Susan's Place Logo

News:

Visit our Discord server  and Wiki

Main Menu

What's happening to me?

Started by a-glass-brightly, December 14, 2015, 01:55:34 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

a-glass-brightly

I apologize in advance, 'cause this is gonna get long.


Four or five months ago, something changed for me. It came one night while I was brushing my teeth.

I was wearing my oldest, rattiest t-shirt (junior-high old - and I'm 23 and a half) and no bottoms (which i never do) and I happened to look at myself in the mirror for a long moment, when something strange happened. An image appeared in my head, and for a second, I thought "Huh. In this outfit, i look like a girl wearing just her boyfriend's old shirt and her underwear." It was both an idle thought and a bizarrely weighty one. From that moment on, it wouldn't leave me. I went to sleep thinking nervous circles around the idea of wearing girls' underwear, something i had never really tried before. I woke up still thinking about it. I went to work the next day and my head was swimming with these anxious, probing thoughts, half-formed questions about who and what i really was. this lasted for, i think, three days, before i couldn't take it anymore. i went out and i bought a pair of panties. i put them on that night before bed, expecting to feel a surge of some kind of dramatic feeling, after all this tension built up, but instead it was... relief? Almost like nothing. It was the absence of the anxiety and the questions and the obsessive thoughts. My mind was just quiet.

After that, i came to realize what I was feeling every day. It fit pretty well under the description of gender dysphoria: there was this constant nagging sense of wrongness and discomfort, of my body being ill-fitting to what it contained, manifesting in cycles of building anxiety and then emotional exhaustion, numbness.  All through the workday i would be a squirming, anxious wreck, and then by the time i got home all the bad feelings would be gone - but the thoughts they were attached to, the abstract notions of being in the wrong flesh, of people seeing me all wrong, those persisted. They just didn't have the same torturous emotional weight, like they'd just burnt me out. Then i'd put on my panties at night, and again i would feel quiet. Only for the cycle to start again the next day.

This went on for a couple of weeks before i told my therapist. By then I'd bought more girls' underwear, and some actual clothes, too. My days were consumed by dysphoric thought-patterns; i'd notice the shape of my shadow out of the corner of my eye and be struck by a pang of sick feelings. Et cetera. And then there was the doubt. Of course I was wondering if this meant I was transgender; i took the COGIATI and got category 4, "Probable Transsexual" - twice. [Four times, by now.] But there was a very significant part of me that was just doubt incarnate, and every time i would think i had landed on a conclusion, it would creep up with all this evidence and these counter-arguments about why that couldn't possibly be true. To the doubt in me, every moment I was free from dysphoria (without having to dress my way out of it) was just more proof that I was a fraud, that this was some kind of twisted bid for attention, a desperate desire to feel unique that was causing me to latch on to a marginal identity. I had no idea what was real; was the dysphoria a delusion? was the doubt a crutch? It was an endless loop of uncertainty, a labyrinth of spiraling doubts.

I told my therapist i thought i might be transgender, told her all about what had been happening. I told her about how strange it was, 23 years and not a hint of this until it hit me one night like a bolt from the blue. Later, i would tell my brother to imagine that he was just standing in the bathroom one night and suddenly a bullet came through the window and lodged itself in his arm. That's how sudden and strange this was.

And yet, as i talked it through in therapy, i could see traces, little ghosts of what was to come hiding throughout my past. The way i'd never had any of the acceptable masculine interests, unless you count video games; the way I had liked it when the neighbor girls would take me into their room and paint my toenails when i was little, even though i knew it wasn't meant for boys. The way i'd had crushes that bordered on hero-worship, as if some part of me was blurring the line between wanting her and wanting to be her. The way i had liked to play dress-up, to walk around in my mother's shoes. The way I had sometimes ended up wearing girl clothes in high school without even meaning to, just because I pulled something I really liked off the rack I didn't realize was 'wrong'.

I started to realize that I had no memory of ever having consciously identified as male. I didn't remember ever accepting or embracing masculinity like my brothers seemed to. I just remember it feeling a little alien to me, without me being able to articulate that until now. I remembered reading Stranger in a Strange Land in sophomore year, and how the book's gender- and sexuality-defying slant had resonated with me, how I had recognized myself as feeling like deep-down, gender maybe didn't quite reach me or apply to me in the way people assumed it to.

I became fairly convinced that I was transgender. So, after a few weeks of talking it over in therapy and coping with the dysphoria, I decided to tell my best friend. He's a wonderfully sweet, loyal person; sometimes I wonder if he's not actually a golden retriever who decided to take human form. He said he wasn't surprised. He told me that he'd always noticed my negative comments about my body had seemed... weird, to him. Like it was something more visceral and strange than merely feeling like I was unattractive. When he said that, I knew he was right. All through my teenage years, I was always frustrated with the maleness of my body, though I framed it a bit differently. I wish I was skinny and waifish and pretty, I always told myself (and sometimes my friends). I had always written it off as wanting to look like an anime boy, at the time. But sometimes the lumpy, hairy, angular, pudgy squareness of my body would get me so upset I'd self-harm ─ not in a really serious, permanent way, just punching myself in the stomach and things like that. Just every once in a while.

But the fact remained: I was starting to notice a pattern, a history to this seemingly out-of-nowhere thing taking root inside me. So, with the support of my best friend, I did the only thing that seemed right, and confessed to my girlfriend. A little background here: the two of us have been together for almost six years. At 23, that's nearly a quarter of our lives. We've felt like soulmates, even though neither of us believes in soulmates, for a while now. We're very, very close, and since we've been both next-door-neighbors and college roommates, we've spent almost every day together since May of 2010, the month of our high school graduation.

I told her. It was the second-worst night of my life. She sobbed like she was dying, and after a while, so did I. At first it was just an outpouring of grief, as we both fought off the feeling that our lives were over, because we couldn't be together anymore if this was the case. But then things took a stranger turn. She started... questioning me. Pointing things out that didn't sit right with her, little indicators that led her to believe this wasn't completely true, like something was missing from the picture. As first, I was resistant, but I listened to her, even gratefully after a while, as we talked it through. She said there were things about me that definitely seemed male, that I didn't really understand what being a girl was like. We convinced each other, over the next few hours, that I probably wasn't transgender. I probably wasn't a girl. I had to be something in the middle ─ still worth exploring, but different in the key sense of being livable. It was like a compromise that our relationship could handle.

That was three or four months ago, now. In the meantime, it's been a bit of a double life for me. During the great majority of the day, I have to maintain my masculine presentation, at work and with my family and friends. Every once in a while, I steal away to go shopping, and when I'm alone in my room, in the hours before bed, I experiment with gender. Slowly but surely, I edge closer to full-on feminine presentation; first it was panties and bralettes, then there were shorts and camis, followed by cardigans and sweaters, and then lipstick and a nightdress, until, the other day, I finally bought a full-on, actual dress. I'm trying these things out and finding them comfortable, finding that they all have the same quality of stilling the dysphoric thoughts, even dispelling the constant, wordless awareness of it, the background-radiation form of dysphoria that is little-felt but always there. It all seems to fade, when I'm dressed up. And in its place rises this lovely, subtle feeling of purity: of being in touch with my soul in a way that I wasn't before. I keep waiting, as I dig deeper and deeper into feminine expression, to find some kind of stopping-point, like a barrier that I'll hit where I realize "nah, this part isn't for me, this is the limit" ─ because I've been understanding myself as genderqueer, so I expect to have some kind of middle ground, right? Because if what feels right for me is full female expression, rather than a mix of genders, then... I'm back where I started, aren't I? I must be trans after all.

The doubt is stronger than ever, now. I feel my mind splitting into three parts, each with their own beliefs and agendas. One part is expecting this all to pass, assuming it to be some kind of short-lived phase that will leave me feeling oh so silly when it's all over ─ you're just a normal boy, it says. Get over it. Another part suspects that this is definitely real, but is convinced that I must be "just" genderqueer, or genderfluid, or a demigirl, or whatever mid-spectrum term works the best ─ don't be too hasty, it warns; don't go getting carried away, thinking crazy ->-bleeped-<- thoughts. And the last part of me earnestly believes that I was right all along, that I'm a trans girl ─ trust your feelings, it tells me. But beneath all of them, connected to all of them, is a fourth part, the part of pure doubt: it uses my own capacity for logic and self-reflection as a mercenary weapon, fighting for all sides and none. My mind is a never-ending debate, where all three sides, fueled by this fourth indestructible quantum of doubt, seek to undermine and debunk each other. I have no idea what to believe, what thoughts to trust and what to dismiss. I don't know what I am or where I'm going. I don't know what's real within my own mind. I feel so... unspooled.

This last week, I told two more people. First was my best female friend (besides my partner), and then my favorite brother. Both of them had more or less the same response as my best friend, the first one I told; they both seemed unsurprised. It made sense, they told me, without any sense of judgment or even distress in their reactions. They seemed less surprised or upset by it than I was.

Then there was this weekend. I hung out with some old friends, while wearing an outfit of mostly feminine or gender-neutral clothing, but in a way that wasn't very noticeable ─ crossdressing in stealth, essentially. And it felt good. I noticed a shift in my personality, as if the clothes brought out the truer form of me. There were moments where I actually kind of saw myself as a girl, that evening. The next morning, at therapy, I wore a black dress and a girl's sweater, my hair in pigtails done up just right, red lipstick on my lips, my face freshly shaved. It didn't feel like crossdressing. It felt right. More and more, I was experiencing myself as female. I felt more sureness, more of a sense of something real, than I had in weeks. Until that evening, when I got together with a different set of friends to go look at Christmas lights, and I noticed something disquieting: the dysphoria was hardly there at all. I barely thought or felt anything about my gender at all, the whole evening. And that was upsetting, because the doubt latched onto it and used it to dismantle the precious feeling of mostly-sureness that I had arrived at only that same morning. I was cut loose, adrift once again, and worse than before.

This all leads up to last night. My girlfriend and I, due to a series of ->-bleeped-<-ty events, ended up talking about it all over again. She wanted to know if our safe compromise was still holding true, if I still felt like I was really genderqueer, instead of being a girl. I told her the truth, that I was more uncertain than ever before, but she could tell I was leaning toward the trans theory. Things got heated, and I lashed out, admonishing her for the way she'd spoken to me in our first conversation, months ago. She had said these things to me, little insinuations that had taken root in my mind, exponentially feeding my own innate tendency to doubt and question: "You know sometimes your imagination gets you carried away", "I think you're biased, you're ignoring all the evidence", "It seems like your obsessing over it blew it out of proportion", things along that sort of gist. I blamed her for breeding this monstrous doubt that refuses to let me have a clear answer. We fought each other terribly, and apologized in turn. She said she hadn't meant to do that, to make me distrust my own feelings and question the validity of my thoughts, my reality. She had never intended to throw me for a loop like that.

But then the fight cycled back around, and she said more of the same, this time even worse. "I think you want it to be true," she said, when I suggested the possibility of me being trans. "For some reason, you're trying to see it that way." I told her point-blank the damaging effect those words would have on my ability to understand my situation, but she had already said it. Now I trust myself even less, though I don't trust her any more than that. After all, who stands to lose more from my transition, should that be what I decide to do? She needs me, she's told me. Her family life is in shambles, she tells herself she has no friends, but there's always been me. I try to tell her, "Maybe you're biased, maybe you have the ulterior motives," but she doesn't listen. I point out to her that everyone else I've told, who all have known me as long or longer than she, told me how unsurprised they were to consider me trans, how nonplussed they had all seemed—"They're just telling you what they can tell you want to hear," she tells me. We came closer to breaking up for good than we ever have before, but eventually we reconciled.

Now I am truly and utterly lost. The period of believing I was "just" genderqueer was where the dysphoria seemed at first to fade, though I never stopped having thoughts about my gender and its need to bend. But after a peaceful month or two, it just came creeping back, and I found myself hungry for more and more complete forms of feminine expression. Just when I was feeling almost like I could believe I was trans, for sure this time, the events of the last few days come along and detonate all those feelings of understanding. This week, I've decided, I'm going to test myself. I'm not allowing myself to cross-dress or engage in gender-bending experiments in any way, shape, or form, until next Saturday when I see my therapist again. I want to know how that absence makes me feel. It's the only move I can think of. But I don't know how to feel. All weekend I was considering this test, and the mere thought of it brought the familiar airless feeling of anxiety to my chest... but today, Day 1 of the new experiment, I feel less dysphoric than I have in a long time. I go looking for thoughts about my gender, and I don't find a lot. Maybe I'm just exhausted and blown-out from last night, probably the worst night of my life. Or maybe it means something else.

Please, someone, anyone who might have answers, help me. I am so, so terribly confused. I don't know what's going on in my head. I haven't known for a long time. It's only getting worse.
I feel like I'm losing my mind.
TL;DR – What am I?

P.S. It's gotten to the point where, even when writing this, I couldn't stop questioning my own motives. "Are you really looking for honest answers, or are you constructing the whole narrative in such a way to ensure validation of your own pet theory?"
I can't stand it. It never ends.
  •  

Laura_7

Here is a video:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfXQxn98Q6I

And here are a few resources that might help understand:
https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,197523.msg1756901.html#msg1756901

Many people now say being transgender has biological connections, to do with development before birth.
There are differences in brains of women and men, and the brain develops at a different time than the body so a mismatch is possible.

There is a huge transgender spectrum, from people crossdressing occasionally to full transition.
Its up to you to find where you are comfortable.

I'd say go with a feeling of joy... what you feel brings you joy.

Imo its no use repressing over long times.

Well your girlfriend might see what she saw as a male reflection she hopes to be there...
important imo is what you fee inside brings you joy.

Often transgender people have spent a lot of time adapting to others...
sometimes even kind of reading unconscious expectations...
I'd say try to feel... not necessarily the chatter of the mind... what you feel is you and brings you joy..


hugs
  •  

Tessa James

Welcome AGB,

Wow Honey you wrote us an epistle!  Thank you for sharing such a complete look at your personal dilemmas.  You are talking about some very familiar territory here.

You reminded me of one of my first trans awareness moments as an adult.  I will never forget it.  I too was wearing an extra long t shirt and feeling frisky.  For whatever reason I stuck some wadded up kleenex under my shirt and instantly had boobs.  I felt absolutely terrific and pranced around my place and danced to music.  I was out buying lingerie soon after.

You are the only one who can decide if you are transgender, transexual, or any of the labels commonly used around here.  Many of us had help with our "clues" from therapists, friends, families and mentors you can find here.  It is not unusual to work thru the labels and arrive at a place where you are simply being the authentic, unfiltered, wholly original and unscripted YOU.  Don't settle for some else deciding who you are.

Good luck and welcome aboard.
Open, out and evolving queer trans person forever with HRT support since March 13, 2013
  •  

Tamika Olivia

Hi, so first I had to do a quick check and make sure I didn't create this thread in my sleep. Absent a few details, I lived this story. Bullet realization, wrestling, dressing, dealing with people questioning my motives, and questioning my own motives.

Taking the central theme, the one sung in the refrain by your girlfriend, what if you're stacking the deck... looking for evidence in accord with your "pet" theory? I say unto you... why would you do this? For me, the answer always was: Because I want this to be true, so that I can transition. If you find that at the root of your thoughts, if that's what the core of it is... it kinda tells you the answer.

To answer the tl;dr question: Set aside your girlfriend, in this scenario she is on board for all ports of call... You have a button in front of you that will, if pressed, make you a cisgender female. No take backsies. Do you press it?
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Laura_7 on December 14, 2015, 02:20:39 PM

I'd say try to feel... not necessarily the chatter of the mind... what you feel is you and brings you joy..


hugs

That video helped a lot. I watched a bunch of her others, too.

But I think "follow the joy" is probably one of the best things I've gotten out of all my conversations about my issues. Thank you.

[The hugs, too, are much appreciated.]
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Tessa James on December 14, 2015, 02:34:59 PM
Welcome AGB,

Wow Honey you wrote us an epistle!  Thank you for sharing such a complete look at your personal dilemmas.  You are talking about some very familiar territory here.

You reminded me of one of my first trans awareness moments as an adult.  I will never forget it.  I too was wearing an extra long t shirt and feeling frisky.  For whatever reason I stuck some wadded up kleenex under my shirt and instantly had boobs.  I felt absolutely terrific and pranced around my place and danced to music.  I was out buying lingerie soon after.

You are the only one who can decide if you are transgender, transexual, or any of the labels commonly used around here.  Many of us had help with our "clues" from therapists, friends, families and mentors you can find here.  It is not unusual to work thru the labels and arrive at a place where you are simply being the authentic, unfiltered, wholly original and unscripted YOU.  Don't settle for some else deciding who you are.

Good luck and welcome aboard.

Thank you for saying this. It's proving really, really hard, but I guess I just have to keep working on filtering what is really natural to me from what is easiest for my relationships. I mean, if my relationship with myself is toxic, all I'm going to do is hurt those people in the long run, anyway...
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Tamika Olivia on December 14, 2015, 02:40:48 PM
Hi, so first I had to do a quick check and make sure I didn't create this thread in my sleep. Absent a few details, I lived this story. Bullet realization, wrestling, dressing, dealing with people questioning my motives, and questioning my own motives.

Taking the central theme, the one sung in the refrain by your girlfriend, what if you're stacking the deck... looking for evidence in accord with your "pet" theory? I say unto you... why would you do this? For me, the answer always was: Because I want this to be true, so that I can transition. If you find that at the root of your thoughts, if that's what the core of it is... it kinda tells you the answer.

To answer the tl;dr question: Set aside your girlfriend, in this scenario she is on board for all ports of call... You have a button in front of you that will, if pressed, make you a cisgender female. No take backsies. Do you press it?

God, it feels good to know I'm not the only one who's gone a little crazy about this.

You know, I kinda had the same thought last night, but I couldn't really articulate it like you just did. Like, yeah, maybe I DO want it to be true... because that's the only hope I have of ever fulfilling this feeling I'm having. Which would kinda prove I am transgender all by itself, would it not?

I get queasy with butterflies reading that question, which is probably some kind of sign. I'm... I'm pretty sure I would press it. I can't really say for certain, yet, but... that's definitely my instinct.
  •  

J-Sada

Quote from: a-glass-brightly on December 14, 2015, 01:55:34 PM
"I think you want it to be true," she said, when I suggested the possibility of me being trans. "For some reason, you're trying to see it that way."

I apologize in advance for not being able to offer too much in the way of advice, but as someone in a position very similar to your own, this really cut to me. I've been having the EXACT same conversation in my head for a while now. I can only imagine what it must be like to go through it with someone who you love. My heart goes out to you.

I will say though, that through all of my own self doubts, the difference between "wanting it to be true" and it "being true" have become very blurred. To the point that if there is any, it's negligible.

Just the other day, I was thinking about my career and making some long-term and short-term plans, my trans dilemma the furthest thing from my mind, when I just sort of automatically factored my transition into things. That got rid of a lot of doubt for me. It's still there, but things get clearer with time.
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: J-Sada on December 14, 2015, 07:19:35 PM


...the difference between "wanting it to be true" and it "being true" have become very blurred. To the point that if there is any, it's negligible.

...things get clearer with time.


The more I think about it and talk to people about it (especially here and on ->-bleeped-<-), the more I realize the truth of these two facts. It seems to be just a matter of hanging on and following your heart, and the feeling becomes easier to understand. And in a way, "wanting it to be true" actually kind of demonstrates that it is, I guess.
  •  

Rp1713

I have often had this fear of convincing myself or "wanting it to be true". I still do, but as someone said to me on here the other day, "if I was making it up... Why this?" No one wants to deal with this pain and confusion. Or the fear of losing the people you care about most in order to make yourself happy. The thing I'm starting to realize at the age of 25, as I truly contemplate my gender for the first time in my life, is that it is pretty much impossible to make everyone around you happy. I have spent far too much of my life trying to do just that, trying to make others happy, to appease them, often times leaving my own feelings to haunt me later when I'm alone. As I look back there's certain things that maybe could have hinted at what I'm really feeling, but I was too busy trying to fit in the little box that society expected me to be in.

The point is, only YOU can determine what you really want, and who you want to be. I am so sorry to hear of the struggle with your relationship. That is one thing that has kept me grounded in the last couple months since I came out to my girlfriend, her love and support. We all deserve to have this love and support, but for some it is harder to find than for others. I can understand that your girlfriend is scared, in part she's probably scared of losing you, and what you guys have. It's important for you to express to her that no matter what you decide, you will still be the same person, and that you still love her, but she will be seeing the authentic you, that you yourself have probably not even truly seen yet. It's also important for both you and her to realize that it is your choice to make. She doesn't get to decide where you land on the gender spectrum because she's not you. That's not to say you're NOT genderqueer, you could be. You could also be a trans-woman, and only you can come to the true answer, not her or anyone else.

I still don't know where I fall on the spectrum myself. On a personal level, I'm starting to think I fall somewhere in line with genderqueer, but I'm still not really sure, and I could easily come to a different realization in time. Right now what's important for you, as well as myself for that matter, is to find what makes you happy and feel like you. Find that feeling, and run with it. I'm still learning how to do that myself, it's not easy, but it's possible. Don't settle for anything less! You deserve to feel comfortable in your own skin as does everyone else!

Hugs, and much love!

Ry


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  •  

cheryl reeves

I also ask what's happening too me,I love dressing fem but I also like dressing male,but the older I get I'm now wanting too dress more fem then male and it's driving my wife crazy. Ever since two near death experiences Cheryl has been wanting more freedom and Terry is fighting for survival and I don't want too kill my marriage or break my promise of not going fulltime, I love my wife and she is my rock, if I lost her there won't be any Terry left. I keep telling her I've lost my balance and she tries her best too keep me somewhat sane.. I know about the mirror thing for I'm also just seeing Cheryl these days and no longer see Terry which terrifies me for I used too see both.
  •  

Jennilyn

Very interesting read! I've struggled with this my entire life! I remember the earliest being having my grandmother (Very poor babysitter, I'm surprised I didn't die or something) babysit me and I would rummage through her panty drawer and find something to wear that "I liked better" (I had to tie a knot in the side to fit, but I felt better)

The strange thing about my dysphoria though, is that It was never constant.. Until I came to terms with it. It would come and go.. and I would wash it out by doing something extremely manly, such as taking a job building houses.. I was very successful at this, but I hated life and I had no idea why.. I remember my relationships always being horrible because I was a control freak.. which later panned out to be me forcing the women I dated to look and act how I wanted to be.. not how I wanted them to be.. Weird I guess, huh?

After coming to terms and starting HRT, I was finally me! The dysphoria is still there, but It's so much better, and I actually love myself, and love life.. I've progressed rapidly in a new career because of my attitude, and dedication.. or so they tell me, hehe. But the person I am today just isn't the person I was..

Anyhoo! Thanks for sharing everyone! It's really nice to see that others have had similar struggles.

Jen
Sometimes it feels like life is an uphill race, sometimes it feels like a losing battle, but we need to shine on. No matter who's trying to turn off our light.
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Rp1713 on December 15, 2015, 11:58:25 AM
I have often had this fear of convincing myself or "wanting it to be true". I still do, but as someone said to me on here the other day, "if I was making it up... Why this?" No one wants to deal with this pain and confusion. Or the fear of losing the people you care about most in order to make yourself happy. The thing I'm starting to realize at the age of 25, as I truly contemplate my gender for the first time in my life, is that it is pretty much impossible to make everyone around you happy. I have spent far too much of my life trying to do just that, trying to make others happy, to appease them, often times leaving my own feelings to haunt me later when I'm alone. As I look back there's certain things that maybe could have hinted at what I'm really feeling, but I was too busy trying to fit in the little box that society expected me to be in.

The point is, only YOU can determine what you really want, and who you want to be. I am so sorry to hear of the struggle with your relationship. That is one thing that has kept me grounded in the last couple months since I came out to my girlfriend, her love and support. We all deserve to have this love and support, but for some it is harder to find than for others. I can understand that your girlfriend is scared, in part she's probably scared of losing you, and what you guys have. It's important for you to express to her that no matter what you decide, you will still be the same person, and that you still love her, but she will be seeing the authentic you, that you yourself have probably not even truly seen yet. It's also important for both you and her to realize that it is your choice to make. She doesn't get to decide where you land on the gender spectrum because she's not you. That's not to say you're NOT genderqueer, you could be. You could also be a trans-woman, and only you can come to the true answer, not her or anyone else.

I still don't know where I fall on the spectrum myself. On a personal level, I'm starting to think I fall somewhere in line with genderqueer, but I'm still not really sure, and I could easily come to a different realization in time. Right now what's important for you, as well as myself for that matter, is to find what makes you happy and feel like you. Find that feeling, and run with it. I'm still learning how to do that myself, it's not easy, but it's possible. Don't settle for anything less! You deserve to feel comfortable in your own skin as does everyone else!

Hugs, and much love!

Ry


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


I'm happy for you, that your partner is giving you the support you need. That's really powerful, and rare. But you're right - it's something we all want and deserve. Unfortunately for me, I've told my girlfriend all that already - that she doesn't have to see this as losing me - but to her, it doesn't really help. She's about as straight as they come, and I can't blame her for not wanting to be with a boyfriend that's not a boy anymore. It may just be that staying together is not in the cards, y'know?
I'll survive.
But I don't want my sad story to overshadow your happy one, in my mind or yours. That's really a wonderful thing, a blessing. <:]

Your words of encouragement mean a lot. You're right. This really should be as simple as doing what makes yourself feel happy, comfortable, grounded, at peace. "Everything else is background noise." I'm gonna try to keep all that in mind.

Thank you for all that you've said. <3

  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Jennilyn on December 15, 2015, 04:44:55 PM
Very interesting read! I've struggled with this my entire life! I remember the earliest being having my grandmother (Very poor babysitter, I'm surprised I didn't die or something) babysit me and I would rummage through her panty drawer and find something to wear that "I liked better" (I had to tie a knot in the side to fit, but I felt better)

The strange thing about my dysphoria though, is that It was never constant.. Until I came to terms with it. It would come and go.. and I would wash it out by doing something extremely manly, such as taking a job building houses.. I was very successful at this, but I hated life and I had no idea why.. I remember my relationships always being horrible because I was a control freak.. which later panned out to be me forcing the women I dated to look and act how I wanted to be.. not how I wanted them to be.. Weird I guess, huh?

After coming to terms and starting HRT, I was finally me! The dysphoria is still there, but It's so much better, and I actually love myself, and love life.. I've progressed rapidly in a new career because of my attitude, and dedication.. or so they tell me, hehe. But the person I am today just isn't the person I was..

Anyhoo! Thanks for sharing everyone! It's really nice to see that others have had similar struggles.

Jen

The inconstancy of dysphoria is honestly one of the worst things about it. Every time it ebbs away for a spell, you start to wonder if maybe you could just stick it out, keep living life without changing anything, and maybe it won't be so hard to bear. For me, it just feeds all the doubt and questioning. It makes me wonder whether it was ever real in the first place. Like the last couple of days, I've barely felt it at all, which is so confusing - doubly so because it happens to coincide with my decision to not cross-dress at all this week, as a test. I dunno what that means. Is it just a coincidence? It's not like I don't still want to, or wish I could, but it isn't having quite the negative effect I was anticipating.
See what I mean? If the dysphoria was just there, permanently nagging at the forefront of your mind, it'd be so much clearer.

I'm glad to hear that you're thriving! Having come through this to end up there, I hope you feel like you deserve it.
  •  

Rp1713


Quote from: a-glass-brightly on December 15, 2015, 06:21:58 PM

I'm happy for you, that your partner is giving you the support you need. That's really powerful, and rare. But you're right - it's something we all want and deserve. Unfortunately for me, I've told my girlfriend all that already - that she doesn't have to see this as losing me - but to her, it doesn't really help. She's about as straight as they come, and I can't blame her for not wanting to be with a boyfriend that's not a boy anymore. It may just be that staying together is not in the cards, y'know?
I'll survive.
But I don't want my sad story to overshadow your happy one, in my mind or yours. That's really a wonderful thing, a blessing. <:]

Your words of encouragement mean a lot. You're right. This really should be as simple as doing what makes yourself feel happy, comfortable, grounded, at peace. "Everything else is background noise." I'm gonna try to keep all that in mind.

Thank you for all that you've said. <3

Don't worry about overshadowing my story. I didn't take it that way. I completely empathize with what you've been going through, our partners just reacted differently once we had the courage to confide in them. For now I would say hold out. She may come around. It's not easy for anyone's partners, we have arguments and whatnot sometimes because tensions still run high. But the last time this happened I told her she just had to be honest with me about everything she's feeling and things have been a little better since then. I don't want you to think I said any of that to make you feel bad or like I was better off than you. You have just as much of an ability to be happy as me.... Not to say that I'm happy either, I'm just learning to accept myself as it comes. That's all any of us can do. This is just as new to me as it is to you. I suppose I just said those things about my relationship hoping it would somehow will your situation into being better.

It's definitely not simple for anyone of us, I'm sorry if I made it seem like it was for me. I wish it was. It's messed up that any of us have to worry about finding ourselves this much. I think the concept of gender has just been made so finite in our culture that it's hard for anyone that doesn't feel how we do to understand what we're going through. Unfortunately my girlfriend is the only person in my life that even knows. The fact of the matter is I'm afraid that most of my friends and family won't understand... Even she doesn't sometimes but she's trying.

Have hope, and know that there are plenty of people on here and beyond that know what you're going through and are happy to provide help and support! You're strong and you'll get through this to find the real you! The you that you're truly happy with!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  •  

a-glass-brightly

Quote from: Rp1713 on December 15, 2015, 07:07:57 PM
Don't worry about overshadowing my story. I didn't take it that way. I completely empathize with what you've been going through, our partners just reacted differently once we had the courage to confide in them. For now I would say hold out. She may come around. It's not easy for anyone's partners, we have arguments and whatnot sometimes because tensions still run high. But the last time this happened I told her she just had to be honest with me about everything she's feeling and things have been a little better since then. I don't want you to think I said any of that to make you feel bad or like I was better off than you. You have just as much of an ability to be happy as me.... Not to say that I'm happy either, I'm just learning to accept myself as it comes. That's all any of us can do. This is just as new to me as it is to you. I suppose I just said those things about my relationship hoping it would somehow will your situation into being better.

It's definitely not simple for anyone of us, I'm sorry if I made it seem like it was for me. I wish it was. It's messed up that any of us have to worry about finding ourselves this much. I think the concept of gender has just been made so finite in our culture that it's hard for anyone that doesn't feel how we do to understand what we're going through. Unfortunately my girlfriend is the only person in my life that even knows. The fact of the matter is I'm afraid that most of my friends and family won't understand... Even she doesn't sometimes but she's trying.

Have hope, and know that there are plenty of people on here and beyond that know what you're going through and are happy to provide help and support! You're strong and you'll get through this to find the real you! The you that you're truly happy with!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Oh, no, I definitely didn't think you were trying to lord your good fortune over me or anything like that at all! I'm very grateful for your hopeful message - and grateful, on your behalf, that you have someone who knows and is supportive of you. That makes it so much easier than suffering in silence, alone. There's so much more room to breathe, you know? I've been lucky in my own way, in that regard; I've told my three closest friends (besides my girlfriend) and they all had basically the perfect reactions, like it was not even a big deal in their eyes. I hope you discover that your own friends are better than you could have imagined. If I were you, I'd try to figure out how they felt about the trans phenomenon as clearly as possible, and hopefully at least one of them seems open-minded enough to confide in.

The honesty thing is hard for me. That's brave of you, to ask for her honest feelings. I can hardly stand to let it come up around my own partner; the way her face shifts visibly, like her whole mood has been ruined, is just too painful. We've been so close for so long, I can't stand to feel her pain, especially not when it's brought about by something that makes me happy. It's so hard not to resent someone for feeding the guilt you feel for this thing that ought to be is totally innocent.

Thank you again, so much, for all your support and encouragement. I'm an optimist by nature, but it still helps so much to feel positive energy radiating from a stranger.

  •  

Rp1713


Quote from: a-glass-brightly on December 16, 2015, 11:13:00 AM
Oh, no, I definitely didn't think you were trying to lord your good fortune over me or anything like that at all! I'm very grateful for your hopeful message - and grateful, on your behalf, that you have someone who knows and is supportive of you. That makes it so much easier than suffering in silence, alone. There's so much more room to breathe, you know? I've been lucky in my own way, in that regard; I've told my three closest friends (besides my girlfriend) and they all had basically the perfect reactions, like it was not even a big deal in their eyes. I hope you discover that your own friends are better than you could have imagined. If I were you, I'd try to figure out how they felt about the trans phenomenon as clearly as possible, and hopefully at least one of them seems open-minded enough to confide in.

The honesty thing is hard for me. That's brave of you, to ask for her honest feelings. I can hardly stand to let it come up around my own partner; the way her face shifts visibly, like her whole mood has been ruined, is just too painful. We've been so close for so long, I can't stand to feel her pain, especially not when it's brought about by something that makes me happy. It's so hard not to resent someone for feeding the guilt you feel for this thing that ought to be is totally innocent.

Thank you again, so much, for all your support and encouragement. I'm an optimist by nature, but it still helps so much to feel positive energy radiating from a stranger.

Unfortunately I know that several of my closest friends are not very open-minded or supportive of the idea. One of them actually worked with a trans individual and he would sometimes complain about how much she talked about it and I think began to resent the idea because of his experience with this person. I'm sure I have at least one friend I can confide it but it will take me some time to determine who that is.

I'm really sorry you have to go through that. I can see how it would be tough not to resent that person for feeling or acting the way the do, especially when your own feelings towards them wouldn't change if it weren't for their negative reaction. I'm glad you at least have some friends you can be yourself around and talk to about what you're going through.

I think it's a crazy terrible thing that so many of us have that guilt and shame over wanting to learn about a side of ourselves that either we or society has never allowed us to see. People should be able to like what they like, and be able to be who they are. It's that simple, or at least it should be. It's really not fair. But in the end well be stronger because of it. We're facing something that some people never do even when they have these feelings deep down inside.

I'm happy to share any positive energy I discover, everyone needs that feeling at points, I'm glad you were able to get that feeling and I hope I helped in some way. Since we're both sort of at the same stage with all this don't ever be afraid to reach out through PM or any way you feel. Thanks for being you and sharing your struggle! It's also comforting for me in some way to know that I'm not the only person that randomly got hit my this freight train that is gender Dysphoria in my 20s, and to a degree seemingly out of nowhere. But we'll get through this!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  •  

a-glass-brightly

#17
Quote from: Rp1713 on December 16, 2015, 01:37:21 PM
Unfortunately I know that several of my closest friends are not very open-minded or supportive of the idea. One of them actually worked with a trans individual and he would sometimes complain about how much she talked about it and I think began to resent the idea because of his experience with this person. I'm sure I have at least one friend I can confide it but it will take me some time to determine who that is.

I'm really sorry you have to go through that. I can see how it would be tough not to resent that person for feeling or acting the way the do, especially when your own feelings towards them wouldn't change if it weren't for their negative reaction. I'm glad you at least have some friends you can be yourself around and talk to about what you're going through.

I think it's a crazy terrible thing that so many of us have that guilt and shame over wanting to learn about a side of ourselves that either we or society has never allowed us to see. People should be able to like what they like, and be able to be who they are. It's that simple, or at least it should be. It's really not fair. But in the end well be stronger because of it. We're facing something that some people never do even when they have these feelings deep down inside.

I'm happy to share any positive energy I discover, everyone needs that feeling at points, I'm glad you were able to get that feeling and I hope I helped in some way. Since we're both sort of at the same stage with all this don't ever be afraid to reach out through PM or any way you feel. Thanks for being you and sharing your struggle! It's also comforting for me in some way to know that I'm not the only person that randomly got hit my this freight train that is gender Dysphoria in my 20s, and to a degree seemingly out of nowhere. But we'll get through this!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I'm sorry. That can't be easy to hear from a friend. I know the feeling. Best of luck in sifting the true friends from the bigoted shams. It'll be really hard to see people go, but hopefully it will strengthen you, in time.

Thank you for saying that. It's really hard, so far, but I'm enough of an independent person that I won't be destroyed if we end up having to separate. It doesn't invalidate the years we've spent together, or the feelings we've had for each other. Hearts heal and time goes on. So long as I have someone to call friend, I'll be fine. And I think the same goes for you.

Yeah, it's a hot load of injustice that we have to feel such intensely negative things because of something that gives us simple joy and self-acceptance. But society has never been kind to the individual, let alone those who transgress its narrow projection of what is acceptably human. In a way, knowing that helps, for me. It's easier to shrug off the guilt and shame when you see it for the vicious arbitrariness that it is.
And you're right. This will one day make us stronger, better, happier versions of ourselves. No matter how hard it may feel right now.

Thank you so much for your kind words, and for sharing yourself. Solidarity means a lot. And all the same goes for you - message me whenever you feel the want or the need.

Mod Edit: Language
  •  

Debra

You may think so but your story is not unique. Neither are your doubts.

We all come from some kind of similar pivotal point where we started to realize something was going on. And we all have doubts along the way.

I didn't realize things until I was 27 but like you, after going through a lot of my past in therapy , I was able to see the little indicators which I hid growing up....things I covered up and forgot about.

For me, it was a webcomic. A silly, stupid webcomic about a guy getting changed into a girl. It stirred up feelings deep inside myself I had hidden for so long....and it began my exploration.

I transitioned at 28 and here I am at age 34, married to the man of my dreams, with a great job, living a female life.....an authentic life. That being said, I had to leave my conservative bigoted family, ex-wife, and inlaws behind.

Why am I telling you this? Because you are not alone and there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Just know that nobody else can tell you who you are....if you are male or female or whatever. Only you can do that.

  •  

Rp1713

#19
Quote from: a-glass-brightly on December 16, 2015, 06:13:54 PM

Yeah, it's a hot load of <Not Permitted> that we have to feel such intensely negative things because of something that gives us simple joy and self-acceptance. But society has never been kind to the individual, let alone those who transgress its narrow projection of what is acceptably human. In a way, knowing that helps, for me. It's easier to shrug off the guilt and shame when you see it for the vicious arbitrariness that it is.
And you're right. This will one day make us stronger, better, happier versions of ourselves. No matter how hard it may feel right now.

So well stated. I fully agree that it helps to think this way. It has definitely opened me up to finding the real me that's in there somewhere. I just hope I someday get the courage to let that person shine outward. Right now this mindset helps me see no shame when Im alone and I look in the mirror. When I'm dressed up or wearing makeup for once in my life I see I smile looking back when I look in the mirror, I feel like I've never had that before. Or when I take comfort in little things in public like painting my nails clear or wearing my panties under my clothes. I suppose the first step to other people accepting you is loving yourself. This is the step I'm working on right now. Still so many ups and downs but I think overall I am becoming more comfortable with who I am slowly but surely, and becoming a better me because of it.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  •