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

Which aspects of your life have better prepared you for this big step?

Started by Sincerely Tegan, December 09, 2014, 01:54:24 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Sincerely Tegan

So, I am still early in my transition. However, it is already clear to me that there are certain skills that I have learned in my life through various jobs, experiences, and tasks that have better prepared me to more confidently enter this stage of my life. Through my work experience I have gained valuable tools that will make me more prepared to deal with the stresses and anxieties that transitioning life might throw my way.

I started life as a very shy and unconfident person; this only got worse as I entered my teen years. Around this time, though, I also began working. Customer service requires you to not only deal with all kinds of people, but to do so confidently, a skill that I learned over the course of a dozen or so crap jobs over the years. Being an educator these days, I have had to learn an even greater sense of diplomacy, removing my ego from situations in order to maintain control and keep the peace.

I am no longer that shy and unassertive person I was half a lifetime ago, and I can thank my work experience a great deal for that. I would imagine that the confidence, empathy, and ability to remove myself from a situation (framing it in healthier and less personal ways) will be invaluable as I step into the unknown.

How many of you feel that your prior experiences will act as training for what is to come in your transition?

Cheers,
Tegan
"You get what anyone gets. You get a lifetime."
-Death, Neil Gaiman's Sandman
<a href="http://www.tickerfactory.com/">
<img border="0" src="http://tickers.tickerfactory.com/ezt/d/4;52;467/st/20141025/e/Begun+HRT/k/203a/event.png"></a>
  •  

Lostkitten

Eventually I learned I am good at being creative, could turn my job into that and that the way you look/behave/act/feel has all to do with creativity. To me the main focus of my transition has never been about changing as a person from the inside but how to develop my creativity on the outside. Sounds funny maybe but it is how it worked for me :P. The better I gotten at the job and the more confident I gained, the smoother my transition went also.
:D Want to see me ramble, talk about experiences or explaining about gender dysphoria? :D
http://thedifferentperspectives3000.blogspot.nl/
  •  

suzifrommd

Being trained as an engineer really helped. I treated my transition as a project, where I prioritized tasks, assessed risks and analyzed results to find out how my presentation could be improved.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
  •  

Rachel

I am a Licensed Engineer, run projects, physical plants, have 30 staff (operating engineers) and do presentations to our department, senior leadership and at conventions. I also present, project manage and operate very creative energy saving projects.

Prior to telling my boss I am trans and everything else about myself, he had a professional development plan made for me by an outsourced psychologist. Basically I had 4 things that I dread and fear most I had to overcome and measure progress against a goal and it was part of my evaluation. One item was presentations. I took professional presentation courses and now can make and present professionally to large audiences.  I am presenting at a national convention in March.

I was in an auditorium today where I must do a presentation to leadership in January or February. I was looking at the organizations leadership of which 90% are female and looking at their cloths and imagining myself presenting expressing. I really think I can do it. At first I thought I can do it only if I get FFS then I  thought if I can not get FFS can I do it. I just do not know, maybe. Then I thought they will know either way so perhaps I could either way but looking better would definitely help me be more at ease.
HRT  5-28-2013
FT   11-13-2015
FFS   9-16-2016 -Spiegel
GCS 11-15-2016 - McGinn
Hair Grafts 3-20-2017 - Cooley
Voice therapy start 3-2017 - Reene Blaker
Labiaplasty 5-15-2017 - McGinn
BA 7-12-2017 - McGinn
Hair grafts 9-25-2017 Dr.Cooley
Sataloff Cricothyroid subluxation and trachea shave12-11-2017
Dr. McGinn labiaplasty, hood repair, scar removal, graph repair and bottom of  vagina finished. urethra repositioned. 4-4-2018
Dr. Sataloff Glottoplasty 5-14-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal in office procedure 10-22-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal revision 2 4-3-2019 Bottom of vagina closed off, fat injected into the labia and urethra repositioned.
Dr. Thomas in 2020 FEMLAR
  • skype:Rachel?call
  •