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Feminine gravity

Started by rmaddy, May 30, 2017, 01:59:39 PM

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rmaddy

I wonder if any of you relate to this:

Some trans women seem to know from a very early age that they are female.  I was not one of those.  I was designated male at birth and was taught to dress, act and function in a way typical for young boys.  I went along with it just as children generally go along with what there parents say.

I do not remember thinking that I was female.  I didn't know that this was the sort of thing one could think.  I do remember being jealous of my sister, but as far as I was concerned, it was just because my father was doting and affectionate with her, but more distant and authoritarian in dealing with me.  It wasn't until puberty that I experienced a sort of "feminine gravity", i.e. a sense that I fit better with girls and wished I could dress as they did and be part of their group.  As this was the 1970's.  I had never heard the word transgender (and wouldn't until my mid-30's).  I realized that I was attracted to women, concluded at some level that I was not gay, and that therefore I was just a normal guy with some sort of a kink that was way too embarrassing to talk about.  I didn't know anyone like me and I assumed that I was alone.  I did my best just to get by.

Nevertheless, the steady pull of "feminine gravity" continued and intensified as I aged.  More and more, I wanted to feminize my expression, whether through long hair, earrings or whatever.  I fought it for a long time, and felt increasingly guilty about it.  Eventually, I got some counseling and recognized what should have been obvious--that the desire to present and be recognized as feminine were durable aspects of my personality, and that there wasn't anything I could do about it.  Over a 10 year period my gender expression went from typical male to androgynous to fully feminine.

I am 50 now, and have consistently dressed in a feminine manner for at least 7 years.  I have legally changed my name and gender markers (3 years ago).  I have been on HRT for 2 years.  I still feel the pull of that gravity, like I'm in a place that I don't belong.

Unfortunately, whether due to my voice, mannerisms or height, people around me don't perceive me as female.  I get mispronouned a lot, including by some people within my extended family who say "I'm working on it", yet drop my old name or male pronouns as often as not years after I asked them not to.  I feel distress from this, and I have tended to keep my distance from those who do it most.

I look through old pictures and I can't imagine returning to male self expression.  On the other hand, as I have watched my own kids grow up, I see girls becoming young women and realize that I never went through that.  I feel like a "tran without a country", caught between a masculinity that was historically uncomfortable for me and yet conditioned in such a way that the femininity I prefer comes off as unconvincing to others, and at times, to myself.


I have proceeded through transition very slowly and deliberately, one step at a time.  I was always willing to stop at whatever point my daily dysphoria was less.  For awhile, HRT did seen to lessen it, but it is still something I deal with nearly every minute of every day. 

I just want peace.  I want coherence.  I want to not feel freakishly different and constantly self-conscious of of what an oddity I am.  I think transition is potentially much more difficult in middle aged trans people.  I certainly have not found it easy.

I get regular counseling.  My gender dysphoria will occasionally hit me like a ton of bricks and at other times settle down to a dull roar. I'm now at the point of strongly considering GCS and breast surgery.  If I knew that it would take away the dysphoria, I'd schedule in a heartbeat.  The problem is that the only way to know is to go through with it.  I have literally done everything else.  I think the fact that I am still on the fence has, if anything, dialed up the dysphoria. 

My pathway to self-recognition and self acceptance has been long and halting.  I just want to live a normal life not twisted up in a not about who I am.  Maybe that it isn't possible at my age, but it's what I want.  The prospect of another 20-30 years of this sort of daily struggle terrifies me.

Have any of you been through this?  How do I take seriously my doubts without being crushed by them?

Renae
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RavenMoon

I'll be 60 in November. I knew I was supposed to be a girl since a vey young age. Probably about 4.

I'm just starting with my transition. Up until very recently I figured I'd do everything. Now I don't know.

I need FFS and my facial hair removed before I can even consider living full time. But now, beyond that I don't know what I want. 


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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KathyLauren

I am 62, and the first part of your story sounds like it could have been written about me.  But I stayed in denial much longer than you.  I went full-time a month ago, and it feels like a huge burden has been lifted from me.  I still have a little bit of body dysphoria, but I am slowly dealing with that.  As long as I am making progress, it doesn't bother me.
2015-07-04 Awakening; 2015-11-15 Out to self; 2016-06-22 Out to wife; 2016-10-27 First time presenting in public; 2017-01-20 Started HRT!!; 2017-04-20 Out publicly; 2017-07-10 Legal name change; 2019-02-15 Approval for GRS; 2019-08-02 Official gender change; 2020-03-11 GRS; 2020-09-17 New birth certificate
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Dena

I figured it out at age 13 but it hit me pretty hard so I needed to transition as soon as it became possible. For me, the decision for surgery amounted to knowing I would never go back to the old life. I knew I was better off in the current life but as testosterone was still with me, I wasn't sure if the surgery was the full answer. As soon as I woke up from surgery, I knew I had made the right decision.

Am I totally satisfied with myself? Not totally. I came to this site for voice surgery information which I had 2 years ago. I still get misgendered from time to time but I live with it. I discovered FFS and while it's tempting, I am pretty sure I will never decide to get it.

I am comfortable enough in this life that I no longer chase the impossible dream of becoming CIS female and live with what I have. That's enough for me because I have eliminated the dysphoria that nearly caused me to take my life.
Rebirth Date 1982 - PMs are welcome - Use [email]dena@susans.org[/email] or Discord if your unable to PM - Skype is available - My Transition
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LizK

I am 53 and started to transition 2 years ago. My first knowledge was when I was 4 or 5...I didn't know what the issue was then but I know I thought I should have been a girl and suffered disassociation frequently as a young child. By the time I hit puberty I hoped this terrible situation would be sorted out, but instead it got worse...puberty was supposed to take these feeling away not make them worse...by 19 I sought my first help...but refused to accept what I was told..so started 30 years of denial, drinking and over the top macho behaviour...I swear I have a guardian angel...some of the thing I did go way beyond stupid but yet here I am...I am paying the price physically for those actions.

You knew when you knew...you have obviously come a long way from where you were. I still struggle with the self acceptance stuff. I thought for a long time I had it "under control" but I didn't....I could say that I accepted myself but deep down the internal war was still waging...these days we are down to skirmishes more so than all out war...The self acceptance stuff has been the hardest but the most rewarding for me...I think it is something I will continue to work on my entire life, but each day I seem to like the person in the mirror a little better.
Transition Begun 25 September 2015
HRT since 17 May 2016,
Fulltime from 8 March 2017,
GCS 4 December 2018
Voice Surgery 01 February 2019
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