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Confused in Cali

Started by Kupcake, November 21, 2012, 04:48:22 AM

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Kupcake

Hello to anybody who might be reading this.  I've watched your community from afar for a few months.  I hope I can now add to it myself.

An introduction.  I'm not sure how to do this.  I don't want to pour a mountain of details on you which you don't want to hear, but at the same time, I really need to tell this story somewhere.  I guess I'll just give you the Cliff's Notes version.  If it ends up overlong, forgive me.

I'm 27 and was born male, and I'm currently a college student.  I grew up in what I'll simply call a less than functional family, one that consistently checked most of the "bad things" check-boxes that can happen to a child.  I suppose I had my share of blessings too.  Academic pursuits came very easy to me, and I eventually developed a social style which made it very easy to make friends.  Though both of these boons mostly just served to make it easy to pretend I was OK as a kid.

I finally admitted to myself that I liked guys when I was about eighteen.  For about the next seven years, I entered into quite a few "relationships."  It took me a long time to realize what I was actually doing to people.  The only thing I was really good at in a relationship back then was reading people and figuring out what they wanted.  And I didn't know anything else to do but give it to them.  So to some of them, I was basically just a toy they played with every other week.  To others, I became the soulmate they had always been looking for, since I was "perfect."  And in the latter case, after several months, I would become so terrified of an actual relationship that I'd simply disappear with no word or trace, and they'd never see me again.  I've probably seriously hurt some people along the way like that.

The bottom line is that I really had no idea who I was or what I wanted.  It sounds weird, but I basically lived most of my life until I was 25 with no identity and no desire, beyond the forementioned ineffectual grasps at love and affection.  But that was the age when I started to climb out.  I started to actually realize the mistakes I was mistaking, and I started to change them.  And a big turning point came when I met somebody who actually knew how to deal with the real me.  I became so numb at such an early age that he was essentially the first person I had loved in 20 years.  I'm still with him.  So over the last two years, I've been going through the struggle of going from looking like a normal person on the outside to actually being one on the inside.  And while this process has been enormously difficult, I've been making progress.  I feel like my life has finally turned a corner for the better.

And that's kinda the problem.  I always dreamed that I'd get a better life, and it would be like taking an instantly effective Happiness pill, where my past would simply disappear.  In reality, now that I've started to get a taste of real happiness and stability, all the things I could conveniently ignore when I was living day to day are now coming back to me.

So, I was born male, and I don't really know what I actually am on in the inside.  Physically, I've always had slightly girly features, and I'm probably closer to a girl than guy in terms of body fat distribution.  When a boyfriend said I looked girly, I liked it.  I always just figured I was a feminine gay guy, though.  Now I'm really not so sure.  I don't feel comfortable as I am.  I don't look the way I want to look.  There's a part of me which doesn't want to be halfway feminine, which doesn't want to act like a man in public.  But I don't really know specifically what I want.

I'm here because I really want to understand what's going on, and I'm terrible about talking about this stuff in person.  I'm a decent conversationalist until I have to talk about myself.  When people press me on really personal issues, I sometimes I just shut down completely, to the point of not being able to say anything.  I think my boyfriend knows, and he supports me when I do things like play around with girly clothes, but I don't know how to share or explore the specifics of how I feel with him or anybody else.

Anyway, that's me.  Thank you for reading this.  If you have any ideas or want to point me at anything, feel free.
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Holly P

Hi Kupcake - Welcome!
I'm new here too, but I guess everyone could have started their posting with "Confused in..."  Having just started the process, I am no expert but can tell you what I did.  First - Told my SO (wife of 20+years).  Hard, but so worth it.  Second, started a diary.  (Funny, but it has helped me sort out my thoughts).  Third - Got a gender therapist.  I dont think any one of these would be terribly successful with out the others, but together I feel better than I thought I ever could.  And I don't yet know where I'm going with all this, but am working on my personal transition plan with the help of all 3.  Remember, you can't go back and have a new beginning, but you can always start today on a new, happy ending.  Peace, Holly   
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Kupcake

Thank you, Holly.  I really appreciate you taking the time to reply to me, and I'm glad we're both turning a corner in our lives.

I do have a question.  How did you muster the courage to tell your SO?

I feel like I'm being silly holding it back.  It must have been so much harder for you to share than it would be for me.

My boyfriend knows me so well, and while I'm terrible at talking about things, I'm very emotive with him.  He knows how I feel about a lot of things.  He indulges me with every girly thing I do or buy, and sometimes he even calls me his girl.  I'm sure he's trying to support me without confronting me about it outwardly before I'm ready.  But I'm still afraid.
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Holly P

Kupcake -
I would be lying if I said that there wasn't any alcohol, but I don't think it was all that much.  I planned a get-away - important word - planned.  I made the decision that I needed to open up about who I was.  Nice dinner and show.  Then went for a beach walk.  No distractions - no where to go - no phones.  And we stayed up all night talking.  Honestly these past months I have never felt closer to her - I have an incredible partner.  Sounds like you do too!  Fear has been at the root of all my problems my whole life (and thats a different story altogether).  The first step is the hardest.  Good luck, however you decide to take this on.  I personally think a shared burden is easier to bear.  Keep us posted!!!  And, most of all,
Peace, Holly
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justmeinoz

Hello and welcome.  No matter how unusual we think our lives have been there are bound to be several people here who have been through the same thing, so don't stress about it.

A lot of people seem to spend a lot of their life trying to work out who they are.  We at least have an idea where to look for answers.  A Gender Therapist can help you with that, but you will have to dig deep and be ruthlessly honest with yourself to get the right answers.  It can be painful, but it is worth it.  Having a partner who accepts you for who you are is a big help. Hugs to him. :-*

Karen.

"Don't ask me, it was on fire when I lay down on it"
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Holly P

Great point Karen (and "Hi!") - "Ruthlessly Honest" is a key; some people never get to that self-enlightenment.  My own journey has had quite a few turns that I did not anticipate.  The diary writing has me there...  Peace, Holly
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Ms. OBrien CVT

Hi Kupcake, :icon_wave:

Welcome to our little family. Over 9023 strong. That would be one heck of a family reunion.

Feel free to post your successes/failures, Hopes/dreams.  Ask questions and seek answers. Give and receive advice.

But remember we are family here, your family now. And it is always nice to have another sister.

And be sure to check out these links ( MUST READS )


Janet 

  
It does not take courage or bravery to change your gender.  It takes fear of living one more day in the wrong one.~me
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Devlyn

Hi Kupcake, its nice to meet you! I'm up near Boston. Glad you found us, get out on the boards and start making new friends. Hugs, Devlyn
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Jamie D

Hello, Kupcake.  I'm in southern California.  Welcome.
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Catherine Sarah

Hi Kupcake,

A big Aussie welcome to Susan's family. It's good of you to drop in and say "Hi". Hope you like it here, and you stay for a while.

There is a mountain of information, resources and friendship waiting for you here, you just need to jump in start talking and ask any question you like. You're quite safe here and we are very accepting.

Your life experiences are quite interesting. Albeit somewhat different,yet so similar to everyone elses. I say that in a way that we have all had realisations and digressions that we were unaware of. Nevertheless, you're here, safe and sound.

The only thing I'd reiterate would be what Karen has said about finding a good gender therapist. And I'd do that, before anything else.

Looking forward to hearing more of your story in time to come, but in the meantime, be safe, well and happy.

Lotsa huggs
Catherine




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