Susan's Place Logo

News:

According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006

Main Menu

Do you think of yourself as brave?

Started by AdamMLP, April 12, 2014, 09:24:59 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

AdamMLP

I came out to a friend and my manager this week, and both of them said that they thought I was brave.  More than once.  I realised that it's something that cis people often seem to say to us, that we must be brave, or that we are brave.  To be honest I can't really understand why.

I personally don't think that there's anything brave about doing something that I have to do.  Perhaps if I was being open for education purposes in a dangerous place, but just doing what I have to do to ease my dysphoria?  Nope.  That doesn't make sense to me.  It's not going to be easy transitioning by any means, but it's easier than not doing anything.  It's do or die for me.  I don't think that makes me brave in anyway, I certainly don't feel it.

Do you think it's brave to transition?
  •  

alabamagirl

I dunno... No one I came out to told me I was brave, but later, when I was talking about my coming out to other trans* people who weren't out yet, some of them said I was brave. I guess it all depends on the individual situation. I guess I felt kind of proud of myself after I came out to my family, but not really brave. As for transitioning itself, though, it's just something I have to do. It's something that I fought hard against doing for years before I reached a breaking point. So no, I don't see anything brave about that. If anything, I feel like a coward for putting it off for so long.
  •  

David27

Quote from: Pikachu on April 12, 2014, 09:36:48 AM
As for transitioning itself, though, it's just something I have to do. It's something that I fought hard against doing for years before I reached a breaking point. So no, I don't see anything brave about that. If anything, I feel like a coward for putting it off for so long.

I feel similarly about this statement. Coming out and transitioning is something that is needed to be done, so I'm not brave I'm just doing what I need to survive. It is the same for medical stuff. People oh your so brave for going through XYZ when the only choice I had was to go through it.
  •  

ReaverMarcus

People have told me that too. I don't find it brave either. I do however find it brave that I'm willing to accept that I need to do these things. That's what I believe they mean when they say you're brave cause a lot of people aren't really don't see who they are and even if they do, they don't always have the courage to change to become that person.

My Hubby (Mel) and Me
Torturing his Archie Muse
Art by Him
  •  

CursedFireDean

I've been told by many people that I'm brave, but to me it's not bravery, it's just being honest about myself. I can see why others might think it's brave, considering all of the hate that you might have to go through, but really it's just picking between two awful things. I don't see it as bravery when we're forced to chose between hating ourselves but being liked by others or being hated by others but liking ourselves.





Check me out on instagram @flammamajor
  •  

Al James

I don't think of myself as brave- again like all of you above it's just something I have to do.
  •  

Bombadil

I had the same basic conversation yesterday. And I've thought about bravery a lot over the years. I've dealt with a lot of stuff over the years and had people tell me I am brave. I used to say it was desperation not bravery.

I guess it depends on what you call bravery. I think most of us are doing something we find scary and hard at times. So, I think there is an element of bravery. I kind of think of it like this, a soldier who is about to go into battle probably doesn't have a lot of choice but they are still committing an act a bravery in my opinion. The woman who takes her kids and leaves her abusive husband and everything else in her life behind is brave. Bravery doesn't have to be some huge act. It can simply be facing the hard stuff without disintegrating.






  •  

Jared

Many people told me I'm brave but I never understood why. Transitioning was and it's still a need for me. But this also got me thinking and I realized on some level I'm brave. Because I didn't put away the thought of starting my own life, because I found the right people who made it possible (docs), because I made my family to accept this going on etc. Maybe this all didn't happened for the first try but I didn't gave up. I'm sure many of you can relate  ;)
If you want to achieve greatness, stop asking for permission.







  •  

King Malachite

*Potentially triggering*

Yes, for me it is bravery.

My friend told me that I was brave for being willing to go through this a couple of years ago but I didn't think of it as bravery then.  Now, I think it's pretty brave for me to want to transition and even taking the steps to do so.  Transitioning is far from easy and it's going to put tons of stress on me, and then there's that higher chance of being "found out" and tortured, murdered, raped, or dismembered or all of the above.  Then there's the chance of losing my job because of this, and people walking out of my life, me going broke and homeless, and just being so depressed and ultimately killing myself in the end because of not being able to cope with all of the extra burdens that comes along with transitioning.  Again, I can see how some wouldn't calll it bravery becaus they are doing what they have to do, but for me, yes it is bravery.  I make the choice to transition or not and deal with the consequenses accordingly.  I haven't transitioned yet because in part, I am scared.  Bravery isn't the absence of being scared, but rather powering through even when scared.  This is going to be a very scary journey for me, but when I get the courage to transition, yes it will be bravery.
In fact, I consider this to be bravery so much that I think I should have my very own customized transgender millitary uniform and beret because I feel like transition is a battlefield with so many wars and battles I will have to fight in just to be who I am.

Aside from all of that, for me, I consider being called brave a compliment and I like compliments.  I have no intentions of playing myself up as some poor, helpless victim, but if a person wants to call me brave, so be it.  I don't think I'm going to "correct them" and say "no I'm not brave" etc.  A person callng me brave *may* just be on my side so no need to find ways to isolate them from that.  Now if a beautiful, young woman clutches her chest and gives me big googly eyes saying something like "Oh Malachite, you're so brave!"  I'll probably play it off like it's nothing. "Just gotta do what I have to do mam," and tilt my metaphorical cowboy hat.  I'm just being silly now, but I'm sure you get what I mean.  This is just how I personally feel and not how I feel others need to be. 
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."
  •  

Bombadil

hahahah Malachite, you are awesome.


Quote from: Malachite on April 12, 2014, 11:32:01 AM
This is going to be a very scary journey for me, but when I get the courage to transition, yes it will be bravery.
In fact, I consider this to be bravery so much that I think I should have my very own customized transgender millitary uniform and beret because I feel like transition is a battlefield with so many wars and battles I will have to fight in just to be who I am.


I just sent my best friend an email telling her everything. Can I borrow your uniform. I'm scared sh*tless






  •  

King Malachite

Quote from: christopher on April 12, 2014, 11:48:40 AM
hahahah Malachite, you are awesome.


I just sent my best friend an email telling her everything. Can I borrow your uniform. I'm scared sh*tless

Lol thanks and sure, you can borrow my uniform.  Good luck, soldier!
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."
  •  

AdamMLP


Yeah I understand why people who have a lot to lose are more likely to consider themselves brave. I get that I might have come across as saying that no one has the right to feel brave for transitioning and that wasn't what I was about. I was trying to understand why people think this is a brave thing to do. I think that people that do take the risk of losing everything require a certain amount of bravery, I've put off coming out to make it easier at some points.

I'm fortune enough to live in a country where there's anti discrimination laws, and that on the whole people are accepting. It was just very odd to hear my manager say that I was brave, and then in the next sentence that he wouldn't stand for anyone giving me stick.
  •  

Jason C

My best friend's said the same to me. I think it is brave. It's brave to tell people if you're unsure of their reaction. It's brave to tell people even when you know what their reaction will be, because from that point on, there are quite big changes. It's difficult to accept who you are (for some, not for everyone) and realise who you are and what you need to do, and so, accepting that and planning on what to do about it rather than continuing to live as you were beforehand is also brave.
  •  

Edge

I think maybe it's harder for people to see if they are brave since they only have their own life to really compare.
A few months ago, someone who has only known me for the past few years told me that she is amazed by how well I'm doing. I was surprised because, to me, the past few years have been easy compared what the years before that were like. I kind of took it for granted. Maybe that's the case here. Maybe other people can recognize that it's brave, but we don't because we take it for granted.
Or maybe I'm just randomly talking and seeing what comes out.
  •  

Polo

"Courage: the moral or mental strength to persevere and withstand difficulty, fear, or hardship." - Miriam Webster's dictionary

Courage is doing something even though you're afraid to do it or afraid of the repercussions, so I'd say that applies to most of us here, particularly during the discovery/coming out phase.

I agree with Edge in that people tend to normalize whatever hardships they're going through, plus for many of us it doesn't feel like a choice... Still requires courage though.


  •  

Eva Marie

I have heard this from the few people that i've let in on my secret.

Do I see myself as brave? Not at all - It was a matter of survival, not bravery. When people say that to me it would take me waayyyyyy to long to explain it to them so I just nod and smile and let it go.

Like Polo said - it does take courage to keep going through all of the challenges of transition.
  •  

FalseHybridPrincess

Quote from: Eva Marie on April 12, 2014, 03:51:16 PM
I have heard this from the few people that i've let in on my secret.

Do I see myself as brave? Not at all - It was a matter of survival, not bravery. When people say that to me it would take me waayyyyyy to long to explain it to them so I just nod and smile and let it go.

Like Polo said - it does take courage to keep going through all of the challenges of transition.

Hhhm I kinda agree
http://falsehybridprincess.tumblr.com/
Follow me and I ll do your dishes.

Also lets be friends on fb :D
  •  

Edge

What's the difference between having courage and being brave? (Not arguing. Just curious.)
  •  

Skyler

Quote from: Edge on April 12, 2014, 04:13:22 PM
What's the difference between having courage and being brave? (Not arguing. Just curious.)

Courage is when you are emotional 'challenging' something like a fear. Bravery is what you need when there is a chance of being physically hurt ie (policeman, firefighter).

In both cases I do think it takes courage and bravery because we all have to face a (mostly) ignorant society when it comes to trans* issues.
  •  

Polo

Bravery implies a certain amount of fearlessness, whereas courage does not.


  •