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Few Questions you asked yourself to find out

Started by Inazuma, October 17, 2013, 07:09:57 PM

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ErinM

Quote from: EmmaS on October 18, 2013, 04:01:15 PM
All the questions already posted on here are amazing and I also used many of those questions when trying to understand myself better.

A social question I found to be enlightening for me was: (Well more of a hypothetical situation, then a question)
--There are two different new groups you are introduced to, one is several males your age, and the other group if several females your age. You seem to be getting along with both groups extremely well and have found you have many things in common with each group for different reasons of course. Both groups start to exclude you due to your apparent gender which doesn't match your true gender, but your acquaintances don't know that. Let's use the female group, they tell you that you don't understand what it's like to be a girl and you will never understand because you're a male and so on. What's your reaction to that? Do you say, "Whatever, I wouldn't want to understand anyways", or something more along being hurt or offended by these sort of comments. I found myself to be offended when females would exclude me because of my apparent gender, because although my body didn't match theirs, my brain does and always has. Not sure if that scenario was clear or not, but I hope it helps some.

<3 Emma

I had this scenario play out enough times that it didn't need to be hypothetical. :-\

For me I kept hoping to come back as a female in my next life. I finally asked myself "What if there's no next life?"
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EmmaS

Quote from: ErinM on October 18, 2013, 04:14:31 PM
I had this scenario play out enough times that it didn't need to be hypothetical. :-\

For me I kept hoping to come back as a female in my next life. I finally asked myself "What if there's no next life?"

But at least you know what your true gender is then, if you keep hoping to wake up as a certain gender in the "next life", why not just make it happen this life? Just in case there isn't a "next life", which there may or may not be, I'd rather just do everything in this life to make sure I'm happy and that I'm there for those who are there for me as well.
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carrie359

Quote from: EmmaS on October 18, 2013, 04:01:15 PM
All the questions already posted on here are amazing and I also used many of those questions when trying to understand myself better.

A social question I found to be enlightening for me was: (Well more of a hypothetical situation, then a question)
--There are two different new groups you are introduced to, one is several males your age, and the other group if several females your age. You seem to be getting along with both groups extremely well and have found you have many things in common with each group for different reasons of course. Both groups start to exclude you due to your apparent gender which doesn't match your true gender, but your acquaintances don't know that. Let's use the female group, they tell you that you don't understand what it's like to be a girl and you will never understand because you're a male and so on. What's your reaction to that? Do you say, "Whatever, I wouldn't want to understand anyways", or something more along being hurt or offended by these sort of comments. I found myself to be offended when females would exclude me because of my apparent gender, because although my body didn't match theirs, my brain does and always has. Not sure if that scenario was clear or not, but I hope it helps some.

<3 Emma

Emma ditto to that...
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ErinM

Quote from: EmmaS on October 18, 2013, 04:18:34 PM
But at least you know what your true gender is then, if you keep hoping to wake up as a certain gender in the "next life", why not just make it happen this life? Just in case there isn't a "next life", which there may or may not be, I'd rather just do everything in this life to make sure I'm happy and that I'm there for those who are there for me as well.

That's exactly what I was implying.  :)
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Inazuma

Quote from: EmmaS on October 18, 2013, 04:01:15 PM
All the questions already posted on here are amazing and I also used many of those questions when trying to understand myself better.

A social question I found to be enlightening for me was: (Well more of a hypothetical situation, then a question)
--There are two different new groups you are introduced to, one is several males your age, and the other group if several females your age. You seem to be getting along with both groups extremely well and have found you have many things in common with each group for different reasons of course. Both groups start to exclude you due to your apparent gender which doesn't match your true gender, but your acquaintances don't know that. Let's use the female group, they tell you that you don't understand what it's like to be a girl and you will never understand because you're a male and so on. What's your reaction to that? Do you say, "Whatever, I wouldn't want to understand anyways", or something more along being hurt or offended by these sort of comments. I found myself to be offended when females would exclude me because of my apparent gender, because although my body didn't match theirs, my brain does and always has. Not sure if that scenario was clear or not, but I hope it helps some.

<3 Emma

Emma, and all of you boys and girls that replyied to my post !!!  Thank you !!!!

Thank you to take time to share your experiences and knowledge !


I posted this tread yesterday, not hopping to get so much reaction...
But It came so fast !!!
Thank you all !!

I also today came out to a good friend of mine,... she was very understandfull.

very much !

She was amaizing !

All the questions that you girls where asking you, I do take it now really sceriously.
I thank you very much for your testimonial !
It does help me a lot !

'Merci !!!!!

;) ( i'm french-Canadian ) ... ( so sorry for spelling mistakes ... )

I am very amaized how this blog is so responsive, and how strong the comunity is holding together !

I love it !

Thank you girls and boys !
;)



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Inazuma

Quote from: kabit on October 18, 2013, 02:22:53 PM
What I can remember clearly ranges from age 8-10 (earliest) to only a month or so before I came out (I make beer and tried supplementing with hops - very high in phytoestrogens - for about a week before I freaked out and stopped).

Becoming certain took me a few weeks, but I'm absolutely as certain as I can be pre-HRT. The clues are probably in your past - especially if you were in hiding (I don't know how old you are). I REALLY REALLY wish I could remember more... since I had some girl friends in the neighborhood in pre-school and kindergarden... and I want to know how I played with them.


I wish I can remember all of this also...

But just what you says... rings such a bell!!!
the thema of phyto estrogen...

I have been taking that since now more than a year...

OMG...

I think it's already a sign...   mensch Mayers !

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Inazuma

Hey Girls !
.. I know it's just another thema...

But since I open this tread I tought I could just say it !!!
Today !!! for the first time !!! I was thinking about myself in a femenin adjetive!!
Like , Heureuse ! instead of Hereux (in french ) This was the first time it came spontaniously through my mind !
I felt so good about it ... since it came from myself... be weird also.... ... This is another topic!!!!
But Have you ever noticed a change toward your own gender spelling or description... through your transition ?
And if so, How was the transition ?

xxx

Inazuma  ( which means ... Lightning bolt ) ;)

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FrancisAnn

I've really never had any other choice. I've always been a girl or woman inside since my first day in grammar school. I thought I was a little girl until the teacher told me I need move & sit on the side with the boys, "you are a boy".

It has never gone away at all & maybe just maybe I can improve & change my body so I can finally feel good about myself. It's been one long struggle with changing my physical "male" body into something nice & normal.

Francis
mtF, mid 50's, always a girl since childhood, HRT (Spiro, E & Fin.) since 8-13. Hormone levels are t at 12 & estrogen at 186. Face lift & eye lid surgery in 2014. Abdominoplasty/tummy tuck & some facial surgery May, 2015. Life is good for me. Love long nails & handsome men! Hopeful for my GRS & a nice normal depth vagina maybe by late summer. 5' 8", 180 pounds, 14 dress size, size 9.5 shoes. I'm kind of an elegant woman & like everything pink, nice & neet. Love my nails & classic Revlon Red. Moving back to Florida, so excited but so much work moving
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KabitTarah

Quote from: Inazuma on October 18, 2013, 07:59:31 PM

I wish I can remember all of this also...

But just what you says... rings such a bell!!!
the thema of phyto estrogen...

I have been taking that since now more than a year...

OMG...

I think it's already a sign...   mensch Mayers !

I'm glad I can help :)

I just sent a message to a very, very old friend. We used to play in pre-school and kindergarden - she moved away then and it broke my heart. I just innocently asked her if she remembered anything from back then and claimed I was getting old and couldn't remember that far back.

Hopefully her memory is good ;) Probably not.
~ Tarah ~

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Mariax

I asked one question of myself.

"What in the hell is wrong with me?"

My answer came back in less than a heartbeat, out of some dark corner of my mind.

"You're transgender."

Really, that was it. All the puzzle pieces fell into place in that second. I was also seriously worried for a while that it might be delusion, but after spending over a year trying to deny it, and another year working with a psychiatrist, I was able to conclude that it wasn't delusion.

(Responging to the original post, so sorry if this derails the discussion.)
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Carrie Liz

The biggest question that I keep asking myself is this...

"If you were living in a vacuum, and you could do absolutely anything that you wanted, would you transition fully, change your name, refer to yourself with female pronouns, get SRS, and all of the other parts of transition that you're wanting?"

And for me, the answer is always yes. And this is what keeps reminding me that I really don't have doubts about transition, I just have doubts brought on by social fears.
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Megumi

If for some reason everything about changing your gender was made illegal and the penalty for doing it was life in a hard labor camp, could you continue to live as you are now knowing how you feel?

My answer is no every time. I feel strongly enough about this that I know I'd just give up the will to live if I have to continue living a false life.

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Taka

if you got a chance to change your whole identity, including body (as far as modern science allows), and have every memory and record of your current self irrevocably deleted, so as to avoid anyone being hurt by the current you suddenly just disappearing... what would your new body and identity be? you get only one chance, so choose well.
you can also choose to be exactly the same as before (maybe skinnier or a couple inches different in height), and the record and memories will still be deleted so nobody will be able to make a connection to anything to do with your life before this point. it would be a new beginning no matter what you choose.
(i'd have my chest fixed at least, and hormones)

Quote from: Lo on October 18, 2013, 01:37:07 PM
"Which normatively defined gender role am I more comfortable embodying, even on an occasional basis?"

Neither.

"What relationship do I have to my genitals? If they could be something else, what?"

I didn't know I had a vagina until I was a teenager. Like really knew. After puberty it was just a body part that hemorrhaged sometimes, and before that, it was always a surprise to look down and see anything. For me right now, having a vagina and functioning reproductive system feels like a medical "condition" for which there is no adequate cure more than anything else. Having a penis is completely out of the question for me. I plan on having a hysterectomy and am beginning to wish that a surgery existed to close up the vagina altogether but keep the clitoris intact. (Partial FtM SRS?) Even then, I'm not sure I'd do it. I can't imagine it would be cheap or easy.

"How do I feel about hormones?"

I wish a sex hormone existed that had no noticeable effect on the mind the way that E or T does. I would take T, but all the changes that I want would require that I took it indefinitely, and all the side effects I don't want are the permanent ones. I currently take birth control for a medical condition, endometriosis, and I've made peace with it by thinking of it in those terms. The mood changes that came with it dialed way down after the first few months, but I think of them as side effects necessary to keep my body from damaging itself and putting me in horrendous pain.
those are some interesting questions/answers. i like reading what you feel like telling about yourself, it's a gender that i can't remember having experienced, even though some of the feelings about body or social situations seems somewhat similar.

my feelings about genitals:
what i have isn't really the shape i want it to be, but that's easily corrected with plastic surgery. what i lack is more apparent, and i really want that in addition to what i already have. i don't do sex, partly because i haven't found anyone i feel like i can trust enough, and partly because i don't know how to do it without having both parts to use. it's frustrated me before. gonads should be inside the body or not exist at all. (in my head, i really am hermaphroditic. and i like the thought of mutual rape with a tentacle monster)

my feelings about hormones:
are there any that will leave me with only sparse facial hair, no body hair, smaller hips, flat chest, deeper voice, no male pattern hair loss? t will probably give me that if my genes are right. but if they're wrong, there will be too much hair. or too little on top. i want primary sex characteristics of both, and secondary of neither, or in between.
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Keira J

I was asked the question "If you could switch genders with no ramifications and your family/friends wouldn't know any different...would you?"

That was a pretty simple answer when I was being honest with myself...yes...I have fantasized about it so many times happening to other people, and I've got transformation/gender swap experiences rooted in my childhood... but that was just a way for me to release some of my own personal frustrations I think.

Whats hardest now is knowing even if I do transition I'll always be seen by some as the gender I was born.

Why can't someone just invent a trans body swap machine? It would make everyones lives here so much easier :(
Started self-prescribed HRT :- 10/3/2015
NHS HRT :- 26/8/16
Start weight :- 240lbs
Current weight :- 186lbs
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Emmaline

If the reason your asking questions is you are having trouble making sure your trans, try going back through your life and note down all the tramatic experiences or strong memories.  Do this without looking for specifics... just get them down on paper.  Dont force it-  just get them down no matter how irrelevant.

Now go back over them and look for possible gender connections.  Chances are some things that disturbed you may have a gender trigger.

For example- now I look back I see things like...

I absolutely hated getting my hair cut as a kid- we are talking kicking and screaming in panic.
My fave books all have female protagonists.
I hated cars and sport.  I loved masters of the universe figures (colorful dolls with accessories basically)
I disfigured my sisters dolls by popping off their heads and sticking googly woogly fingerpuppets on their neck joints after being told off for playing with them.

My highschool art project was a two foot tall naked faerie bursting out of a twisted male face like an egg.
My fave toys where princess leia, teela and evil lynn.

I dated only bi girls or seduced openly lesbian girls with some success- confusingly for all .    I was attracted to short hair.
  I was fascinated by lesbian fiction, film and tv.  I remember Go Fish coming on tv when i was young and I watched the whole thing stunned.  I was totally in love with Geniveve Turner.

How did I not know?


I could go on and on... that exercise was extremely good for me.


Body... meet brain.  Now follow her lead and there will be no more trouble, you dig?



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bethany

A few questions I have asked myself over time were.

Who is that person looking back at me from the other side of the mirror?
Why do I enjoy wearing dresses and skirts so much?
Why do I feel so uncomfortable within myself?
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Night Haven

Quote from: Taka on October 19, 2013, 06:14:25 AM
i want primary sex characteristics of both, and secondary of neither, or in between.

That's actually about what my ideal body is, though it does sway a bit more to male in build. Preferably the only sex characteristics capable of reproduction would be the male ones.

I've taken to asking myself what, if I could redesign my entire life from scratch, what it would be like, particularly with how my body would look. Creating something of a fantasy life from this, I've come to realize a lot more about myself, aside from just gender.
-Fight for the changes you want to see made; become the changes you want to see in the world.-

-The world is worse enough as it is; let us be and let be. Let's stop spreading hate and start spreading acceptance...-
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Northern Jane

One of the most important questions I asked myself (an AWFULLY long time ago!) was "If you were going to live the rest of your life on a deserted island and never see another human being, would you still want to go through the expense, pain, and risk of SRS?" The answer for me was an emphatic YES because it was about me fitting with ME and nothing else.

(I was the first TS seen by a hospital developing a gender clinic and they liked that question so much they adopted it in their program - that was 1974!)
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LordKAT

I never really asked myself these types of questions. I just could never figure out why my body didn't look like the rest of the guys. Why  could no one else see me and only saw this other thing? Why was everything fine when I first woke up but seconds later when fully awake and aware that no one could see me, life wasn't worth living any more? How can the whole world be so blind?


So I'm not got the same doubts as some others. I always knew who I was, I just didn't get why others didn't know.
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Amy The Bookworm

I hate to admit it, but the first question I asked myself wasn't a question. It was, I took an anthropology class and they discussed trans issues and I said to myself, "Oh wow! I'm transgender! That explains EVERYTHING about how I feel!"


The first question I asked myself was "...get real. Are you really transgender? Maybe you're making that up. It's all in your head."

Then I imedately thought, "...You know... if you have to ask..."

And really that was enough to confirm it. It's really the only thing that has ever made a lot of my anxiety in social situations and my discomfort with gender rolls and everything else that has ever made sense to me.
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