01-07-2021, 05:34 PM
In response to my previous post, I received a couple of requests for information about where my granddaughter fits in with her family situation.
My granddaughter, now 11, is a beautiful, powerful, confident transitioning-to-adolescence girl -- much more so along all those dimensions that I was at her age. For her, having a petticoated and feminized father and younger brother is something that is simply the natural and proper way things should be. As I mentioned in my previous posting, she and her brother attend a very progressive feminist school, so what she experiences at school is the same as her experiences at home -- the boys are petticoated and feminized and it is taken as a given that the sissies are subservient to the female students.
In my day there were some girls who were called "tomboys" -- girls who were more like boys than girls and didn't like to wear dresses etc. My granddaughter is not like that. In some ways, she is quite feminine, with gorgeous long hair and a distinct preference for wearing pretty clothes and makeup. But she is also very athletic, and while her brother has never been permitted to engage in any organized sports at all, my granddaughter is involved in sports during every season -- playing soccer, tennis, volleyball, and competitive swimming. And she has even started to play hockey. As a result, my sissy grandson has spent many many hours over the past few years -- dressed in a skirt and blouse of course -- watching his older sister play one sport or another. In fact, it always makes me smile when I'm with the family as we all leave to watch my granddaughter play one or another sport -- with my grandson almost always toting one of his many dolls and with his own long girlish hair neatly brushed and beribboned while his sister is dressed for athletics. Â
The relationship between my granddaughter and grandson is as you might expect. They are very fond of each other, that is certainly true. But there is no question about which is the dominant sibling. My granddaughter basically bosses her brother around, without giving it a second thought. If she is doing homework in the evening, she might send him to the kitchen to get her a snack. Or if she has friends over she will often keep him busy doing little chores for the girls. And regarding regular chores themselves -- it's my grandson, of course, who i(along with his father) s given most of the household chores to do, including, or instance, straightening up his sister's room every day and making her bed every morning, while helping his father with the laundry.
In other words -- my granddaughter is a thoroughly modern girl, on track to grow into a beautiful strong woman.
My granddaughter, now 11, is a beautiful, powerful, confident transitioning-to-adolescence girl -- much more so along all those dimensions that I was at her age. For her, having a petticoated and feminized father and younger brother is something that is simply the natural and proper way things should be. As I mentioned in my previous posting, she and her brother attend a very progressive feminist school, so what she experiences at school is the same as her experiences at home -- the boys are petticoated and feminized and it is taken as a given that the sissies are subservient to the female students.
In my day there were some girls who were called "tomboys" -- girls who were more like boys than girls and didn't like to wear dresses etc. My granddaughter is not like that. In some ways, she is quite feminine, with gorgeous long hair and a distinct preference for wearing pretty clothes and makeup. But she is also very athletic, and while her brother has never been permitted to engage in any organized sports at all, my granddaughter is involved in sports during every season -- playing soccer, tennis, volleyball, and competitive swimming. And she has even started to play hockey. As a result, my sissy grandson has spent many many hours over the past few years -- dressed in a skirt and blouse of course -- watching his older sister play one sport or another. In fact, it always makes me smile when I'm with the family as we all leave to watch my granddaughter play one or another sport -- with my grandson almost always toting one of his many dolls and with his own long girlish hair neatly brushed and beribboned while his sister is dressed for athletics. Â
The relationship between my granddaughter and grandson is as you might expect. They are very fond of each other, that is certainly true. But there is no question about which is the dominant sibling. My granddaughter basically bosses her brother around, without giving it a second thought. If she is doing homework in the evening, she might send him to the kitchen to get her a snack. Or if she has friends over she will often keep him busy doing little chores for the girls. And regarding regular chores themselves -- it's my grandson, of course, who i(along with his father) s given most of the household chores to do, including, or instance, straightening up his sister's room every day and making her bed every morning, while helping his father with the laundry.
In other words -- my granddaughter is a thoroughly modern girl, on track to grow into a beautiful strong woman.