So... my mom is feeling bored and restless lately and wants to go somewhere for a day or two. She originally suggested New Orleans, but that place intimidates me. I suggest we just go to Galveston, because a) it's very New Orleans-esque, and b) I can visit The Rosenberg Clinic while we're there. I don't know if they need you to see them several times before writing their letter, though. I'm really hoping this isn't some 3-month therapy thing I have to endure. I'm 100% certain of transition that I shouldn't have to spend more than one or two sessions making that apparent, and I'd be happy to continue seeing them for months afterwards. I just hope they don't hold the letter on a string at the end of a stick and have me chase it for 90 days.
My mom is supportive of everything, although I really don't think she's comfortable with it. She does try, though. She told me the other day, "You know, the hardest thing for me not to do is to call you 'son'. I guess I can just call you 'sweetheart'." Also, she said I could go with her to get our eyebrows done, and she's given me some of her jeans, too, and said they fit really nice and added, "you can actually see your butt!"
I wrote out this massive letter about everything that has been on my mind and all of the things that she may have never noticed as I was growing up, explaining my identity and how I came to the point of wanting to transition. I haven't sent it, though. I always feel a bit awkward seeing someone in person when I send something like that instead of a face-to-face discussion. It's just not easy for me to explain things in spoken words. My mouth and my brain don't always sync up properly and I end up with blocked speech. Thank you, Asperger's, or whatever the hell is wrong with me. So, I'm considering just using it as a reference when we talk again, and maybe reading bits and pieces of it out loud. It's not like I have to convince her of anything, I just want her to get the full story so she can completely understand why this is necessary for me.
She even asked me, when I first told her, if I wanted to get "the surgery". I said that's not something I need to worry about right now, and that if I got anything right now it would be electrolysis. Maybe sometime after that, a tracheal shave. SRS is a big deal, and far more expensive, and we don't exactly have the capability of affording that. The HRT and the electrolysis is enough of a dent in the bank account. I am, however, on the lookout for a job in journalism. I write every day, and I write a lot, so I think I should start getting paid for it.
Any thoughts?