Anonymous wrote:Doubtful see post above--.3% of population...Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
None at all.
Answers on this thread will be biased, OP, since people who know transgendered people will jump at the change to show how worldly and accepting they are; and people who don't know any, which is to say the majority, will not bother to answer.
I bet you $1,000 you do know someone who is transgendered. You just don't realize it because he or she passes without question, and because his/her gender is totally irrelevant to your relationship.
Anonymous wrote:This question is for non-trans people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doubtful see post above--.3% of population...Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
None at all.
Answers on this thread will be biased, OP, since people who know transgendered people will jump at the change to show how worldly and accepting they are; and people who don't know any, which is to say the majority, will not bother to answer.
I bet you $1,000 you do know someone who is transgendered. You just don't realize it because he or she passes without question, and because his/her gender is totally irrelevant to your relationship.
If you live in an urban area and have a progressive group of friends, you are likely to have more trans acquiantances than others. I have one trans acquaintance who is an ex of a friend from high school and several trans friends/acquaintances from college. I totally acknowledge this is largely because I went to college at a very liberal SLAC (which drew lgbtq persons because there was a very accepting attitude) and I have lived in Portland and Berkeley.
All contact with minority groups depends on your peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Three friends (close enough that we've been to each other's houses for dinner but not besties), two acquaintances/distant family. I'm a pretty average soccer mom. Oh wait--just thought of another--a former coworker. It's really not that uncommon.