Quote from: caleb. on December 13, 2013, 01:31:55 PM
I've been thinking about this a lot, and having looked at this thread I have a few thoughts on it...
- I think the RLE (with HRT) can potentially be helpful in the sense that, perhaps someone would be happy presenting as their "new" gender in public without having to have surgeries. They may enter the process believing they want the "whole shebang" and then come out of it realizing that they were happy keeping the parts they were born with. And if that's the case, more power to them I say.
Good post!
I want the whole shebang, but at this stage in my life don't care as much about the bottom part. I don't hate it, but I also don't really use it much anymore. lol An orchiectomy might be enough for me at first. As long as my clothes aren't lumpy I'm happy.
I care more about how people see me. I've always been that way. I don't leave the house on bad hair days lol (not true, but almost true) It's a personality flaw I guess.
I seriously put off my transition because I disliked growing older. I figured if I was unhappy as a middle aged man I'd me more unhappy as a middle aged woman. But I got a lot of encouragement from a good friend who is a trans woman, and we are almost the same age. She started her transition in her mid 40s. She said "do you want to be at the end of your life one day and realize you should have done it? Major fail!" That woke me up!
Quote- I'm also not convinced it's 100% about whether or not you will be happy in your "new" gender (as in, proof that you re truly male or female). Transition comes with a great deal of other challenges, social, but also emotional. I can honestly say that as much as I thought through the challenges of transition, there were some that I just didn't see coming until I started HRT and began actually...being physically in-between. That was a very hard stage, where I didn't know if people saw a man or a woman and I occasionally heard people asking. No amount of surgery would have helped with that, and some people may end up not being able to pass perfectly or near perfectly. That's a HUGE challenge and a huge emotional hurdle to overcome, should that be a person's reality. So the question was never about, could Caleb function as male, it was could Caleb function being seen in between? Could I have emotionally handled SRS if that ended up being my life? Could I have gotten on with life and been a healthy, functional member of society if I was seen as female (or as visibly trans) for the rest of my life? I can't answer that question. But I could only begin to have an inkling of how this would make me feel by living as male and being visibly (by my appearance, not by outing myself) trans.
I really fear the in-between stage. I want to start HRT as soon as I can, but realize I would be happier with some FFS (and hair removal of course), and I need to start saving up for that. It's extremely frustrating, and takes everything I have not to jump out the nearest window! But I've had gender dysphoria my whole life, and made it this far (barely) so a few more years won't kill me (knock on wood). I wish I didn't care about my appearance so much, but that's who I am.

You are so right about challenges. We did not grow up as girls. It's a whole different culture, and they are often treated differently, and not always in a good way. My mother raised me as a gentleman, but some men are asses. You have to walk in someone's shoes.. or pumps in this case.

As an example of culture shock, I was married to an African-American woman, and have two bi-racial kids. Talk about people staring? Even to this day, I'll be on the bus with my daughter, and people look at us like we have two heads... so she's a little tan girl with a huge bushy afro and I have on purple nail polish... lol Also, I remember my ex telling me once in a shoe store that we were being followed to make sure she wasn't shop lifting! She worked on Wall Street for crying out loud. That made me see that people are often treated differently because of how they look. And I had no idea because I don't live their lives.
So I'm expecting a whole lot of new experiences as a woman. Both good and bad. Just buying clothes has a learning curve!
But I can't wait...
Hope my experiences help shed a little light on this for others. We all seem to have similar stores to tell. That's why I love it here.