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Comfortable cis childhood/teenhood?

Started by Zoe the Obscure, August 11, 2014, 01:21:54 AM

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Jenna Marie

I was happily cis until I was in my 30s. And then the revelation hit me like a truck, and I *had* to transition.

There aren't as many of us telling stories like this, and it had me convinced I was wrong/faking for a while, but considering I had GRS 2 years ago - I think I really am trans. :)
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ashley_thomas

One of my best friends had no idea until she was mid thirties, none whatsoever. She's one year now and went full time 4 months into her transition.  There are other like you and her out there.
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Rainbow Brite



I dont remember much about my childhood. But there are pictures of me with a baby doll and me wearing a potty as a crown. ( I was little) I have no idea why I was wearing a crown. Then, after I came out to my Mum at age 19, she told me she knew I had been dressing as a woman since I was 11 years old. I do remember playing with girls as a child though.

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JulieB

Quote from: Jenna Marie on August 11, 2014, 06:53:28 PM
I was happily cis until I was in my 30s. And then the revelation hit me like a truck, and I *had* to transition.

There aren't as many of us telling stories like this, and it had me convinced I was wrong/faking for a while, but considering I had GRS 2 years ago - I think I really am trans. :)

You sound like me!  I am 22, and I just realized this year I am transgender.  Granted, I haven't been to a therapist yet (am planning to).

I never realized I was for so long.  I didn't really mind having a beard, and getting called by male terms didn't offend me.  However, after looking back, I never felt masculine at all and I related better with girls than boys - aside from the shyness, since I had social anxiety and was attracted to girls.

Now that I realize I am transgender, it all makes so much more sense.  On the downside, my dysphoria has really been increasing - I called myself a guy today in a casual conversation and felt a sharp jolt of discomfort on the inside.  Bleh.
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Jenna Marie

Julie : Yeah, it gets a lot harder in some ways once you know what you want. But you sound like a determined woman, so you should be on your way shortly!

I wasn't exactly a typical guy either, but I had other friends in high school who were also geeky scrawny boys who hung out mostly with girls... none of 'em even turned out to be gay or trans that I know of. So I personally consider myself to have *been* a guy - once. I just got over it. :)
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Jill F

As a small child I vastly preferred the company of girls.  Most boys were mean and liked to use me as a punching bag.  Most of my friends were girls until I was 8 or so, when I was forced to socialize with more boys via scouting.  I loved the idea of hiking and camping, but we'll say I found myself at the bottom of that pecking order right away.  I had very few friends at the time, most of whom were also social outcasts and rejects. Sometimes the neighborhood boys would actually put up with me, the weird, smart, fat kid.  I wasn't invited to birthday parties and was frequently intentionally excluded from activities.  I basically got my ass kicked almost every day until I was in high school.  All this time I wished I could just trade places with any of the girls I knew.  I didn't fit in with them exactly either, but it was a much better fit than with the boys.  Playing dolls and hopscotch just never ended with the ridicule I'd get from trying to play baseball, basketball or football.

When I got to high school, I promised myself that I was not going to be victimized anymore.  Over the summer, I had grown to 5'10" and got my first "guy muscles".  I still had no real friends, and (of course) I encountered my first bully on the first period of the first day.  I don't know how I landed the first punch I threw, but I loosened his front teeth and was left alone for over a year.  I didn't really have any close friends at all until I was 15, when I discovered pot and booze.  Turned out I fit in pretty well with the stoner musician metalheads that cut classes.  I still wished I was one of the girls, but I learned to numb myself as part of my coping repertoire.  I also became a pretty good musician when I discovered that learning guitar could take my mind off of my gender issues for hours at a time.
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anjaq

I guess my parents put me into child therapy at aroudn the age of this photo

I guess I was too girlish for them by that time. Especially my dad who actually tried to force me into competition sports. Luckily they divorced and my mom was the artistic type who allowed me a lot more freedom.

At teenage times, the body changes were so severe that I totally bottled up though and was basically sort of a robot until I came out of it at age 22

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Rainbow Brite

Quote from: anjaq on August 13, 2014, 09:20:26 AM
I guess my parents put me into child therapy at aroudn the age of this photo

I guess I was too girlish for them by that time. Especially my dad who actually tried to force me into competition sports. Luckily they divorced and my mom was the artistic type who allowed me a lot more freedom.

At teenage times, the body changes were so severe that I totally bottled up though and was basically sort of a robot until I came out of it at age 22

I had to see a psychologist myself when I was a child. I have no idea why though or what they found out though.
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anjaq

She actually was questioned by my therapist when I did need the letters for name change and surgeries - but as I understand it, she could not remember me and they did not keep the files that long. I have few memories about playing with the toys in her office which may have been fun, but it was also strange. I was so introvert at some point, so I guess that was probably their diagnosis. Also my parents were divorcing, so they probably declared it is all caused by the divorce. Sigh - well, of course it would have been nice to be asked the right questions back then, but 1980ies - people did not really know about childhood gender/sex issues.

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kira21 ♡♡♡

I remember telling my mum I was a girl age 3 or.  I was so proud of myself for working it out. She was angry tho and corrected me.  I was just an odd boy.  That's how I saw myself.  I started having dreams of being a girl when I was 8. I kept it all in. I still thought of myself just a crazy reject  type,all through school, and after, until I transition,when I realised I couldn't be a man anymore. I was already so feminine wearing women's clothes and make up as an odd boy.  I have never had make friends who were men men.  I have three  male friends and they are my longest standing friends.  One turned out to be a non transitioning trans girl (chances?) and the others are as far from Red blooded men as you could imagine, arty types.  It means I have never really spoken to men men, and now they are paying me attention and trying to talk to me, it's weird. My experience of men has been nothing like the sports bar men men,  and the guys I dated were gay . Now getting attention and conversation from men is something I have to get my head round. 

Rainbow Brite

I think this was my princess crown, lol. I took my potty (clean of course) and wore it.


But, I seemed happy, for the most part....


Well, after a few years....


when I was a teenager....


I have a picture of me with a doll too somewhere. I think my Mum has it in her collection of photos of me she is sending. I remember identifying with Ariel, the Little Mermaid when I first saw her and really wished I could be like her.http://images6.fanpop.com/image/photos/37200000/Ariel-The-Little-Mermaid-rkebfan4ever-37259156-620-940.jpg

And I didn't want to be a Ninja Turtle, I wanted to be Mona Lisa or April O'Niel
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Kimberley Beauregard

I had a traumatic childhood but I put that down to delayed social development and poor upbringing.  I did sometimes envy women for their figures when I was a young teen, but that was nothing major.  I definitely had that side to me but I was forced into a male role and I had no trouble going with it.
- Kim
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