Really great advice in this thread! I think that if you were to graph(Hey, maybe someone should do that?) all the different steps encountered during a transition, you would see a lot of activity at the beginning, and some higher points in the middle, but eventually, it will start to level-off with almost no 'new' experiences.
I am so sorry that you weren't able to enjoy the full extent of many of your first moments, Dana. I'm definitely no wear as far along as many of you, but I am now feeling a bit of a lull in things. I always go nuts when I'm dedicated to something, so my first month or so was full of firsts and looking back, it's really crazy to just change basically almost everything about myself; being one thing for your entire life, and now trying to be something completely different does create that sort of exciting tension in every single situation.
For me, I think the source of this lull feels like my wife, who is not able to just 'jump' into things like I am, but at the same time, I think this lull was coming anyway. I have to wait for more therapy, I have to wait for HRT, I'm not currently planning on any surgeries and only considering electrolysis, but I've been a bit overwhelmed by fashion, and I've hit a brick wall when it comes to makeup.
I would say(this unfortunately can't apply to Alyssa's situation) that I actually wouldn't recommend moving too fast, because like you said, you don't get to really reflect, enjoy, and build upon each new change that occurs. On the flip side of that statement, doing more just feels SO much better! But it also has the potential to trip you up, because you're inexperienced. And every little thing takes time, I mean, the best example really is any approach to makeup. If your first time wearing makeup you put on different kinds of concealers, foundation, countouring, highlights, blush, glitter, several eye shadows, eye liner, mascara, lipstick/lipgloss, and anything else I forgot. Likely, it's going to be really rough, but just starting with concealer and foundation might help just a little less with dysphoria, but it will keep things within reason for your brain to pick-up new skills and process all these new things, and in the end, you'll be better off for it.