Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Saw this come across my Instagram feed, and I was shocked - shocked!
https://www.vogue.com/article/heidi-klu ... sformation
You need only reference the internet to see where this all has gone wrong:
https://petkeen.com/male-vs-female-peacocks/
I'm being silly of course. But I dare say, it must be nice to wear whatever the heck you want, and not have anyone start psychoanalyzing you.
https://www.vogue.com/article/heidi-klu ... sformation
You need only reference the internet to see where this all has gone wrong:
https://petkeen.com/male-vs-female-peacocks/
I'm being silly of course. But I dare say, it must be nice to wear whatever the heck you want, and not have anyone start psychoanalyzing you.
Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
I would bet that there are those who would subject Heidi Klum and other celebs to plenty of psychoanalysis for their deeds and actions. The trick is to get to the point where you just don't give a damn.
“And the time came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.”
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Female dresses as male? Not news -- even on a slow news day. BORING.
Retrocomputing -- It's not just a job, it's an adventure!
Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Yes - I'm trying to get to that point myself, close to it to some degree, but millions and millions of dollars would help speed up the process, I think

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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Do lady peacocks actually exist?
Since there are baby ones, I suppose they must or are they parthenogenetic and done away with all the messy mating thing?
If I was into dressing like a bird, I'd have a problem because I cannot recall ever having seen one, are they ugly and only of interest to real Peacocks to deal with the daily drudge while he performs vital functions such as tail spreading and being very noisy at the same time.
End of silly, but we never really hear much chat about peahens so, it is actually logical for anyone to wish emulate the Peacock.
Should there be a lesson for humanity here somewhere?
Steve.
Since there are baby ones, I suppose they must or are they parthenogenetic and done away with all the messy mating thing?
If I was into dressing like a bird, I'd have a problem because I cannot recall ever having seen one, are they ugly and only of interest to real Peacocks to deal with the daily drudge while he performs vital functions such as tail spreading and being very noisy at the same time.
End of silly, but we never really hear much chat about peahens so, it is actually logical for anyone to wish emulate the Peacock.
Should there be a lesson for humanity here somewhere?
Steve.
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
They are called pea-hens and they have very drab plumage.
There is no such thing as a normal person, only someone you don't know very well yet.
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
We had some living in the garden for a while. Funny birds, the cats won't go near them. The most amusing thing was that they sleep in trees at night, like chickens. So at night you could look up as see a silhouette of a pea-cock in the branches of a tree.
Side note: unlike mammals where sexual attributes are controlled by hormones, in birds each cell knows its sex and acts accordingly. Ergo trans-birds can't happen and HRT is also not possible. There are very rare examples of chimeras, where a male & female embryo merged and you get a half/half bird, but I imagine that most such combinations are non-viable (in humans chimeras are probably more common, it's not something we can easily test for).
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
It is not all that uncommon for a domestic hen to "change its sex", it develops male characteristics and behaviour, but is not fertile. A friend in Milton Keynes had it happen to one of her hens -- which caused a bit of trouble because it was against one of the bye-laws to keep cockerels in that area. It roosted in her hedge, which borders a public footpath, then stuck out its neck from the foliage and crowed loudly into the face of an unsuspecting passer-by. I don't know the final outcome, but I do know the police were involved.rode_kater wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 8:46 am [...]
Side note: unlike mammals where sexual attributes are controlled by hormones, in birds each cell knows its sex and acts accordingly. Ergo trans-birds can't happen and HRT is also not possible. There are very rare examples of chimeras, where a male & female embryo merged and you get a half/half bird, but I imagine that most such combinations are non-viable (in humans chimeras are probably more common, it's not something we can easily test for).
There is no such thing as a normal person, only someone you don't know very well yet.
Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Yes, it is for a fact, much easier said than done. And in fact you hear all the time that those who seem to have reached, I don't care nirvana, actually are put off by some of the feed back they get.
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
That's amazing. The estimated rates are as many as 1 in a 100. Nature is bizarre.pelmut wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 12:49 pm It is not all that uncommon for a domestic hen to "change its sex", it develops male characteristics and behaviour, but is not fertile. A friend in Milton Keynes had it happen to one of her hens -- which caused a bit of trouble because it was against one of the bye-laws to keep cockerels in that area.
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Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
Not worth dressing-up as then, are they Pelmut?
Steve
Re: Female dresses up as male - not one comment about her identity
I stumbled upon a different Instagram post (didn't bookmark it) on this costume, and I was mildly impressed some people noted the male/female bird plumage thing. I did not expect as much. But that's about as far as it went. I suspect if the husband had dressed up as, say, a pink flamingo, all sorts of epithets and snarky comments would have been spoken. But, I am being a pessimist here, and shouldn't be.