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Are we the "same person" after transition?

Started by Tessa James, January 11, 2016, 02:45:46 PM

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Sharon Anne McC


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I made, to me anyway, profound changes from the start - mostly education sparking my introspection.

My first 'lessons' were high school psychology classes during 11th Grade (1972 - 1973, age 16).  The teacher distributed his mimeographed hand-outs one day during Spring quarter.  The discussion topic right there - 'sexual perversions' and 'deviants' - especially transvestites and transsexuals.  I read that in his lesson plan.  I began trembling with mixed emotions; I had to hold back tears to prevent me from crying aloud.

I am NOT a 'pervert' or a 'deviant'!  I hold no impure thoughts toward others.  I am me, a girl, a teen-aged young adult female.  One of these days, I kept telling my self, I shall be a full adult female.  That is neither 'perversion' nor 'deviant'.

I had to hold my tongue throughout these lessons - I knew they were all wrong but I kept it to myself because it was what we had to do during those dark, oppressive days only a few here at Susan's can remember first-hand.

After high school, I attended college and completed numerous courses in psychology and sociology as well as medical sciences.

Outside of class, I also read what little sociological and psychological books that I could find at my small-town Public Library.  I read about gender and the rare find that maybe commented on gender identity and transsexual issues of the day - including the topic of feminine and masculine protesting.

Introspection continued into knowledge.  You see, abusive parents raise children who themselves become abusive and then abusive parents - that vicious cycle.  Meanwhile, I was improving my personal behaviour and attitude.  My growing awareness helpt me deliberately decide that I must break that cycle - dangerous for my health regarding my family relationships.  My devolving attitudes created additional division and conflict within the family - them against lonely me.

My mental adjustment did not sit well with my abusive father.  My rebellion against him continued while still living at home financially dependent upon him as a college student.  He snooped in my room finding my books and evidence he may not have understood was of my stealth transition.  There he was the elementary school principal and lay director of our Catholic parish's education program, finding ways to become more abusive to me, frequently beating me and assaulting me with impunity.

I felt trapt.  There were no domestic abuse hotlines as there are today.  There were no police available for my protection.  If anything, if I dared called for any help of what little existed at that time, then I would have been the one targeted as the violator, not my dad, this well-respected man of the community.  The police would have put me in prison or worse - involuntary and indefinite commitment to the psycho ward.

About a decade ago, when my Catholic parish faced legal troubles during the exposure of the pederast priest scandals, I learned my dad was a co-conspirator with the parish's youth pastor.  My dad died in 1989 at age 62; he evaded that scandal in life but his legacy persists in his death.

I suppose among my more notable changes is my loss of quick temper.  I am easy-going, mellow, and deliberative.  The absence of abusive family is a great load lifted off my shoulders.  I discovered my path to be who I am.  I would say that I am who I always was.

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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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Adena

Quote from: Asche on January 12, 2016, 04:39:09 PMI want to be different.  I want to be gentler, more empathic, more patient, more vulnerable.  I want to be the girl that I envision, awkward and unglamorous, but ernest and giving.  (Which I don't feel I am right now.)  I want to be able to feel -- even if it means feeling more pain.  I want to be able to cry.  I don't know if that means being a "different person," or just the same person, changed.

I can really relate to this. The dysphoria is really hitting me tonight. I don't have to be a beautiful sexy woman. But I want to be the real (and happier) me.

Denali
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Adena

Quote from: Sharon Anne McC on January 13, 2016, 03:11:19 PM
I suppose among my more notable changes is my loss of quick temper.  I am easy-going, mellow, and deloLiberative.  The absence of abusive family is a great load lifted off my shoulders.  I discovered my path to be who I am.  I would say that I am who I always was.
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Sharon Anne, thank you for sharing your story. I am sooo happy for you that you have found yourself and broken the cycle of abuse now in your life. Blessings upon you!

Love,
Denali
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diane 2606

I'm the same, yet different.

As a child I would spend time available for daydreaming thinking about being female. In the 1950s that wasn't acceptable, and because I was the only person in the history of the universe who was uncomfortable in my skin, I needed to find an outlet — sports. If I was thinking about a ball and what happened between white lines, I wasn't thinking about that forbidden thing. It turns out I really enjoyed playing baseball and football, despite the fact that I was neither big enough nor athletic enough to be successful beyond the sandlot. That didn't matter to me, I just loved participating. Post-op I played co-ed softball for several years. When I got to be too old for that I took up golf. The same.

Girls, women, I was always attracted to them. I still am. The same.

What's different is how I interact with people. I don't have to pretend to be one of the guys. I never was; it was all an act. I'm so much more comfortable being one of the girls. I have to be careful about my history with other women; I say as little as possible. I've gotten good at smiling and nodding whenever female things I never experienced become the topic. I'm still a self-centered twit.
"Old age ain't no place for sissies." — Bette Davis
Social expectations are not the boss of me.
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Peep

People change a lot when they're not trans though. I'm already not the same person i was five years ago but that's not  exclusively because I've started to transition. I was one person at primary school, another at highschool, another at uni, another since i left. In another five or six years I'll be someone else. I suppose I agree with same but different (although I haven't transitioned yet I imagine that'll be the answer once I do). There are lots of things that affect and alter a person. Even just where you live or who you see every day. I tend not to worry about becoming a stranger after transitioning because it might happen anyway if i don't.
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