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Do you ever feel like you're gaslighting yourself?

Started by AnamethatstartswithE, March 08, 2016, 03:22:09 PM

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AnamethatstartswithE

I don't know, I sometimes start to question whether I do deeply want to be female, our whether I'm just somehow working myself into this. It seems like the dysphoria ebbs and flows throughout the day. When it's bad I feel like I can't start transition fast enough, when it's ok I start to wonder why I'm even contemplating it.

Does anyone else go through this?
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Claire

All the time. Things swing wildly. Something real is going on however. Reading through many of these threads it seems very very common but it doesn't make it less real. One pat mentioned that we've spent our whole lives denying this and so it is our default mode of thinking.

Claire (née Dori)
Claire.
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DAWN MID GIRL

Hi sis occasionally I question do I really want to do this? But then all I have to do is look down and I know because I had what I am. That's the reason we all do it, fear,anxiety about it is what gives us dowdte about it but in the end we know we are doing the right thing. So gust keep your head up and try to stay happy.

BY FOR NOW
Always love your self for your special  :-*
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Obfuskatie

Being confused about your emotions and your relationship with your body is normal, especially for a trans person. It isn't actually possible to gas-light yourself, because you can't play tricks on yourself to make yourself think your losing your mind. What your describing sounds like conflicting desires, ambivalence, and/or cognitive dissonance.

-conflicting desires are normal, we are all pulled in many different ways by our family, friends, environs, and the pressures we accept in our social lives, jobs and responsibilities. Think about being trans as how you would be happiest inhabiting your body instead of how it relates to other people. Yes there are consequences for any choice or action we make regarding commencement or postponement of transition. If you let the pervading fear of the bad guide you, you'll never get to the good.

- ambivalence is also pretty normal. Many of us figure we have privileges we'll lose, we worry about what we're trading as though they are equitable. I'm a firm believer in transition, though it might not be everyone's preference. But there is no right time or way to begin and go through transition, there's only the here and now. If you plan ahead and do everything "perfect," you're still probably going to be outed, so I think the biggest hurdle of all is simply accepting yourself and surrounding yourself with people who you are already out to, and not really caring who does or doesn't know. When you aren't ashamed of who you are and what you represent, the demagogs and bigots lose their ability to harm us with their ignorant words. That doesn't mean that they can't still hurt our feelings by being jerks, and can still assault us with violence however, but letting them make you fear being happy gives them way more agency than they deserve.

- cognitive dissonance is when you believe conflicting things. A lot of transition is relearning things you thought you knew before. Maybe an easier way of getting past this is to look at truth as relative in a lot of situations. There are facts and hard black/white truths, but they aren't as ubiquitous as probabilistic truths. The more set in stone something is, the less relevant it tends to be IMO. Anyway, most cis people don't come across this dissonance without something they have blind faith in with zero context, and suddenly find a pertinent context that makes them question their blind faith for the first time. We trans folk are born with it when we have to choose between how we were assigned and how we identify.

I don't know which case fits you best, maybe it's something else altogether, or maybe it's a combination of things. Just know that you're normal, and if anything, this can help you make conscious and informed choices. The only person who can tell you that you are or aren't trans, and where on the gender spectrum you are most comfortable is yourself, or maybe a good gender therapist. I'm a big fan of experimentation and empirical evidence, so if you need to be persuaded, maybe by taking baby steps you will see the path you want to take after finding a bit more clarity.
I planned out my transition years before I mustered up the courage to do it, then I found that I was constantly adjusting my plans to fit my schedule and other commitments. Not everything goes to plan, but getting the initial inertia helped me keep taking steps forward instead of backtracking.


     Hugs,
- Katie
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk



If people are what they eat, I really need to stop eating such neurotic food  :icon_shakefist:
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AnamethatstartswithE

Thank you everyone.

One thing that drives me crazy is that being around other people tends to make me not think about wanting to be female. I seem to mainly have body issues, not social ones.I think this may have something to do with how I've coped with this throughout my life.While my friend groups have been mostly male they aren't overly masculine. So I'm fairly comfortable there.

I still haven't come out to anyone since anytime I'm with other people I don't feel the overwhelming need to transition, that only happens when I'm alone.
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joanie

going through something similar and not on the other side of it at all so I don't cant offer any guidance but just sayin HI! me too  :/  :)
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highlight

"If I am lucky Mr talent will rub his tendrils on my art"
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suzifrommd

Quote from: AnamethatstartswithE on March 08, 2016, 03:22:09 PM
Does anyone else go through this?

I certainly asked myself the question. You can read my musings about it in this post:

https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,124474.0.html

No one thinks of transition every minute of every day. The fact that you have moments when it seems vital is pretty telling, though.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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cindianna_jones

Everyone goes through this. I think the older you get, the more difficult this becomes. It's something we have all dealt with. So don't worry about it. Loosen up and try not to think about the gas lighting thing too much. You'll know sooner or later which direction you should take. And don't let anyone sway you. You can make this decision on your own. A good therapist may help you do just that.

I have a good therapist I see from time to time. She just asks questions and I answer. Her technique is to get me to solve my own problems. Even though I know how to solve them, it still gives me a warm fuzzy feeling to know I'm heading in the right direction.

Chin up!
Cindi
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joanie

Quote from: Cindi Jones on March 08, 2016, 06:30:05 PM
Everyone goes through this. I think the older you get, the more difficult this becomes.

Chin up!
Cindi

funny you should say this, I was just telling my therapist how at 6 yrs of age I knew unequivocally that I wanted to be a girl but that although in a manner that still holds true, things are much more complicated now. Or seem that way.  No, they definately are more complicated :)
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AnonyMs

I get it as well. I decided that it doesn't matter. It might go away for a while, but it always comes back. I only know one way of coping with it, so that's what I'll do.
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