Tomboys

I know I have grown balls since starting my export business, does that count as a tomboy :D
 
I love I love I love
My Calender Girl
Each and every day of the year

january
You start the year off fine
February
You're my little valentine
March
I'll march you down the aisle
April
You're the easter bunny when you smile.
 
little miss Oughts...

I think you've smoked yourself a little sideways there deary. Maybe I need to take that off your hands for awhile. ;)
 
Re: little miss Oughts...

JaymesBlond007 said:
I think you've smoked yourself a little sideways there deary. Maybe I need to take that off your hands for awhile. ;)
Rolling on the floor buddy ;) I'll pm you the roach now :D
 
lavender said:
I have been told I'm a tomboy for the following reasons:

I like football.
I can be friends with the guys.
I think more abstractly.

Well, take me now and get me a sex change operation. I'm a manly gal.

Hey, you are a tomboy!
 
i play football (soccer) most sunday's against boys im the only girl who plays infact ... does that make me a tom boy ? :)


although i think the whole notion of a tomboy is kind of dated and sexest im not bothered if someone thinks im a bit of a tom boy
 
Never made sense to me either.

& Nancy Boy is the opposite? Why not Tom Girl or Nancy Girl, get a standard & stick to it:mad:


I best go to sleep befor I say something silly.

Like Lavender, as long as your boobs are balder than mine, I think you're fine as is.;) :D
 
lavender said:
I have been told I'm a tomboy for the following reasons:

I like football.
I can be friends with the guys.
I think more abstractly.

Well, take me now and get me a sex change operation. I'm a manly gal.

Nothing wrong with being masculine if you're female. I think dykes call it butch; I don't know if guys call it anything, but lots of us like it...

I don't know if I've ever heard an adult woman called a tomboy; usually it's for girls. And I always though it was a positive description...

spectral
 
Me too

spectral said:
I don't know if I've ever heard an adult woman called a tomboy; usually it's for girls. And I always though it was a positive description...
It seems like something I remember my mother saying, "oh, so-and-so is such a tomboy." And invariably, I always thought whoever the so-and-so was was kinda hot.
 
when i was younger i was always called a tomboy. i grew up with my brother and cousin. if i wanted a playmate i had to play "boy" games. in elementary school i was on the kickball team when most girls were cheerleaders.
i'm much more femme now though.
 
it didn't affect my identity that much, in my opinion. i never saw myself as less of a girl because of it. my brother and cousin also always made me be the "bad guy" when we played games. i don't see myself as a "bad" person because of it.
 
I've been called a tomboy more times than I can count. Probably for the same reason Lavy has. That, and I don't dress 'feminine' unless I have to.

I think my horses might bust a gut laughing if I showed up in the pasture wearing a skirt and makeup. :rolleyes:
 
I would not be offended if someone called me a tomboy because I am one. I can do the whole girly thing but that is not where I am comfortable.

I grew up with all boys so "boy" games were normal for me. My dad taught me to shoot a gun when I was 3 and its something I still enjoy with him today at 34, he taught my son when he was 3 also. I threw shot and discus in highschool as well as played softball and basketball rather than be a cheerleader. I like 4 wheel drive trucks and going out playing in the mud in them, I hate to shop, and don't like diamonds or roses.

But I get up each morning and fix my hair and make up before heading out to work on a construction site.

I am not un feminine I am just me. A country girl.

Dawn
 
I just love a manly kind of woman! As long as she shaves, I hate whisker burn.
 
I, also, grew up in a neighborhood of boys. I have two older brothers and was a blatant tomboy growing up. I am a good athlete and was usually chosen for baseball before most of the boys. It made me very angry that I was not allowed to play baseball (little league) just because of my gender. I don't consider myself a tomboy now, but I have kept some of the characteristics.

My ex-husband and everyone I have since dated have loved the fact that I understand and love sports. I adore going to Seattle Mariner's games (my favorite sport) and hold my own with men on discussions of that as well as football and basketball (I am not really a basketball fan, however). I have always been competitive to a point, and I believe that has something to do with my growing up a tomboy.

My daughter was considered a tomboy growing up as well (she excelled at sports) yet, at the same time, she was one of the most graceful people I know due to her 8 years of ballet lessons. She and her husband are both resident physicians and he loves the fact that she will go hiking, skiing, kyaking, rock climbing, etc. with her.

I see growing up tomboy helps a girl grow into a balanced woman who just may understand men a bit better than the rest. I am proud of growing up that way............;)
 
For the women: What would you think if someone told you that you were a tomboy?


I have always been called a tomboy since I was a little girl. I was the girl who played cowboys & indians with the boys. I would play football and other " boy" activites.

I am older now & while I don't get called " tomboy" any more I think @ heart I am still one.:) ... and if some one were to call me " tomboy" I would just have to smile. :)
 
I like most Tomboys - I feel more comfortable with them than women who feel that in order to be feminine they have to play the helpless and ignorant female.

I don't care much for organized team sports so I don't care if a woman understands/enjoys football/baseball. But for the same reason many guys like women who understand/enjoy sports, I like most Tomboys; we usually have more common ground which we chare and enjoy.

I do not like women who are overly masculine such as bodybuilders, or who for some reason feel they need to act/talk cruder than a sailor in Singapore. I am not threatened by them, I just don't find such masculine traits attractive.
 
lavender said:
I have been told I'm a tomboy for the following reasons:

I like football.
I can be friends with the guys.
I think more abstractly.

Well, take me now and get me a sex change operation. I'm a manly gal.

I'll just take you know... screw the sex change operation.


Hmmmm does that then make me a Tomgirl?
 
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