possibly you've had that dream, or one along the same lines, several times. Maybe more, now you come to think of it, and they started... hmm, as long as you can remember? Nothing strange about that, all kids daydream about that kind of thing. Astronauts are rare, but they've been around since before you were born, and occasionally show up in films and on TV. But when they do, they're the object of ridicule: the other characters treat the astronaut as some kind of freak, and joke about them. I don't get it, you think: being an astronaut sounds pretty cool. But your friends and family don't bat an eye at these films. You take note: astronauts aren't cool, and you'd better not let on about that daydream.

Life goes on, you grow up, and most of the time when you drift away from whatever conversation you're not listening to, you're thinking about being up there in orbit, or walking on the moon. In your spacesuit. Yeah, that would be nice. Once or twice you may read about or see a documentary on actual astronauts, and while you pretend not to be interested, every word etches itself into your memory. Just some more trivia to add to your general knowledge, you tell yourself.

You'd never deliberately seek it out, but coming across information about astronauts is always a happy acccident, and you're glad to fill in any gaps in your knowledge. You know the training schedule pretty much by heart. In all the interviews, the message is the same: "I always knew I wanted to be an astronaut; I told my parents about it almost as soon as I could speak." Strangely, you feel almost jealous.

Perhaps you have some posters of the moon up in your room. Or maybe a discreet NASA logo on your shirt. Or played an astronaut in an RPG. It doesn't mean anything; you're just so secure in your identity as "not an astronaut" that you can do it without feeling ashamed. In fact, it's almost... exciting?

One day you come across a post by someone about your age, who gave up their career as an accountant to join the space program. Turns out they didn't know all along, and just figured it out one day. That sticks in your throat a bit: some folk have all the luck. Wait, what?

You can't shake the feeling that there's something missing from your life. Something big. It's not like you're depressed, or anything, but everything just seems so... gray. Pointless. You don't hate yourself, but you wouldn't be too bothered if it all just ended one day.

And then, at last, you figure it out.

 

I picked up a crowdfunding flyer for the movie at pride last weekend, so I had to check out the manga as well. It's four poignant short stories featuring trans girls at various stages of their transitions. The author is of course trans and the characters are spot on. The physical presentation of the book is very nice too, on thick paper with a pink, white and blue glitter on the cover.

Apparently the stories have been around on the net for a little while, so maybe there is an English translation out there somewhere?

Anyway, ¥1815 well spent. I recommend it if you read Japanese and can get hold of a copy.

 

I always did particularly like chocolate, but it just goes to show, doesn't it?

 

https://pride.tokyo/festival/

Anybody else here? Come find me and say hello.

 

It does hurt like hell. Yay, I guess? /humblebrag

 

I never used to get shaving cuts before E. Can't finish hair removal soon enough.

 

We all know and love (!) the leaderboard, but how about a different method?

One can solve a problem with a simple, naive method resulting in a short program and long runtime, or put in lots of explicit optimizations for more code and shorter runtime. (Or if you're really good, a short, fast program!)

I propose the line-second.

Take the number of lines in your program (eg, 42 lines) and the runtime (eg 0.096 seconds). Multiply these together to get a score of 4.032 line-seconds.

A smaller score is a shorter, faster program.

Similarly, (for a particular solver), a larger score is a "harder" problem.

 

Tried a little too hard to go with a theme on this one, and some of the clues are a bit contrived. Feel free to suggest alternatives!

 

Here's an old puzzle of mine to get started. One of the clues (at least!) is a little unfair, but the puzzle has been solved by others so it should be possible. Comments much appreciated, and more to come...

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