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19 Heartbreakingly Honest Confessions About Dating As A Transgender Person

Started by Willowicious, December 14, 2015, 07:14:01 AM

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Willowicious

19 Heartbreakingly Honest Confessions About Dating As A Transgender Person

Ali Velez
BuzzFeed
Nov. 25, 2015, at 7:51 p.m.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/alivelez/19-honest-confessions-about-what-its-like-to-date-as-trans#.uvJ43keZL0

""Everyone is either disgusted by me, or they just fetishize me without treating me like an actual person." All confessions courtesy of Whisper."


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Sharon Anne McC

It is not always some other person who is attacking a transsexual.

I know a transsexual who who fits #7 with all her complaining yet she spends her day job working at her computer and her free time at her computer.  I ask her when she goes anywhere or does anything and it's like pulling teeth - all her whining how no one wants her, how her wife and children rejected her, how she has nowhere to go for the holidays because no friend wants her, how men want her only as a novelty.

All we need to do is get off our duff and join the real world where we can find real people who love us for our real selves.  The proof is right here at this Susan's web-site.  Look at all the spouses who stay with their transsexual partner - threads listing them innumerably.  Okay, sure, there are plenty of spouses who do reject their transsexual spouse but that's a loss worth getting over and finding someone better.

I propose that all the transsexuals who have remained in their partnership or marriage and families post here or to a new thread and share what makes their partnership or marriage stay together.

Sorry to sound so harsh to some people.

I was depressed all last year - it was a bad year.  But that excuse ran dry with my counsellors and my self.  I have been restoring my life in 2015; 2016 will be open to all new possibilities.  I challenge each of us to find our future in this coming new year.

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1956:  Birth (AMAB)
1974-1985:  Transition (core transition:  1977-1985)
1977:  Enrolled in Stanford University Medical Center's 'Gender Dysphoria Program'
1978:  First transition medical appointment
1978:  Corresponded with Janus Information Facility (Galveston)
1978:  Changed my SSA file to Sharon / female
1979:  First psychological evaluation - passed
1979:  Began ERT (Norinyl, DES, Premarin, estradiol, progesterone)
1980:  Arizona affirmed me legally as Sharon / female
1980:  MVD changed my licence to Sharon / female
1980:  First bank account as Sharon / female
1982:  Inter-sex exploratory:  diagnosed Inter-sex (genetically female)
1983:  Inter-sex corrective surgery
1984:  Full-blown 'male fail' phase
1985:  Transition complete to female full-time forever
2015:  Awakening from self-imposed deep stealth and isolation
2015 - 2016:  Chettawut Clinic - patient companion and revision
Today:  Happy!
Future:  I wanna return to Bangkok with other Thai experience friends

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Dee Marshall

I'll be honest, my wife and I are still together and in love 18 months since I came out to her and 15 months into HRT, but we're still feeling our way day by day. There's no doubt the relationship has changed, sex, for example, is off the table for her, and what our marriage will end up being is anybody's guess. Some days I'm optimistic, some days I'm not.
April 22, 2015, the day of my first face to face pass in gender neutral clothes and no makeup. It may be months to the next one, but I'm good with that!

Being transgender is just a phase. It hardly ever starts before conception and always ends promptly at death.

They say the light at the end of the tunnel is an oncoming train. I say, climb aboard!
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diane 2606

My personal opinion, which should have zero credibility, is that dating before being at least one-year post-op can be problematic.  Anytime before that life is filled with adjustments. Adding other people to the mix will throw you off your game.
"Old age ain't no place for sissies." — Bette Davis
Social expectations are not the boss of me.
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FreyasRedemption

In my case, it's less "no one wants to date me" and more "I don't want to date anyone before I'm done with my transition".
There is a better tomorrow.
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suzifrommd

Yes. Heartbreaking. Hits home, and hits hard. Nice to hear that at least I'm not alone.

:icon_cry2:
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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BunnyBee

This paints a very futile picture that isn't 100% true. I will tell you that it is possible to have a happy experience with it. I get that for some it actually is very hard, and I am definitely not denying that, just saying if you want it, maybe give it a whirl and see what happens. Don't let things like this make you give up without trying.
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suzifrommd

Quote from: BunnyBee on December 14, 2015, 07:32:14 PM
Don't let things like this make you give up without trying.

No, I wouldn't. I've been trying to date for more than two years now. I'll keep trying. But I'd be lying if I said I wasn't discouraged.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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michelle666

When I began transitioning my relationship of 15 years ended(for other reasons. She actually wanted me back because she likes me much better now). I spent a couple of weeks under a blanket on the couch and then said <not allowed> this. I created an okcupid profile and immediately started getting dates with beautiful woman. I made a few good friends from it and had some week long flings, then one morning I walked into my motorcycle safety class and saw the woman that I would marry a year later. We've been together pretty much everyday since we met in May 11 2014 and we were married on May 22 2015. For me, dating became so much better because I met the love of my life.
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Joelene9

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Amy1988

I have no interest in romance at all so dating is not a problem for me.  I feel lucky that I was spared that burden. 
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iKate

Quote from: FreyasRedemption on December 14, 2015, 11:49:22 AM
In my case, it's less "no one wants to date me" and more "I don't want to date anyone before I'm done with my transition".

Same here. I have other issues to deal with too. I'm not dating until I'm post op and free to date even though I have many opportunities.
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