

This obviously extended to when I started writing my own - I kept things PG, focusing on all the other aspects of people's transformations.Īnyhow, as the years went on I gained more self-awareness and - more importantly - self-acceptance. I'm also somewhere on the ace spectrum, which meant that any explicit images or sex-based captions simply didn't resonate with me at all. I felt unwarranted guilt and shame when I looked at them, but it didn't stop me from coming back time after time. I didn't know why these captions were interesting to me - only that they were. Back then, I knew little to nothing of trans people - I lacked the language or awareness to even begin to understand who I was. I started this blog 13 years ago, after other people's TG captions captured my imagination. hi! I'm Emily, a transwoman living in the UK. The long answer is the remainder of this post, and should probably start with a bit of an introduction. So, the obvious question: why am I stopping? The short answer is that captioning no longer holds any interest for me. It will remain here, to be stumbled upon and enjoyed by anyone who finds it useful.


I really don't think it will.īefore I go any further, please rest assured that I have no intention of shutting the blog down. And so here I am, writing this so you're not all left wondering if a new caption might miraculously land one day. But this time feels different - it feels final. It's certainly true that I've come and gone over the years as my interest has waxed and waned. Of course, you might read that and think "never say never". I know this isn't what any of you will want to hear, but I believe that my time as a caption author has come to an end.
