Shaved my face so I can at least try and present as more NB. Also I think this is the first time I've posted a selfie to this blog? And of course I'm shirtless, rip me
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from France

seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland
seen from Switzerland
Shaved my face so I can at least try and present as more NB. Also I think this is the first time I've posted a selfie to this blog? And of course I'm shirtless, rip me
“god I hope the internet thinks I’m cute”
Rested my yellow! Significantly less green and more vibrant.
So I might have shaved last night
I'm a drag queen sometimes too.
I slept in braids
I dyed my hair bubblegum colors. Can I be a nonbinary Princette gumball/bubblegum though? Princette bubbleball?
How to dress steampunk I guess
EDIT: hey I appreciate the love but as the notes grow on this post I am seeing more and more transphobic shit on here. For those posting/tagging this with things like “he looks so good” and “I love men in dresses”; I am not a man. I’m nonbinary and I use they pronouns.
i’m glad you guys like my look, but I stressed about this for months because it was my first formal event where I was able to present as my gender. Nonbinary isn’t just dfab people in suits. As a very “masculine looking” dmab person I prefer to wear dresses and skirts to present as nonbinary. I’m not a man in a dress. Saying “I love men in dresses” or “why does he have better legs than me” is not supportive of me. It’s transphobic. Cis women do not have a copyright on good legs.
Please do not use my post where I actually felt good about myself to enforce your binary. I have spent too long panicking over what to wear to work, and to school, and to family dinners, and to formal events, and to weddings to be labeled as a “man in a dress”