Hi Everyone. My chosen name is Rachel, or just Rach, and I'm a 41-year-old male with gender issues. I've wanted to be a female, even if I was hiding it, all of my life, as early as 4 or 5, but never really faced it. I've been married, divorced, and am now, years later, engaged to a wonderful and loving woman. I'm from the Midwest originally, lived in a few parts of the US, but now live in the Seattle area, where there is noticeably less hostility to Trans people than I'm accustomed to, though I do still definitely see it.
I only really recently came to understand what gender dysphoria is, and how it relates to me. It was sort of a "a-ha" moment, when the light went off in my head while reading an article about how depersonalization, related to gender identity, can affect people, and EVERY SINGLE THING described was like reading a biography of my entire life. I have always wanted be, and/or felt like I was supposed to be a female. I've also always been told that this is wrong, that it makes me less of a person, and I just accepted that it wasn't worth looking into. I'm bisexual, so I used that as an excuse to ignore the real issue.
The light really went on only in July this year, and I've since been working on understanding it fully. Thanks to this site, though, I came to understand that I was continuing to hold this in, and keeping it away from the most important person in my life, my fiance. So, I came out to her just this last Saturday, and she is willing to forge ahead with me, and see this through, wherever it takes me. It was a hard conversation, and I know she is really struggling to understand it, but I don't feel so alone about this anymore, and we have a place to start from, together, with honesty.
I have so many things I don't know yet, and have been looking into therapy options to help sort them out, but this site has already given me valuable advice, and I know that it will continue to in the future. Just reading the stories of others, and understanding that I'm not alone here has been very emotional. Unpacking the years of mostly self-imposed repression, negativity, implied (and occasionally real) violence, it's all very overwhelming, but it is also affirming to finally have an answer the that decades-old question that's been directed at me: "What's your deal?"
Thanks for your time, and I look forward to not being alone on this anymore.