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How Many TS Specialists and Connections Do You Have?

Started by K8, October 12, 2009, 03:57:19 PM

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Alex_C

Maggie Kay there's a chance we could run into each other I suppose. I'd be honored.

The TS meetings I go to are transguys only, and they are ok. There's another group in Santa Cruz that's transguys and transgals, and I've heard is friendly.

Frankly for me it comes down to function. I'm only 3.5 months on T, and there may be little secret tricks to obtaining medical care, various things, that I don't know and you can only learn this stuff through gossip. The only reason I'm on my way now is, through attending a meeting and hanging out and engaging in the jokes and gossip and general "schmoozing". I found out secret information.

But other than that need, my life basically consists of surviving on $200 a week, or let's see I guess I made about $80 this week so it's all about the piquince of Depression life, trying to stay dry and warm and fed, going to school because in the coming times we're gonna need EMTs and extra points if it actually gets me one of those "job" things people used to have, having some fun where I can find it (Did you know zucchinis can grow well over 2 feet long? And that when they do, you can take the seeds out like a pumpkin and then cut them into large pieces and throw them to the sheep?) and going about my work, keeping an eye out for that rarest of things, a possible GF, and so on. So I have to be out and functioning in the real world and don't have the luxury of keeping my social life to organized functions.
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MaggieB

Quote from: Alex_C on October 13, 2009, 02:55:57 PM
Maggie Kay there's a chance we could run into each other I suppose. I'd be honored.

The TS meetings I go to are transguys only, and they are ok. There's another group in Santa Cruz that's transguys and transgals, and I've heard is friendly.


I would love to meet you too!  Consider the Monterey TS Support Group. Both transwomen and transmen go together and it is really friendly.  Second Saturday every month. Stephan Braveman runs it at his office.  He has special speakers too like Jamison Green every so often. 
http://www.bravemantherapy.com/

Maggie
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Alex_C

Hm that sounds kinda cool. Mainly on Saturday I'm  in Santa Cruz making some money though.
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King Malachite

Aside from this site and the rest of the internet, I have zero TG connections around me and zero TG friends and zero TG specialist within a decent amount of miles from me
Feel the need to ask me something or just want to check out my blog?  Then click below:

http://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,135882.0.html


"Sometimes you have to go through outer hell to get to inner heaven."

"Anomalies can make the best revolutionaries."
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Deanna_Renee

Quote from: Deanna_Renee on October 12, 2009, 11:27:22 PM
Count me among the boring...

My therapist is a transman and treats or has treated some number of trans people and lectures quite a bit (I think). I have attended one day of one conference (SCC a couple of weeks ago) and met a few people there, but none local. I don't know anyone who is T in this area. I do have a few gay friends, one of whom knows quite a few Drag Queens and Transwomen - hasn't introduced them. I haven't been to a bar/club in years and never a LGBT bar/club (I rarely ever drink and don't like loud music/noise). There is a transgender group here in ATL, but I have not been able to make it to the meetings these past few months (since I came out to myself). I haven't yet started HRT, so there are no docs I'm connected with and I haven't been to a doctor (except for a couple of minor injuries) in over 30 years. I also have not started Electro yet, so don't have any connections there yet either.

Like I said - BORING! :)

Give it some time, it may change.

Deanna

WOW!! I just came across this post from a little over three years ago. I'm sure most of the old group are now gone on. In fact I have not been here myself in about a year or more. Life has certainly changed a lot in these three years. I have gone from knowing no one and feeling almost utterly alone to having hundreds of new friends from all around the world. I have been involved in a number of support groups and conferences. I am out to almost everyone. I have spoken to college classes about what it means to be trans*. I have gone from zero to stellar in such a short time.

I gave it some time, and it certainly has changed!

Deanna <3
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aleon515

Pretty much in my case. My therapist is a transman. I go to support groups at the trans center (2 groups twice a month). Our support groups are run by transmen (the ones I go to anyway). I go over there once a week when I don't have group to hang out or talk to the director. This is as much social as for support and the "secret info" (love this Alex). I wouldn't say I have close friends there but I am friendly with a lot of transmen and transwomen I know there. I don't know a lot of people really well, but I get along with most of them. I go to parties or other events they have there, though I usually don't stay long. My girl friend is trans and I met her there.

I've done a little volunteering. I'm planning to volunteer next year, but with work it would be a bit hard.

I don't go to bars or clubs ever. I can't drink and I don't like the noise anyway.

This is actually about the most social life I've ever had.


--Jay
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Zumbagirl

Quote from: K8 on October 12, 2009, 03:57:19 PM
How many TS-related specialists do you see?  How many TS friends do you have?  How involved are you in the "TS scene"?

Other than on this forum, I have no TS friends.  I have knowingly met perhaps half-a-dozen TS's in my life, and not many more CDs than that.  I have some close gay friends who live far away and have some gay and lesbian acquaintances in town here, but I don't hang out with them.  I'm not aware of an LGBT bar in town.  I've gone to a TS support group in a nearby town a few times and enjoy it, but I often forget to go.  I've heard of two other MtFs in town but have never knowingly met either of them.

- Kate

When I transitioned the psychiatric community was very big on support groups. I had joined some support groups, one a general TG type group and the other a TS only group. The TS group was full of stories of horrific divorces, child custody disputes, losing jobs. It was a complete bummer, so I stopped going. The other group was less depressing and had a few people who seemed less stressed out, so I stuck around for a while. By sticking around that means I probably went to maybe 5 or 6 meetings over a year and a half. I did actually go to 1 transgender day of remembrance, back around the time I was a newbie full timer. I remember it was before the Gwen Arujo killing. I did actually go to a single pride festival in Northampton. I walked around, picked up a few flyers and then stopped in at Starbucks for a cofffee and went home :)

When I was actively transitioning I went to an IFGE conference. It was in Philadelphia. That's where I learned about successfull transitioning from others who were themselves successful. I remember meeting Marci Bowers before she became a famous sugeon :) It gave me hope that this was a "doable" thing for me. I too could have a good oucome. I just had to keep my head on my shoulders and stay focused.

I did join a few yahoo groups back then, mostly lurking, to understand and learn more about surgeons and their techniques. Instead of focusing on negative cases, I found others who were happy and successful in thier new roles and sought them out for advice. Of course their advice would be the same thing I would say today when asked.

I did have a few TS girlfriends and we would sometimes hang out, go shopping, go out to eat, etc. One thing that happened right away though is we started losing interest in each other. The only thing we had in common was the sex change bit, other than that our lives were pretty divergent. I helped a few girls out with electrolysis treatments, but that was when I first discovered the ones who are just playing around at being girls, to the ones who really want to do it.

After I had been living full time for about a year I sort of lost interest in "the community". I knew what I wanted, I knew how to get there, I had the letters and all I needed now was the cash to get me there. That's when I started falling off the face of the earth. I stopped going to support groups (although I was never really an active participant), stopped talking online, stopped browsing surgery groups, etc.

Up until that point I had a few other ts girlfriends, I had a good transman friend who I had known from grade school and high school.

One thing about my experience that it taught me, is how to tell the ones who will make it from the ones who won't or never will. In my mind, there is no such thing as a non-transitioning, non-op transsexual. That's the definition of a regular guy or gal, a dreamer, what have you, maybe a CDer. I got sick of those who were hanging around waiting for miracles to happen, or ended up throwing their lives away without thinking the process through. I remember meeting a girl at a party I was invited to in NH who was living full time but with a heavy and I mean heavy beard. I remember talking to her for a few minutes and listening to how she can't get a job and no one would accept her. She was even laughed out of her motor vehicles department and they refused to change her gender to F, even though she had the right paperwork. When I asked why she wasn't doing electrolysis, she said "oh the homones make the facial hair go away". I am guessing that she was unaware of who she was talking to and that I was somehow dumb. It was moments like that when I knew I had to get out for my own sanity. I knew I was doing alright when people started mistaking "me" for the spouse and asking me which person I was with who was the t person :)

The only other times after that where I met other TS women was going to Montreal for my SRS surgery and when I went to Thailand to get breast augmentation. In Canada there were 3 of us who were having surgery on the same week, so one day we went shopping together and we each bought the same watch and said we would keep it as a sign that we were all in this place at the same time. I still have mine. It has a pewter watchband with dolphins on it. If you have ever had surgery in Montreal and had to walk around the nurses station in the hospital, counting the dolphins on the wall, you wlll understand the significance of the watch. I remember being in Thailand and talking to the other women who were going in for SRS surgery and being there to bring comfort and happiness to thier moment, since I had already lived it and survived :) A few people even wrote me afterwards and I received a few cards thanking me for my kindness. It was then when I felt my job was done and that was when I finally lost contact with everything.

I still have 2 ts girlfriends, who have gone on to successful transitions and are living good lives now. But we don't meet face to face anymore. Now it's just a few facebook messages her and there "How's it going?" "Great, how about you?" "I'm doing great too!". My circle of friends is now just regular women.

Which all comes back to, why I am even here? Well after living the good life for a few years I felt I was ready to start talking about what life is like on the other side of sex change street. I wanted people to know it isn't all doom and gloom. I have read other peoples stories on here about the who, what, when, where and why of disclosure. I've been there, done that. So now I have sort of wandered back and this is turning out to be a great outlet for me to show that there really are successful cases out there and maybe offer some positive affirmation or hope :)
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AusBelle

Quote from: Zumbagirl on December 25, 2012, 04:52:04 AM

I still have 2 ts girlfriends, who have gone on to successful transitions and are living good lives now. But we don't meet face to face anymore. Now it's just a few facebook messages her and there "How's it going?" "Great, how about you?" "I'm doing great too!". My circle of friends is now just regular women.

Which all comes back to, why I am even here? Well after living the good life for a few years I felt I was ready to start talking about what life is like on the other side of sex change street. I wanted people to know it isn't all doom and gloom. I have read other peoples stories on here about the who, what, when, where and why of disclosure. I've been there, done that. So now I have sort of wandered back and this is turning out to be a great outlet for me to show that there really are successful cases out there and maybe offer some positive affirmation or hope :)

My experience is very similar to yours Zumbagirl.  I've just come back here after many years in the 'big world' after SRS.  See the intro thread. 

After leaving the support group behind and getting a job, having SRS etc, I gradually lost contact with the TS girls that I transitioned with.  I haven't heard from the last one for over 7 years.  After reading many positive stories on this site I thought it was time to put my own forward (eventually).  I know there are a lot of us out there, just living normal mundane lives with no one the wiser.  I have many friends and acquaintances who are unaware of my past.  But that's for another thread.

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Simon

Zero on all accounts. My Endo and Gyno (who performed my hysto) are good friends so I was recommended to one by the other. I don't live near any GLBT center so no groups to speak of. I live way out in the boonies so there is absolutely nothing here for trans people. When my gf gets out of College we're moving closer to a city but not sure where yet. Thinking about Asheville and it has a large trans community.
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Eleanor

I only have two trans friends (both FTM). One of them I knew before he came out, and the other lives stealth, but came out to me out of the blue because he was worried about me feeling alone or isolated. I guess since I'm lucky enough to have so much support from cis friends and family, I've never really felt the need to seek out specifically trans friends or explicitly trans-friendly spaces outside of the internet. ^^ I'd definitely be interested in meeting more trans people (particularly other MTF people!), but it's not something I've ever really gone out of my way to do.

As for specialists... nobody, I guess. After mixups with the gender clinic, my doctor was kind enough to prescribe me hormones, so I never went through the regular channels, and never met anyone who was an expert on such things. I guess I'll have to when I eventually go in for surgery, though. :)
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