Your personality is partially influenced by the Y2K era your parents and/or older peers experienced, with a modern twist. Like, you may have an affinity for things like Britney Spears, Deftones, low rise jeans, and PS1 games. But you’re also glad the days of Creed, tramp stamps, dial-up, and terrible diets are history. Oh, and you’re happy that today’s era is more accepting of trans girls like you. Now if only society focused their fears on computer bugs again.
-BTW: It’s Britney’s birthday, b*tches! Happy 41st b-day, Britney!
-Back in the Y2K internet era, it was common for TG sites to use pics of the popular girls of that era. But while many of them faded to obscurity, few became legendary like Britney Spears. Some of my early memories involving pop idols was her being everywhere, from music to TV. She was hot, confident, and feminine, becoming an ideal girl for guys at the time while becoming an influence for female pop idols and celebrities for years to come. Although she doesn’t seem hyperfeminine, her vibes definitely woke up hidden feelings of wanting to become like her one day. That thought popped up in my mind one day as a kid, before I knew anything about being trans. The Y2K era may be gone, but it’s best to reminisce or recreate the best of those days while adapting and enjoying the changes we experience today, especially in a world that is more accepting of trans people.
-TL;DR: Y2K girl idols like Britney Spears woke up an early memory of someone being a trans girl, before knowing about trans people existing at a time period where LGBT+ topics were still not talked about in public.
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SHES SO LUCKY, SHES A STAR
This is a story about a girl named Lucky.
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Britney Spears in Tokyo, 1999
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