Hi, Anna!
I have a few things in common with you:
-I also feel I'd need to spend dozens of thousands, mainly in surgery, just to get CLOSE to where I'd like to be.
-I get misgendered on occasion too, specially by people who knew me before transitioning. It's strange that most people seem to keep an "old picture" of one, from before, and just can't see the "new picture". But as I gain confidence, they are starting to not make such a mistake.
-I also make the mistake of comparing myself to cis women. There's no point really. One should compare mostly to oneself, before and after. If I was 51-38-40 (chest, waist, hips as a male bodybuilder at the end of my puberty) and now I am 43-33-42 (breasts, waist, hips), then that's what counts. Compared to MYSELF before transition, I am doing great. Compared to many super-lucky cis women who are naturally curvy , super-fem and delicate, I still look too different, but i have to compare to myself in the past, not to others with very different physical features than mine, from birth.
-Not only don't I have anything in common with my family, but they all have also distanced themselves from me since I told them I am trans. It seems this is a common story for maybe 80% or more of the trans population (just my personal estimation). So we have to grow a thick skin and get used to it. Some of them relatives will, in time, accept you or, at least, tolerate being with you. That's better than nothing!
-I don't have a job either. Since I haven't been able to do my legal name and identity change, I just can't apply for jobs "as a guy". I live with my parents currently, so I have to put up an act with them, then go out and be a different person, and all this takes a big psychological toll on me.
-I also have a supportive boyfriend that means the world to me, and without him, I'd have probably terminated myself by now. To him, I'm 100% a woman, in fact, more a woman than all cis ones he has ever met. Talk about a vote of confidence! JUST FOR HIM I want to keep going on with my transition. If I know I am making one person real happy by being the real me, in spite of my non-supporting family and the occasional peanut-brained bigot, then I will keep at it!
*And now, ta daa, the commentary and advice:* 
First, if that picture is you, WOW. You'd have to be very tall (six feet even is my height) and have a big bone structure like me, in order to not pass with a face like that. And you actually look petite. But pictures are way different than reality, I know. Yet if someone looks like a female model in a picture, then in reality they shouldn't look too bad IMO.
As for advice, first, I have been almost six years HRT and almost five since orchi and t-shave, so evidently, I am not anywhere as young as you are. I started my HRT after my puberty had ended.
It has taken me all these years (and the highest dose of estrogen, for close to a year non-stop for the first time in my life), to FINALLY get self-acceptance, and care MORE about how I see myself than how others see me, and this confidence, strangely but surely, makes others accept you in the end, in case they have some doubts or issues with you at first sight.
So, the simple suggestion from me is this: LET ESTROGEN DO ITS JOB. If you're not there yet, start working towards getting the highest estrogen dose possible, a safe one of course, supervised by your endo and checking your blood work. I made the mistake of thinking that being post-op, after orchi, I should go to the lowest possible estradiol dose, and that really messed me up for several years. Now that I am at full dose, everything is different in my mind, and I also see changes in my body, that I didn't see before.
Also, instead of alcohol, why not try exercise and watching comedy or fun stuff to crack yourself up? I love doing the leg and butt Mike Chang workouts, they only take about 20 minutes, but I feel totally energized during and afterwards. Then I do one of those oldie stretching routines from Cindy Crawford, to warm down, it feels so nice!!! Then I play some nice/relaxing music, and then a nice shower, a little pampering of myself and now, looking and feeling good, maybe go to the convenience store or the mall or whatever, with a face naturally glowing... then back home, watch funny comedy stuff like Tosh.o or whatever stuff that cracks me up (American Dad is cool too, I love watching Roger's shenanigans).
Bottom line, for me the key things to finding self-acceptance (and thus getting social acceptance that I didn't have before, except my bigot family, but I am sure even they will accept me, in time) are all these:
--Estrogen, the fullest possible monitored dose you can handle.
--Exercise (Chang, oldie Cindy Crawford and aerobic dance workouts, anything fun and feminine, not too complicated, stressing the lower body) and listening to nice music, as opposed to alcohol and drugs.
--Listening to cool music, cracking myself up for whatever reason, and, in public, avoiding having a "resting bitch face", instead, at least a small grin, and whenever I hear something funny from the people I'm talking to, having a nice feminine smile or laugh. That helps way more than surgery or tons of makeup!!!
--Just recently I started taking SSRI medicine, for depression and social anxiety. It has worked fine for me, but everybody is different. I am also taking progesterone, half dose, daily, they say it also helps decrease depression, and it has actually helped my breasts grow a bit fuller.
I hope you had the time to read all this super-lengthy drivel, I rarely respond to stuff on here, but your situation seems somewhat similar to mine, so I wanted to share it with you!
Cheers
Bibi B.
Quote from: Annabolton on March 18, 2015, 11:39:59 PM
this has been happening to me a lot lately...it happened in the beginning too especially right before I got on hormones.. I have just been feeling really dissatisfied with the way my transition is... like I just feel like if I ever wanna look close to the way I want im gonna have to pay thousands and thousands and I will have to wait a long time probably...im only nineteen and started hormones at eighteen and been on them a year and still don't know that I pass fully...im pretty sure I got sired for the first time a couple weeks ago... I just constantly compare myself to others both cis women and transwomen and I always find stuff that makes me feel inferior... ive pretty much grown distant with all friends I had not because im trans but more just the situation...I don't feel anything in common with my family and I only really have my boy friend... and although I love him and enjoy his company I don't think he will ever get or understand how I feel being trans or know how to make me feel better...our relationship has other challenges too which make it not ideal but nonetheless he's the best thing right now..i don't have a job and im so afraid to get one assuming I could get one...everything I want that would make me feel more comfortable with myself and working at a job costs thousands and I guess would require me getting a job and feeling very uncomfortable.... anyways Im kinda drunk right now (don't know if im allowed to say that??) so if anythings incoherent that's why...but ya anyone else feel this way any advice??