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Total Stealth/Nondisclosure (Potentially Controversial)

Started by Memento, April 10, 2018, 05:05:26 PM

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Memento

Eh, I'm just being pessimistic. The law will change. Probably in the next few months, but definitely in the next few years. Idaho is even more conservative than Ohio and they won there. We're almost there.

And I'm so young, but I'm about to worry myself to death. I should focus on recovering and let this sort itself out. It's a damn miracle I even got surgery and I got it months before I was supposed to. I'll just rest and pray, it's the best I can do.
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EllenJ2003

Good Luck. 

I know what you mean about having SRS being a miracle.  I barely pulled mine off. 

I was barely getting by after going full time in late 2000, but it was looking like if I pinched my pennies, I'd be able to pull off having SRS, but then financial (for me)  disaster struck.  The company I worked for did some major downsizing, and I got downsized out of my job in 2002.  We were in the middle of a recession.  My job position was eliminated, and in order to keep a roof over my head, I accepted a much lower paying job.  I went from being a salaried quality engineer, who was also a calibrations technician, to an hourly worker (doing a job I hated) on the shop floor, taking the equivalent of a $5/hr loss in wages.  I remember crying my head off over losing my old job in QA, and wondering if one of my worst fears has become reality - ending up out of money and stuck permanently as a pre-op.  Luckily the economy picked up, and by working insanely long hours (about 65 hours/week), borrowing from my 401K, and borrowing from my credit cars via cash advances, I was able to get my SRS, a trach shave, and a nose job done in late 2003.
HRT Since 1999
Legal Name Change and Full Time in Dec. 2000
Orchiectomy in July 2001
SRS (Yaay!! :)) Nov. 25, 2003 by Suporn
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Memento

I guess I've been pretty lucky. I might get a trachea shave, but if SRS might make me gain a little weight I won't need it. I think I like the rest of me. SRS is really the only surgery I've wanted. Anything else would make me look rather disproportionate.

Ugh. If I could stop worrying about the fact that my clitoris has no feeling after 3 weeks that would be grand. Then again, sex is gross so it wouldn't be too much of a bummer if my nerves are dead.
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EllenJ2003

Don't give up.  It can take years for all of the nerves to reconnect, and for your libido to come back.  It took a while for me, but feeling did come back.  I looooove female orgasms way more than any male orgasm I ever had.  For me, they're much more intense.
HRT Since 1999
Legal Name Change and Full Time in Dec. 2000
Orchiectomy in July 2001
SRS (Yaay!! :)) Nov. 25, 2003 by Suporn
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JoyJoy

I've been in the same job for four years working with 8 other female receptionists and many ob/gyn's..
Nobody has an f'n clue and it's non of their business.

I haven't told someone I'm trans since 2015.
Nobody else's business! (Except a SO - I'd always be honest there)
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Miss Clara

I live half the year in one city and half the year half way across the country.  In one place I'm open trans, the other stealth. I keep these two lives separated.  I prefer living stealth, and guard my gender identity jealously.  Disclosing has consequences, some good, some not  If you want to be treated as a cis woman, don't disclose.  If you do, you'll always be seen as trans with no way back.  Non-disclosure requires that you create a new life narrative.  It means separating yourself from the person you were.  It's not hard if you accept that you really are a different person today.

If you fall into a serious relationship, you'll have to, at some point, fess up to how you came to be you. I don't think it's necessary or wise to paint a vivid picture of your past.  You're you, not that other person.  Resist the urge to introduce your SO to this ghost from the past.  You don't need the competition.  And, OMG, never show a photo of that dead male person to your new love.  It'll haunt him forever.

Some trans women have a hard time breaking the link to their past.  Who they were is dear to them despite the pain of gender dysphoria.  That's fine.  Just be aware that it will define you in the eyes of others.  I've selectively assimilated those aspects of my past that are essential to my self-image, and thrown away the rest.  Yes, it does leave holes in my past that can't be completely refilled, and many past life experiences had to be reframed in the context of my having always been a woman masquerading as a man.  It's not easy, but over time I've learned to not only peel away the physical shell that confined me, but the behaviors and social trappings of my past, as well.  Good luck.
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Gail20

I was pretty open in my Lesbian community that I was TG and I was very happy because they were incredibly accepting. But . . . I inadvertently discovered that when women did not know they treated me differently in may ways. This is what I had always wanted. I wanted to be a woman among other women.  Since then I do everything I can to leave the impression I'm CIS . . .
"friends speak for you when you can't speak for yourself" :)
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