What is the thing (or things) that haunts you from your past? In relation to your transition, I mean. Maybe something in your look? Or the way you used to look? Something you did that still haunts you? Did you have atypical interests to your gender identity - i.e. typical to your assigned gender at birth? Something that you find hard time letting go of?
Something that makes you doubt yourself all the time? Or do you have some characteristic that stares you back from the mirror - even today?
Let it all out here - and let go of it for GOOD!
---
Mine: What haunts me from my past is my life pre-transition, aka 0-13 years. It disturbs my mind that I wasn't the so-called typical tomboy - far from it! It bothered me when I socially transitioned. It bothers me still to this day. I didn't like the way I looked and the way I dressed as a child. My mom made me wear all girl clothes - and horrible ones on top of that! What bothers me most is that I played with dolls, even more compared to girls in general, I think! All that was mainly because I had a very strict mom who didn't let me have anything slightly boyish, be it clothes, accessories, toys etc. I never got the chance to be my true self, really. I know it's not my fault and wasn't my choice. But it still irks me the way I used to look & be as a kid. And on top of that it annoys me that I used to play with dolls that much, for some reason. I don't know why!
Maybe that bothers me partly because I can't ever know what I could have been like, had I been given the chance. And secondly it bothers me because I don't like the idea that I used to be a girl in society's eyes, even as a kid.
After reading all your stories, though, it has really occurred to me that I actually realized I was trans & socially transitioned pretty early on, after all! So - despite all that stifling & uber strict upbringing, I managed to transition at 13. My childhood still annoys me to some extent, though. But then again, it did at that time too, so. I just didn't like the person my mom tried to make me, on so many levels.