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When to tell your man that you're trans?

Started by echo7, March 07, 2018, 07:29:20 PM

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echo7

Please, I'm only interested in hearing responses from transsexual women who are currently in, or have had, a successful long-term romantic relationship with a man.

My question is, When did you tell your date/boyfriend/husband that you're trans?  Did you tell him before the first date?  After the first date?  After several dates?  Before sex? Just before it became a serious relationship? After engagement?  Or even after marriage? And do you think your timing was okay, or do you wish you had told him later, or earlier?

I'm currently struggling with this question myself...
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Mallory

I tell them all, both men and women, that I'm trans before the first date.
Carpe diem.



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Julia1996

I've been in a relationship for almost 2 years now. I told him after we had been dating for a month.
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Sophia Sage

I've never disclosed, even in a 6-year relationship with a man.
What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
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Devlyn

Quote from: Sophia Sage on March 09, 2018, 02:11:28 PM
I've never disclosed, even in a 6-year relationship with a man.

If someone did that to me and i found out, I would  run, not walk out of the relationship.

Not because I'm anti-transgender.

Not because I feel the person shouldn't make their own decisions.

I'd run because the person felt entitled to make my decisions for me.

Hugs, Devlyn
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herekitten

It was different timing for the few I have told. Some I never even went there because I had no interest in them beyond friendship. But then there are those whom I bonded with mentally/physically and I know it was going further -- then the dreaded subject had to be dredged up. So never for some, and maybe after a month or two or three for the few whom I felt were worth sharing my life.
It is the lives we encounter that make life worth living. - Guy De Maupassant
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echo7

How did you ladies tell your guy?  In person? Or over phone/text? And did you give a long explanation or did you keep it short?
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Julia1996

Quote from: echo7 on March 09, 2018, 06:40:10 PM
How did you ladies tell your guy?  In person? Or over phone/text? And did you give a long explanation or did you keep it short?

I told Tristan in person. I gave a medium length explanation.  I toyed with the idea of yelling him in a text because I had had a bad experience telling a guy in the past and I wasnt sure how he was going to react. But I thought it was something that I needed to tell him in person.
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Sophia Sage

Quote from: Devlyn Marie on March 09, 2018, 02:24:11 PM
If someone did that to me and i found out, I would  run, not walk out of the relationship.

If any of my lovers had brought up the issue, I would be the one leaving the relationship.  I would only have an open narrative with another transitioner, and even then only with someone who practices non-disclosure as a rule. 

QuoteI'd run because the person felt entitled to make my decisions for me.

I do not believe that anyone else gets the right to choose how to gender me.  I will be gendered solely on my embodiment, presentation, and behavior... not through some kind of ritualized narrative request. 

What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
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echo7

I was really hoping to avoid instances of thread-crapping here, which is why I asked in the first sentence of my original post for some courtesy.  Please respect my desire to have a productive and helpful conversation here, and please try to avoid redirecting the discussion toward a different topic.  Thank you.  :)

Thank you for the responses thus far, and also to those who have sent private messages to me about their experiences.

My dilemma is this - I'm hoping to find a long-term relationship; really a future husband.  But I'm not exactly young anymore, and so time is not on my side.  I don't want to spend months or even years dating a man, only to have him leave the moment I tell him I'm trans.  So maybe it'd be better if I told him early.  Or even very early.

On the other hand, if I tell him too early, maybe he won't want to get to know me in the first place.  While trans women are becoming more accepted in society, I feel like there's still a huge stigma against straight cis men who date/marry trans women.  So maybe if I tell him after we've gotten to know each other and maybe even after we've fallen in love, he'd be ok with my being trans.  But if I told him too early, he wouldn't even want to get to know me better.

I don't know what to do.  Anyone else willing to share what worked for them?
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Julia1996

Tristan and I had been dating for a month when I told him. He wasn't immediately accepting. It was a big shock for him and he said he needed to think about it. I figured that was the last I would hear from him but a week later he wanted to talk. He had done some research online about trans people. He said he really liked me and he wanted us to keep dating and since I was having surgery soon he was willing to wait. I honestly don't think he would have been as willing to accept me being trans if he hadn't had that month to get to know me. In my opinion it's better to let a guy get to know you a little before you drop the trans bomb on him.

I asked Tristan to give me an honest answer and I asked him if he would still have wanted to go out with me if I had told him I was trans when he first asked me out and he said honestly, no he wouldn't. He had never met a trans girl before, knew nothing about us and had misconceptions about trans women just like lots of guys do. Again I believe it was the month he had to get to know me that helped him be more accepting. I am not saying to "fool" some guy sexually,  I'm just saying I believe it's helpful to let him get to know you a little as a person before telling him.
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Miss Clara

I have no personal experience, so my comments may not be worth much, but I'll give you my thoughts.  I think you are right about the risks of revealing your status too early vs waiting too long.  So how do you decide the right time to tell all?  It's very hard to know, but there are some guiding principles.

You want a person to love you for the qualities you possess that will lead to a lasting relationship.  It takes time to get to know a stranger beyond the superficial.  You both need that time.  If his interest in you is very shallow, learning that you are trans will probably end the relationship right away.  Budding relationships frequently end prematurely on discovering some potentially messy complication.  What's to lose?  Since you pass convincingly as a woman, I would hold off tell your date in the early going.

Eventually you reach a point where you have to tell him.  When you do, you should not lose heart based on his initial reaction to learning that you are trans.  It's not unusual for a man to take a step back or run for the hills.  It's not necessarily a bad thing.  It tells you that up to that point he saw you as an attractive woman, which you are, and that his interest in you was for reasons other than your being transsexual.  That's a good thing. 

I would take full advantage of the initial weeks of a new relationship to establish a bond with this person whom you might some day marry based on things that really matter.  I would hold off on having sex on the first or second or even the third date.  Longer if you can manage it.  If a guy really likes you he'll be patient, and it will give you time to feel out the depth of his feelings for you.  When there's no putting it off any longer and you feel he's entitled to know the details of your past, you want him to be aware of what he's giving up should he decide to walk.  A good man who loves you will be reluctant to throw away someone who he values regardless of gender issues.  If he walks away for good, you know that he was never the right person for you from the start.  If, however, he's willing to stick it out and work through any misgivings for the sake of preserving your developing relationship, then you know you have found a man worth your time.
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Sophia Sage

Quote from: echo7 on March 12, 2018, 08:49:38 PMI don't want to spend months or even years dating a man, only to have him leave the moment I tell him I'm trans.  So maybe it'd be better if I told him early.  Or even very early.

On the other hand, if I tell him too early, maybe he won't want to get to know me in the first place.  While trans women are becoming more accepted in society, I feel like there's still a huge stigma against straight cis men who date/marry trans women.  So maybe if I tell him after we've gotten to know each other and maybe even after we've fallen in love, he'd be ok with my being trans.  But if I told him too early, he wouldn't even want to get to know me better.

Let's assume you're going to disclose and take non-disclosure off the table.

Do you plan on practicing non-disclosure in the rest of your life, or are you going to be living with an open narrative of being trans?  If the latter, you should tell up front, before dating, because anyone that's interested in getting to know you is going to find out sooner or later, and it's best to weed out the people who won't understand you as soon as possible.  Also, this is the ethical position for someone who is out -- because being out has social consequences not just for the person who is out, but for their partners, too.

If on the other hand you practice non-disclosure as a general rule, wait until the relationship is serious.  It may take weeks or months, not years, to determine this.  In the meantime you get to find out if you're compatible -- in conversation, in values, in sex, and in the practical material reality in which you live your lives.  When you come out, it will be an act of intimacy, an intimacy earned through the building of a relationship. (Don't wait until the marriage proposal, which has its own rules of engagement.)  And hopefully you won't end up making yourself out to your entire social circle because you've determined, through the time you've invested in this relationship, that if he does bail on you he's not also going to try and ruin you.

Never forget that coming out as trans (which is true for all instances of coming out) is tacitly a request to be treated differently.  At what point in this potential romantic relationship is the best time to do that?  Maybe it's at whatever point you decide you want to be treated differently, which may not be something you can really plan in advance. 
What you look forward to has already come, but you do not recognize it.
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Barb99

I've been dating post op for about 16 months now. In that time I've had one relationship that I thought might go somewhere so I told him on our 3rd date. He said he was ok with it but we have not dated since. We still talk once in a while but a serious relationship is just not going to happen.

I believe that had I waited until we got to know each other better we would still be dating. Since that time I have decided not to tell until the relationship gets serious, exactly when that is I don't know. I guess I will have to judge that at the time.
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Barb99

Quote from: Sophia Sage on March 13, 2018, 11:01:28 AM

If on the other hand you practice non-disclosure as a general rule, wait until the relationship is serious.  It may take weeks or months, not years, to determine this.  In the meantime you get to find out if you're compatible -- in conversation, in values, in sex, and in the practical material reality in which you live your lives.  When you come out, it will be an act of intimacy, an intimacy earned through the building of a relationship. (Don't wait until the marriage proposal, which has its own rules of engagement.)  And hopefully you won't end up making yourself out to your entire social circle because you've determined, through the time you've invested in this relationship, that if he does bail on you he's not also going to try and ruin you.


This is exactly how I feel and how I live.
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Northern Star Girl

I have been full-time for almost a year and a half.... I feel that I look, dress, and act undeniably female and pass 100% so guys (and gals) do not have a clue. 
I feel that once I am on a date that goes beyond hand-holding, hugging, and casual kissing that is definitely the time to reveal my secret past.   Otherwise it is not being fair (or even not being kind and considerate) to my date.
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herekitten

Echo, I've never felt there was a methodology for talking about what is between your legs.  It is so different for each of us and the unique situations we find ourselves in or for whatever other reason life throws our way. I can only speak from my experience because everyone has a different opinion -- all worthy of listening to. I've had three marriages in my life and I'll share with you:
Marriage 1 - I was barely 18. He was in the Marine Corps. We dated about two months before I 'told' him about those parts of me. Never used the word trans, man, boy, male, masculine (its just not me). Just that the stars did not align in my favor upon my birth. He was charming. He was so in love. As much as I was. He was also very horny  >:-)
Marriage 2 - This marriage found me a bit wiser and a bit more financially independent. I was a very picky choosy girl. We dated about three to five months but I knew all along he was the 'one'. One night, I just decided this was it. Ugh! I did not want this perfect man to view me any differently. Again, never used the words man boy trans.  I took a breath and 'told' him. He did not understand. Finally the light went off. We were married for 18 years.
Marriage 3 - What can I say, the third time is the charm. Truly. I am without words to describe my Love. I told him before we even met. The days of the internet were just dawning and AOL was at its highpoint. I met him accidently on line attempting to join a 'chat room' that was full.  Upon our meeting in person, there were no walls, no curtains, no mysteries or anything to hide. I could just Be.  Every man pales in comparison when I think of him -- ooh, I'm thinking of him now  :laugh:

My only piece of advice is that if you want to make an omelet -- you gotta break some eggs!! Go get that man!

PS:  Still preop - but not for long YAY.
It is the lives we encounter that make life worth living. - Guy De Maupassant
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Megan.

Although I didn't really know what I was at the time, keeping my feelings away from the person who became my wife (now Ex) cost me my marriage and a life with my children.
I would always advise honesty as early in any relationship as possible, to save them and you from any pain down the road. X

Sent from my MI 5s using Tapatalk

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alex82

One night stands, never.

As a plan, when and if it feels appropriate for that person to know.

For the man I'm seeing now, before either of us were interested in each other, and while he was still living with his girlfriend. We happened to end up in deep discussion on a night out and that was one of many things we talked about.

There was a natural entry into the discussion because we were talking about our children, and mine is relatively newborn. It was an arrangement with a friend and we divide up the week equally, he was talking about his own young children and custody arrangements because his relationship was breaking down.
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softbutchharley

Quote from: echo7 on March 07, 2018, 07:29:20 PM
Please, I'm only interested in hearing responses from transsexual women who are currently in, or have had, a successful long-term romantic relationship with a man.

My question is, When did you tell your date/boyfriend/husband that you're trans?  Did you tell him before the first date?  After the first date?  After several dates?  Before sex? Just before it became a serious relationship? After engagement?  Or even after marriage? And do you think your timing was okay, or do you wish you had told him later, or earlier?

I'm currently struggling with this question myself...
Hi there echo :)
1) I had sport sex a few times pre op and disclosed first date . I would NEVER even start to go in a sexual direction pre op . No way... People do not deserve that IMO .
2) I dated several for short periods POST op - never disclosed, tho one was very "tuned in" and a friend of the community, and the other 2 I had known previous to my starting transition. From start to finish, my transition was about 18 months, mainly due to surgery healings. A long time pre,  and since, I have attempted to work on me inside.
3) I have had several long term lesbian relationships ( year or better) and am in my third one now at 7 years. Never disclosed.....the gals knew from meeting me pretty much, but no disclosure or discussion about "it" .  :)
I guess this is not too helpful with the specific requirements of your post, but I believe my experience touches a few.
TY for sharing here, and I hope my experience (all I have to share) helps.
J
Those who deny freedom to others....Do not deserve it for themselves.  Abraham Lincoln
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