Transracial and Cross-Cultural TG

Transgender fiction involving a change in ethnicity or culture. As of now, I am unsure if I can post stories in their entirety on this blog, so I will simply link to them. Rules of the stories in this site are: 1. Must involve True Transformation (complete physical transformation between sexes, that is, no crossdressing or shemale stories). 2. Must involve a change in race or culture to the same person. For information about categories (I'm using them as tags) see the very first post.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Not a Stereotype

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I wrote this caption in a public library, which was crowded as fuck. Yet I still had the balls the cycle through my giant collection of Ulzz...
2 comments:
Thursday, August 15, 2013

Spring of Ubusha 3

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Apparently, this was in my computer somewhere. I don't have much recollection of making it, but hey, maybe one of my other personalities...
Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Ubusha 2

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A sequel to Spring of Ubusha, since that one seemed popular. Also, for any well-seasoned enthusiast of TG fiction (stories, captions, art,...
1 comment:
Sunday, October 23, 2011

Lolita

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For those of you who enjoyed this caption, you may also like Katie M's Lolita TG Caps blog .
1 comment:

Harem

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A little sexier than what I usually do here. Note that while Muslim TG Captions tends to focus more strongly on modern Islamic women and t...

Re-Education

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Vietnamese re-education camps DO exist, and are nothing to fap about in real life.

Ley Tunnels

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Ley Tunnels elaborates on an aspect of the Red Ochre universe. It's been used in some captions thus far, but until now hasn't been g...
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About Me

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Red Ochre
There is something incredibly exquisite and insatiably attractive about the world outside of white America (or Canada, or the UK, as I'm sure some of my frequent visitors are from). It's vast, it's mysterious, it's elusive, and despite the best efforts of the explorer, the anthropologist, or the traveler, there are attributes of it that are inaccessible for those born outside of it. My fantasy is the next level, the natural progression, of the cultural enthusiast: the idea of not only researching, but experiencing another nation, another culture, not as a misplaced foreigner who could never fully tap its potential, who could easily return to familiar waters at will, but as a full-fledged, undeniable member; looked upon with the same distant appreciation by outsiders, and accepted with previously unknown affinity by my new kin. As for the transgender aspect, well, don't pretend you've never felt curious...
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