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Gender dysphoria vs. general dislike of your body

Started by Yuusui, December 01, 2016, 07:53:26 AM

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Yuusui

It has come up several times, mostly while talking to women, that they are frequently unhappy with there body too. How do you describe the difference between gender dysphoria and generally not being happy with your body. I am failing to come up with good talking points on this to help people understand.

TonyaW

Major difference would be that the women that hate their bodies still feel like women.  They most likely hate their bodies because they don't measure up to some ridiculous ideal that society pushes on them.
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Amanda_Combs

It has recently occurred to me that for me personally; it isn't helpful to try to distinguish disliking my body and gender dysphoria.  There is a lot of overlap.  But it isn't difficult at all to determine that some parts are clearly dysphoria. 
    A good example for me is my weight.  I used to be fat.(about 80 lbs heavier). I didn't like my body and wanted to change it.  If asked I would have described my ideal body as a muscular chisseled visage of godhood.  So I tried and initially lost 100 lbs.  I was elated.  I felt so strong, fast, and mobile!  I wasn't like a movie star, but no one would call me fat, and my physical abilities were getting impressive.(for me lol) And then it suddenly occured to me that my favorite new feature was my long slim legs; because it reminded me of a woman's.  I also became reluctant to cut my hair and began practicing feminine poses.  A couple years later, it's becoming clearer to me that the negativity about my body was replaced by 2 aspects.  In the new feelings toward my body, half is positive because I am physically fitter and closer to what I feel makes an attractive man; and the other half of my feeling is very negative because I'm still not a woman.  Being this relatively close to looking like a woman has made me very aware of how flat and straight my body is. 
     If there were not an element of dysphoria here, I would just buff up more and become that perfect male body, but now I'm close enough to realize that I really want to be female.  My take is that in my life, there is no way to perfectly separate body dislike from gender dysphoria, but I do have both and they are very connected.


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Rachel

Hi Yuusui,

Gender dysphoria means feeling unwell about your gender. In reality it a spectrum of what a person is focused on ( it changes ) and the level of discomfort from mild to life threatening. Also, the rumination can get extreme.

Unhappy with ones body and having the correct genitalia is different than choosing suicide or having suicidal ideation  because ones genitalia is wrong.

I had GCS 2 weeks ago and have not had suicidal ideation in the past two weeks. That may sound like a small change but part of me was suicidal ideation. It was there and I thought about it several times a day. I had made many attempts starting from age 11. Now I am not in that frame of mind; I want to live. I still want changes to my body. My hair is curly and I want straight hair, oh well. My tummy is a bit too large and I want a flat tummy, I will get there. I have a clubbed toe on each foot and in sandals I am self conscious, I am ok with my feet and if it really bothered me I could get them straightened.

I would give an example of being under water and holding ones breath for as long as you can. The moment before you lunge for the surface there is a feeling of extreme need to breath. That feeling is the feeling of dysphoria. It hurts and over time it causes self medication ( drugs and alcohol abuse), isolation, hiding, self hatred, compartmentalization ( loss of feeling and caring), cutting and suicidal ideation.
HRT  5-28-2013
FT   11-13-2015
FFS   9-16-2016 -Spiegel
GCS 11-15-2016 - McGinn
Hair Grafts 3-20-2017 - Cooley
Voice therapy start 3-2017 - Reene Blaker
Labiaplasty 5-15-2017 - McGinn
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Dr. Sataloff Glottoplasty 5-14-2018
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Dr. McGinn vaginal revision 2 4-3-2019 Bottom of vagina closed off, fat injected into the labia and urethra repositioned.
Dr. Thomas in 2020 FEMLAR
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josie76

I think it is similar in that all women constantly find flaws in our bodies appearence. We are women in mind as well aren't we even if not born that way? The disphoria can be a lot deeper but experiences are individual and personal.

It's one thing to not be happy with a portion of your body's appearence but another to feel like you are in the wrong body and to have society pressure you to behave in a way that is not natural but forced upon you.

Rachel, not a single feeling of self harm in two weeks, that's beautiful in itself. Thinking about that made me cry. I hope I can get to that point someday. I've never tried, but ther is always some vague presence of the idea lurking.
04/26/2018 bi-lateral orchiectomy

A lifetime of depression and repressed emotions is nothing more than existence. I for one want to live now not just exist!

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Denise

I came out to a long-time friend yesterday and she asked "what does the dysphoria feel like."  And this is what I/we came up with:

1) Imagine extreme jealousy at 1/2 the population
2) Imagine waking up in the morning thinking - Crap, still a <insert gender here>
3) Imagine thinking about gender ALL THE TIME.  Not just my own, but gender in general, to the point of distraction.
4) Imagine an anger that doesn't go away
    Note: This is how my dysphoria manifests(ed) itself.  Since starting on anti-T and "E" I've not gotten angry - not even road rage and I drive into Chicago for work!
5) [Note, this has happened to me only 3 times] Imagine realizing that being <current gender> is a lot of work, all the pretending, false hoods, fake everything.  Living a lie.

ALL of this goes away when I'm Denise (about 6 hours/week at this point).  Even #3 which really surprises me.  The voices in my head are totally quite when Denise comes out.
1st Person out: 16-Oct-2015
Restarted Spironolactone 26-Aug-2016
Restarted Estradiol Valerate: 02-Nov-2016
Full time: 02-Mar-2017
Breast Augmentation (Schechter): 31-Oct-2017
FFS (Walton in Chicago): 25-Sep-2018
Vaginoplasty (Schechter): 13-Dec-2018









A haiku in honor of my grandmother who loved them.
The Voices are Gone
Living Life to the Fullest
I am just Denise
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PBP

I don't like being overweight but being male makes me feel nauseous. That's the difference for me
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Deborah

I have never hated my body at all.  It was actually a very good body.  It just wasn't the right one.  So, I guess that while I did not hate my body, I did hate the situation it left me with.


It is better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for what you are not.
André Gide, Autumn Leaves
Love is not obedience, conformity, or submission. It is a counterfeit love that is contingent upon authority, punishment, or reward. True love is respect and admiration, compassion and kindness, freely given by a healthy, unafraid human being....  - Dan Barker

U.S. Army Retired
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Amanda_Combs

Quote from: Denise on December 01, 2016, 11:22:00 AM
I came out to a long-time friend yesterday and she asked "what does the dysphoria feel like."  And this is what I/we came up with:

1) Imagine extreme jealousy at 1/2 the population
2) Imagine waking up in the morning thinking - Crap, still a <insert gender here>
3) Imagine thinking about gender ALL THE TIME.  Not just my own, but gender in general, to the point of distraction.
4) Imagine an anger that doesn't go away
    Note: This is how my dysphoria manifests(ed) itself.  Since starting on anti-T and "E" I've not gotten angry - not even road rage and I drive into Chicago for work!
5) [Note, this has happened to me only 3 times] Imagine realizing that being <current gender> is a lot of work, all the pretending, false hoods, fake everything.  Living a lie.

ALL of this goes away when I'm Denise (about 6 hours/week at this point).  Even #3 which really surprises me.  The voices in my head are totally quite when Denise comes out.
100% this!
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JessicaSondelli

I simply had no connection to my body before I started HRT. I didn't care if I was overweight, I didn't even realize it. I didn't use any products on my entire body except for shower gel and shaving cream on my face.

I started losing weight about 9 months prior to HRT. I went from 215lbs to 170 at 5'12" (I like that better than 6' [emoji1]) and regained about 5 lbs thanks to E.... But in the right places...lol.

These days I notice every little pimple immediately. In the old days, I didn't notice them at all.

As a male I hated seeing pictures of myself. I can't really explain it but it felt like this wasn't really me. Now... Oh well... I take multiple selfies every day. I probably have more pictures of me from the last 9 months than from the previous 40+ years. It's insane...


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Feel free to PM me, I'm happy to help, don't be shy... :)
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jamie1964c

The first question I asked my therapist 30 months ago was, "What does it mean when you like females but would much rather be one."  For me I would see a particular female face or body and get the almost overpowering sense and desire that "I could look like that" or "I could have that body".  For me the desire was there since adolescence but I kept it buried so deep that I only recognized it fully when I pulled it to the surface in therapy.  It's hard for cis gender people to understand this because it is so much a part of who we really are and they can't see, or maybe better put, they can't "feel" this.  So I try to explain my inner feelings to them as best as I can but it is difficult sometimes.
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Denise

Quote from: jamie1964c on December 02, 2016, 08:09:53 AM
The first question I asked my therapist 30 months ago was, "What does it mean when you like females but would much rather be one."  For me I would see a particular female face or body and get the almost overpowering sense and desire that "I could look like that" or "I could have that body".  For me the desire was there since adolescence but I kept it buried so deep ...

I hope the therapist said "a lesbian," paused, then chuckled.

You have hit upon EXACTLY what I've been feeling since I was 4. (50 years ago)
1st Person out: 16-Oct-2015
Restarted Spironolactone 26-Aug-2016
Restarted Estradiol Valerate: 02-Nov-2016
Full time: 02-Mar-2017
Breast Augmentation (Schechter): 31-Oct-2017
FFS (Walton in Chicago): 25-Sep-2018
Vaginoplasty (Schechter): 13-Dec-2018









A haiku in honor of my grandmother who loved them.
The Voices are Gone
Living Life to the Fullest
I am just Denise
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Jacqueline

Quote from: jamie1964c on December 02, 2016, 08:09:53 AM
The first question I asked my therapist 30 months ago was, "What does it mean when you like females but would much rather be one."  For me I would see a particular female face or body and get the almost overpowering sense and desire that "I could look like that" or "I could have that body".  For me the desire was there since adolescence but I kept it buried so deep that I only recognized it fully when I pulled it to the surface in therapy.  It's hard for cis gender people to understand this because it is so much a part of who we really are and they can't see, or maybe better put, they can't "feel" this.  So I try to explain my inner feelings to them as best as I can but it is difficult sometimes.

Sorry to interrupt. I wanted to welcome Jamie to the site. Thanks for sharing your experience.

I also want to share some links with you. They are mostly welcome information and the rules that govern the site. If you have not had a chance to look through them, please take a moment to:


Things that you should read



Once again, welcome to Susan's. Look around, ask questions and join in.

With warmth,

Joanna
1st Therapy: February 2015
First Endo visit & HRT StartJanuary 29, 2016
Jacqueline from Joanna July 18, 2017
Full Time June 1, 2018





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amazonprincess

Ugh, i wrote a long reply and it dissappeared. Anyway hon, i describe it this way,

I used to be fat, i'm now a 144 pounds (i gained 2 pounds got to get back to 142 lol) and i'm 5'11 to i'd say i'm thin but because i was fat once, i have horrible stretch marks all over my body, i hate it to me that's hating my body.

Gender Dypshoria to me is muich deeper, is the feeling that what you are isn't right. Emotionally, psysichally, mentally...so much more in my opinion then i just want boobs and a Vajay-jay. It's wanting to live every aspect of your life as a women, and dysphoria is the pain you feel when you can't do that because of the disconnect in your brain and body and because you have the brain of *insert gender* you feel wrong having your birth parts, whether it be boobs, muscle defininition and private areas.

i hope i did well lol.
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Sno

Please excuse the stream of consciousness, its ugly...

Dysphoria, it's all wrong, a nip, plump or tuck, gained or lost weight, a change of colour, all don't make a huge difference, because inside we feel our bodies and expressions are wrong, a no-match, antisocietal misfit.
Dysphoria is running against the tide, wearysome, a have to turn about and change everything, for ease and grace and self to return, not a pebble in the stream minor diversion, a desire to be comfortable, not acutely aware, a desire to be in the flow, not on the bank watching
Dysphoria is not existence, dissatisfaction at its finest, the knowledge that a wipe of fate on the sands of history we would cease existing, and are at peace with that, not making sure we exist to the max, not a tweaked, polished, refined best we that we could ever possibly be
Dysphoria is a fight, for fleeting moments when the current runs with us, and the world feels right, an all consuming silent torment, the water and pebble wearing down to a new form, with eddies which change from moment to moment.
Dysphoria is the deep seated moire. It is home to fear, to knowledge of falsehood, to exposure to the hail of shards, a continuous justification that a little more would be a little less painful. It's pumping the tank of life when that tank is empty, and all the while a supertanker lies idly by, gathering cobwebs of neglect and shame
Dysphoria is a cause shown, alluded, pointed out by others, when the response is instinctively divergent to the standard programmed condition, not the careful refinement of a form given, or desires driven by the winds of the norm, a changing expression or desire in form

It's the feminine in a masculine role, whilst the masculine is feminine, or part, or none of the above, it's when you encounter a world and say that's weird, where weird is challenged expectation, to the point where it is a distraction.

I cooked and cleaned my heart out this last weekend for friends, with the help of my partner. The role reversal was so stark that it caught some of our friends completely off guard. Their comments in the beginning were 'weird', not unpleasant, but challenged expectations of how the world works. My very close friends know that it's at times like that, when I can express myself, and demonstrate my love.

I would love minor inconvenience to be a major irritation ;)

Rowan
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Kylo

The difference is between say -

My nose and my boobs.

I don't love my nose, it's kind of small. It could have done with growing for a bit longer. But I've given up caring about that and put on the "whatever" mental shelf a long time ago. It's just a body part that "could be better".

Boobs on the other hand, always felt wrong, still feel wrong... and after 37 years of exactly the same I am pretty confident will always feel wrong. My nose "could be better" but it's still my nose. These boobs feel like someone else's body parts and it's awful.
"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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2cherry

I am not sure where the dysphoria starts and the dislike starts, let alone where they meet and end... it's all a blur to me. It's safe to say that any dislike of parts of my body can be blamed upon being trans, and that is something I am very well aware off. It is difficult to be objective when you are the subject yourself...

For a close to 40 year old woman, I think I look good compared to woman of my age. But when I compare myself to someone who started around the age of 20, well, I can't compete with that. But neither can my cis-peer group. So I simply quit looking at females that are above or below my age, and I started to look at females that are around my age. When I do, I think I do very well...  ;)



1977: Born.
2009: HRT
2012: RLE
2014: SRS
2016: FFS
2017: rejoicing

focus on the positive, focus on solutions.
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staciM

Quote from: Denise on December 01, 2016, 11:22:00 AM
I came out to a long-time friend yesterday and she asked "what does the dysphoria feel like."  And this is what I/we came up with:

1) Imagine extreme jealousy at 1/2 the population
2) Imagine waking up in the morning thinking - Crap, still a <insert gender here>
3) Imagine thinking about gender ALL THE TIME.  Not just my own, but gender in general, to the point of distraction.
4) Imagine an anger that doesn't go away
    Note: This is how my dysphoria manifests(ed) itself.  Since starting on anti-T and "E" I've not gotten angry - not even road rage and I drive into Chicago for work!
5) [Note, this has happened to me only 3 times] Imagine realizing that being <current gender> is a lot of work, all the pretending, false hoods, fake everything.  Living a lie.

ALL of this goes away when I'm Denise (about 6 hours/week at this point).  Even #3 which really surprises me.  The voices in my head are totally quite when Denise comes out.


I would agree this 95% of this with a few changes....

5) this has been a constant with me...my male disguise is incredible work, pretending and lying is exhausting.....feels like a costume.  This was one of my main breaking points and still is difficult until I can fully be out

And for me, unfortunately some of these never go away when the disguise comes off.....I'm still jealous of pretty ladies, even when wearing my true wardrobe elements of my body are incredibly dysphoric and regardless of outfit/expression I still feel major frustration at being born in the incorrect form, and being "forced" to hide it for so long.

- Staci -
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Denise

Quote from: staciM on December 07, 2016, 08:06:25 PM
I would agree this 95% of this with a few changes....

5) this has been a constant with me...my male disguise is incredible work, pretending and lying is exhausting.....feels like a costume.  This was one of my main breaking points and still is difficult until I can fully be out
...

Staci, for me I've always "known" I was being fake but in a few cases/instants it was a total sub conscience realization.  Every fiber in my body screamed at once "Being a woman is right, being a man is wrong."  I don't know how to explain it other than it was a feeling that washed over me right down to the core like a warm blanket.  It was the strangest sensation I'd felt ever.
- Dee
1st Person out: 16-Oct-2015
Restarted Spironolactone 26-Aug-2016
Restarted Estradiol Valerate: 02-Nov-2016
Full time: 02-Mar-2017
Breast Augmentation (Schechter): 31-Oct-2017
FFS (Walton in Chicago): 25-Sep-2018
Vaginoplasty (Schechter): 13-Dec-2018









A haiku in honor of my grandmother who loved them.
The Voices are Gone
Living Life to the Fullest
I am just Denise
  •  

DawnOday

Quote from: JessicaSondelli on December 01, 2016, 12:16:19 PM
I simply had no connection to my body before I started HRT. I didn't care if I was overweight, I didn't even realize it. I didn't use any products on my entire body except for shower gel and shaving cream on my face.

I started losing weight about 9 months prior to HRT. I went from 215lbs to 170 at 5'12" (I like that better than 6' [emoji1]) and regained about 5 lbs thanks to E.... But in the right places...lol.

These days I notice every little pimple immediately. In the old days, I didn't notice them at all.

As a male I hated seeing pictures of myself. I can't really explain it but it felt like this wasn't really me. Now... Oh well... I take multiple selfies every day. I probably have more pictures of me from the last 9 months than from the previous 40+ years. It's insane...


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Acne was a big problem for me. Aside from feeling ugly, it was painful. Physically and mentally. Add to this the hate for my third leg. My inability to socialize and the prospect of feeling happy all led to my total dislike of who I was. I always had a question of what it would be like to be. Shirley Temple, Barbara Feldon and that sexy voice, Jacquelyn Smith, Emma Peel  . Now I think of what it would be like to be Carmen Carrera or Gigi Gorgeous. I know I'm vain. But that is one trait that makes me feel like a woman. When I look at a woman, I don't think, Boy I bet she would be good in bed. Instead it is, I wonder what I would look like in that dress. Dang I wish they had boots that fit. The thing that made me most angry was that my sister was always beautiful and was competition.
Dawn Oday

It just feels right   :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_kiss: :icon_kiss: :icon_kiss:

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First indication I was different- 1956 kindergarten
First crossdress - Asked mother to dress me in sisters costumes  Age 7
First revelation - 1982 to my present wife
First time telling the truth in therapy June 15, 2016
Start HRT Aug 2016
First public appearance 5/15/17



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