I’ve Been Called Both and They Aren’t the Same
For most of my adult life, I thought I was a crossdresser.
That was the word available to me. It came with a script: secrecy, timing, discretion. You dressed when you could, not when you wanted. You folded everything back into drawers before anyone came home. You erased the evidence. You returned to being a man.
And for a long time, that fit. When I dressed, it was intentional. Deliberate. Almost ceremonial. I chose the clothes carefully. I became attentive to posture, movement, the sound of heels on a floor. But when the moment ended, so did the version of me who wore them. I didn’t want to be feminine all the time. I wanted to visit it.
Then one day, much later, I heard the word femboy. At first, I dismissed it. Too young. Too online. Too unserious. But the more I watched, the more unsettled I became, not because it felt wrong, but because it felt familiar in a way I hadn’t expected.
Femboys weren’t sneaking. They weren’t switching. They weren’t compartmentalizing. They were just… being. Feminine in daylight. Feminine without apology. Feminine without an exit strategy.
That difference matters more than people think. As a crossdresser, femininity was something I put on. As a femboy, femininity is something you live with. One is episodic. The other is ambient. One has a beginning and an end. The other just… continues.
I realized that what separated us wasn’t clothing—it was relationship. I always returned to masculinity like a home base. No matter how far I wandered, I knew where I was going back to. Femboys, by contrast, didn’t seem interested in returning. Masculinity wasn’t forbidden, it just wasn’t necessary.
There was a confidence in that I found both enviable and alien. I didn’t grow up with language for public softness. My femininity developed in private, under pressure, shaped by risk. Femboys grew up in a different climate. Online, at least, they had mirrors that reflected something back without shame. They didn’t have to choose between hiding and confessing. They could simply post.
That freedom creates a different posture in the world. I’ve noticed that crossdressers often want to pass. Femboys often want to play. Crossdressers study women. Femboys remix femininity. Crossdressers ask, “Do I look convincing?” Femboys ask, “Do I look cute?”
Neither question is better. They’re just not the same. And yet—there’s overlap.
I’ve seen young men who call themselves femboys but approach femininity with the same ritual seriousness I recognize. I’ve seen older crossdressers who gradually stop returning to masculinity as faithfully as they once did. The borders blur with time.
I know this because mine did. There were days I didn’t feel like “switching back.” Days when I resented how conditional my femininity was. Days when I wondered what it would feel like not to schedule it, to let it leak into the rest of my life.
That’s when I understood something important: Crossdresser and femboy aren’t stages on a ladder. They’re different strategies for surviving the same desire. One learned to hide. One learned to display. One adapted to scarcity. One adapted to abundance.
I don’t begrudge either.
If someone calls me a crossdresser, I understand what they mean. If someone calls me a femboy, I understand why they might think so. But the word I choose tells you how I relate to myself, not how I dress.
Labels don’t exist to trap us. They exist to explain us—briefly, imperfectly, and only when asked.
And if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this: The clothes never mattered as much as the permission.
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| Wearing Ann Taylor |
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| Kevin Kline (left) femulating in the 1999 film Wild Wild West. |







Very interesting post, Stana. Just wondering where "femulator" fits into the spectrum you described.
ReplyDeleteSo True - "As a femboy, femininity is something you live with. One is episodic. The other is ambient."
ReplyDeleteNice post Stana. We have lived some parallels but I am a content crossdresser. I think your definitions are spot on.
ReplyDeleteFor those who call themselves femboys, crossdresser is an old fashioned term. Society has changed and they live differently because of it
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Stana, but one line you wrote resonated with me the most: Crossdressers ask, “Do I look convincing?” Femboys ask, “Do I look cute?” When I used to focus on looking convincing, I was always let down which negatively affected my happiness and didn't allow for a sense of contentment. I have never possessed the physical characteristics to be absolutely convincing, so I learned not to focus there. Instead, I learned to focus on being cute (or at least feminine), which allowed me to be happy and content in my feminine skin. And amazingly, being happy and content in my feminine skin, had a positive impact on how the rest of world saw me. Despite the male characteristics people began to see and acknowledge me for my female persona. I think that by focusing on being cute, we will automatically become more convincing.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, if one projects as a femboy, openly gay or lesbian or openly cross dresses, that person risks having all of societies negativity heaped upon him or her. How do you navigate socially or economically unless you're insulated somehow from society? There is a difference between being fully accepted and tolerated.
ReplyDeleteI have no problems integrating into society in spite of presenting like a woman the vast majority of the time as I wear dresses most of the time. That includes church, where I am part of a men's fellowship.
DeleteJohn
Often, as a completely closeted crossdresser, I've pondered this question and I'll tell you a short anecdote that happened to me almost fifty years ago when I was 22.
ReplyDeleteI was at the apartment of a female friend and her sister. We were friends. There was no romance between myself and either of them. The older sister and I were recent college graduates and her younger sister was still in school. It was Halloween and the older sister who was my age asked me to come along with them to a party. To my surprise she added, "we'll dress you up as a girl."
My initial paranoia and fear was that somehow the women had figured out my secret, but how?
I said, "no," but they continued to appeal to me.
The older sister who'd begun working in a law office that fall said, "I wear dresses to work everyday. You can wear one of my nice dresses and pantyhose too. We'll get you all dolled up." She did not spare details which drove me crazy.
By then my heart was pounding and I excused myself to the bathroom where for a couple of minutes I pondered, why the hell don't I say yes? I decided it was too risky and going as a girl would expose my inner secret to them. I said, "no."
At the party I met a girl whom afterwards I invited out. She said, "yes." It was not the romance of my life, but she was a nice person and we went out a few times.
Often, I've pondered what I would have felt had I allowed the sisters to dress me up as a girl and how I might have reacted to an attractive girl at the party?
Fifty years ago, I felt relieved that I didn't attend it in drag and today I'm convinced that had I done it and met that girl I'd have never had the courage to ask her out.
I am not saying what I did was right or wrong, but I think if I had the chance or was compelled to dress en femme for a solid week, I'd yearn to go back to my regular self sooner than later. I'm not telling anyone how to live their lives, I'm telling you my perspecive.
I live in a blended world. As a straight male, I have NAILS. Long acrylic-gel colored fingernails and colored toes. I wear high heels and almost all my clothes are women's. When I cross dress, wig - boobs - (more) makeup, I don't go completely back to male.
ReplyDeleteSo neither of those definitions fit. I'm just ME!
such an thought provoking piece. For years I expressed feminine grace in ways other than clothes, dress, and makeup. After a shaming experience with dress and an early girlfriend, I never stopped feeling feminine just not with the art of makeup n clothing. I took it up serious much later--I am not so worried about labels, but never thought crossdresser was accurate. When i see those self indentifying as femboy, I think..hmm maybe that is me?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.tiktok.com/@pathy_oliveeira/video/7263226674177756422
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