You're welcome. I also say, don't worry about your height, my sister-in-law is roughly my height (I'm 6'3") and when people talk of strong women, what they often forget is many women are physically strong as well as mentally. In response to your next article, where I talk about flannelette shirts and jeans, I'm not attacking you, but I'm explaining, in one comment, about why "drag" is offensive to transwomen in that a drag act is typically a masculine man who might have a typically masculine occupation (that's in part a reference to the term "Don't give up your day job.") and I know that one thing that is drummed into anybody who wants to be an actor or singer is that they need to have a career to fall back on, so the buff actor you see on a soap opera without his shirt on, might, after he leaves the show, be quite scruffy with a beard if he's a builder's labourer between acting gigs. And typically drag actors can be quite masculine outside character.
Being autistic, I tend to like plain clothes and as I am more feminine and tend to prefer neutral colours to masculine ones, I would probably be more, post-transition, have a routine of shaving my armpits (I already do), gently remove leg hair, polo shirt (sometimes short, more typically long), cotton shorts, socks and sneakers, and unisex flannelette shirts and jeans and sneakers. And have IPL on my face and on my body, but I'm not too hirsuite, and my interests wouldn't change. Also, my sexual attraction is towards women, and I have long been repulsed by men, sexually and physically, and I don't expect to be sexually attracted to men post-transition, either.