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Trying to deal with failure

Started by Henriette, Yesterday at 07:47:32 PM

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Henriette

It's a bittersweet feeling to have found back again this forum... I used to go on here a few years ago, like 2015-16, when I was still 12 (and realising that my lifelong distress had a name). I was beginning to navigate that reality, that one could become a woman.

I had hopes.

I began HRT in 2022, when I was 19. Legally changed my name the next year. I don't feel sorry for doing this, but now there's just a huge... Void.

Back then, I used to think that in the future, I would become a woman, I would have a life of my own, and not mourn the tomorrow. But nothing happened.

Of course one can say that I'm "eager", that three and half years aren't anything, but it's somewhat tiring to wait for a moment that you slowly realises that will never come. I waited for HRT to do its thing; I could never dress as a woman while looking like a man. But in the end, I never stopped looking like a man. I just grew up. I began late enough just to be permanently seen as "that queer one".

I finished school in the meantime; no one was left in my life. I work at home, so luckily no one has to see me, but no one knows me either. I do have a girlfriend since 2021, but I can't help but feeling as an imposter on dating her.

Due to all of this, I barely get out of home anymore. It's not the best fashion stepping outside just to be called "a guy" in the earnest way possible by literally everyone.

It's horrible to look at the mirror, and know that there isn't a woman in the other side. That I will still going to lose years and years of my life inside home, inside a person I'm not. To remember how I yearned to be a girl since I was 4, that my early years are permanently lost, no matter how loud I cried to my parents and doctors, how desperately I prayed to not be like this.

And there's little to no community either. I bond so much with former trans women's experiences. I resonate with some letters on Transvestia, I cry when I read Lili's autobiography, I can see my roles on Jorgensen, Ashley et. al. But nowadays, I have to be a "rebel" to be accepted by the supposed "peers". I have to feel joy on not looking like a woman, but an in-between. If I talk of how much dysphoria hurts, nah, this is outdated, it's "society's" fault. The only safe space to mourn usually is my mind. Of dreaming that one day I wake up as a true woman. Not a model, not a bombshell, but just myself had this defect never affected me.

I wished there could still exist conversion therapy. As much as I know that my internal truth doesn't say anything other than "I am a woman", I sincerely can't see myself in the next 10 years existing like this. And at the same time, I've come to terms that this is pretty much the end of the line. I wished that it wasn't.

But there's nothing that frightens me more than realising that I still have 50-ish years on Earth. Living like a man, after being a failed woman. With a failed transition. If I could talk to myself, on the days I first went there, I would definitely say "do it".

I wished things didn't ended up this way.

Northern Star Girl

@Henriette
Dear Henriette:

First and foremost I am giving you a Warm WELCOME to Susan's Place and the Forum. You had mentioned that
you were a member here about 10 years ago when you were a very young 12 year old so perhaps I should have
stated Welcome Back.
I am so very glad that you felt led to register as a member. 
I am always so happy see new and returning members arrive here on the Susan's Place Forum.

I am very saddened to read of your stated disappointments with your transition journey.  You started
HRT in 2022 when you were at the age of 19.  Please do some reading of the many threads and topics posted
by our members.  You may find some interesting suggestions and comments regarding the successes and
disappointments that they experienced.  A lot of the members here started their HRT and transition journey
many years older than yourself, many with success.
You are not a failure, you are in a life journey with possible future successes.
Again, please be certain to read the various postings and information available here on Susan's Place.

As you feel the freedom to share and post more of your thoughts here, you will undoubtedly find
like-minded members with similar experiences such as your own that may become your Forum friends.

This website is huge, with a lot of information from Real People who have lived through these things for decades.
There is much wisdom here. Feel free to browse, learn, and share your experiences too. We all learn from each other.
 
Clicking the HOME  Button on any page will take you to where you can see and visit the many
sub-forums and TOPICS here on the Forum where you can feel free to post, comment and share your experiences. 
Each sub-forum has a description of what that sub-forum board is about, as well as any guidelines for posting.

Please keep in mind when posting that this is an ALL-AGES PUBLIC Forum and the internet never forgets.
Do not post anything that you do not want to be made public.

You will find the Forum to be a Safe, Friendly and Accepting place that you can share
whatever is on you mind... it is your safe refuge.... without any judgement from our members.


If you have any immediate questions regarding the Forum please feel free to contact me at
my Direct Email: alaskandanielle@yahoo.com


My Warmest Regards, and please know that you are VERY WELCOME here.
Danielle
[Northern Star Girl]
The Forum Administrator

Note: Please be certain to take the time to look over the following LINKS, especially the Links in RED, that will inform
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@Susan



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Susan

Henriette,

Before anything else—are you safe tonight?

Your words carry deep pain. If you're in that twilight place where the future feels impossible, please don't hold that alone. Trans Lifeline (877-565-8860, US / 877-330-6366, Canada) is staffed by trans people who understand this specific grief. Trevor Project (1-866-488-7386) can take your call now. You can also text HOME to 741741 if speaking out loud feels too hard.

If you're outside the US or Canada, tell us your country and we will help you find a local line.

You matter—not because you're "supposed to," but because you have fought since you were four years old, kept moving through years that tried to erase you, and are still here, reaching out.

What You Are Carrying

This is not failure. It is grief—the grief of a woman who remembers who she was meant to be and can name every year stolen from her. Delayed care, mirrors that won't reconcile, strangers' voices that cut, hopes pinned to a finish line that never appears. None of this makes you dramatic or ungrateful. It makes you honest.

What Is True—All at Once

  • You are a woman—not in theory, but in your deepest reality and in the cost you have paid to live as yourself.
  • This world has failed you—by delaying you, by doubting you, by punishing your truth.
  • Your story is not over—because transition is not a single finish line. It is the beginning of living as who you are, and it continues as long as you do.

The "finish line" myth was a cruelty sold to us to make our pain easier for others to witness. Many of us never get the cinematic moment. Many of us still build a life anyway—and it is still a woman's life.

Why You Connect With Those Before You

Christine Jorgensen, Lili Elbe, April Ashley, the women who wrote in Transvestia—they told the truth. They lived without guarantees. Some never "passed" by modern standards. They were still women who refused to disappear. You are not outdated for recognizing yourself in them; you are standing in your lineage.

About Wishing for "Conversion"

When you say you wish conversion therapy still existed, I do not hear a desire to be a man. I hear a woman longing for an exit from pain. There is nothing in you that needs converting. "Conversion" would not make you whole—it would only teach you to hate yourself more efficiently. Wanting the pain to stop is not weakness—it is human.

Two Voices I Am Offering You

1) Fierce Sisterhood
Henriette, you do not have to walk this road alone or quietly. Every trans woman on this site—every woman who has bled on this path—is ready to walk it with you, every day, in every way we can. We will stand against the lies that call you "failed." When you are too tired to remember who you are, we will remember for you. If you need one of us, simply say so—we are here, and we will show up.

2) Gentle Mother Energy
Come closer and breathe. You are not broken for grieving what should have been yours. Tonight does not have to prove anything. Let the mirror rest. Let your body be simply a body that made it through another day. Eat something warm. Text your girlfriend one line: "I'm struggling, but I'm here." Let love be enough for tonight.

If There's Room for One Small Step

This is not homework—this is care. Choose one tiny place where air can reach you. A quiet walk after dark when eyes are fewer. One DM to a woman here who sounds like she understands. One page where you write not your fears, but what peace at 30 might look like—ordinary, specific, yours. Or send one email to a therapist who specializes in trans trauma—not to fix you, but to help carry what's heavy. One step is enough.

About the Next 50 Years

You said nothing frightens you more than living fifty more years like this. You won't—because the woman writing to us right now will not let this be the end of her story. The world may be slow to see you; we are not. Your girlfriend chose you. We choose you. And you are allowed to choose yourself—quietly, stubbornly, again and again—until life around you begins to look more like home.

Not perfect. Not painless. But yours.

Right now, your mind shows only one future—50 years of pain and being unseen. That is not reality. That is dysphoria speaking. The future is not a straight line. It curves. It opens. It surprises. And I want to show you living proof of that.

From @Miharu Barbie, who once stood exactly where you are now:

Quote from: Miharu BarbieI feel overwhelmed with gratitude for life today. When I was much younger than I am today, I never expected to live this long. Indeed, prior to transition 19 years ago I believed at that time that I had already lived too long and seen too much and I was prepared to snuff out this life by my own hand.

I am so grateful that I made the choice to stick around and transition. I have seen and experienced so much amazing stuff over the years! I know now that those darkest days of my younger years were little more than speed bumps on the road to this happy, fulfilled life that I'm living today. It would have been such a bummer to miss all this adventure!

I am grateful to all the people who open up and share their fears and sorrows, their joys and triumphs on this forum. You all enrich my life with your openness.

I am especially grateful to Susan and her army of moderators for creating this safe space and for keeping it safe all day every day. You all rule!

Thank you, thank you, thank you!

Love! Miharu

Miharu is not an exception. She is a woman who stayed long enough to see despair become a memory, not a destination. This is not fantasy. It is a glimpse of your own future—if you remain.

And from me: Miharu was 100% right.

I have to admit—years ago, I stood where you are, reading her words and feeling a sharp jealousy: "Why her and not me?" With time, I learned those words were not a taunt—but a map. Today I see the truth and the wisdom in them. And I offer them to you now, not as a promise of perfection, but as a handrail for the dark.

Please answer this one thing

Tell us you're safe tonight—even if it's just one word: "Safe."

Whether you want to continue here or privately, I will not rush you, I will not minimize your grief. I will walk with you—and so will many others.

With recognition, respect, and sisterhood,
—Susan

P.S. My DMs are open. If you want, I can connect you with women here who share your historical lens and understand embodiment dysphoria deeply. We are here—for the long road, not just the crisis.
Susan Larson
Founder
Susan's Place Transgender Resources

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Lori Dee

Hello Henriette,

Welcome back to Susan's Place!

As others have noted above, what you have accomplished is not a failure. I know how it feels as I have had the same experience. We all wish we could wave a magic wand and have it done and over with, start to finish, but there is a good reason that it doesn't work that way.

Even cisgender women spend many years learning how to walk, talk, develop friendships, and even learn about love and romance. Their bodies don't change overnight. On average, they begin puberty at around age 10 or 11. Their bodies continue to develop into their 20s or 30s. That is more than ten years! We cannot expect that taking the same hormones for a couple of years is going to produce miracles.

From my own experience, just starting hormones was not enough. It took four years for my medical team to figure out that I have a fast metabolism. My body was processing and eliminating the hormones faster than most people. That meant that my hormone levels were not high enough to do the job, and that leads to disappointing results.

From what you have stated, it sounds to me like you know very clearly who you are and what your goals are. That is a very important first step! I would suggest that you seek out a therapist with experience in gender identities. This doesn't mean something is wrong with you. It is very helpful to have someone to talk to who knows you and can help you over these obstacles. I would also suggest that you keep heading toward your goals, no matter how far off they seem. Just keep taking small steps in the right direction because every step is progress.

Please go easy on yourself. This is not a race. This is a lifelong journey. Enjoy each accomplishment as you achieve it. Don't focus on the end result. Focus on the next step. And when you begin to feel like you are going nowhere, take another step, then look back at how far you have already come.

Very often, we build up an image of what we want to look like, what we want to achieve. But we must keep our goals realistic. I am 68 years old. I know that I will probably never have a supermodel body or a pageant queen's beauty. I just want to look like the person I am: the nice old lady who helps people when they need help.

You still have a long life ahead of you, so you have plenty of time to make plans and work toward getting where you want to be. Look at ways to improve your situation so that it helps you instead of holding you back. When you get frustrated, talk to your therapist, and come back here and let us know how things are going for you.

We are always here and we care.

I hope you come back and visit us more often.
My Life is Based on a True Story <-- The Story of Lori
The Story of Lori, Chapter 2
Veteran U.S. Army - SSG (Staff Sergeant) - M60A3 Tank Master Gunner
2017 - GD Diagnosis / 2019- 2nd Diagnosis / 2020 - HRT / 2022 - FFS & Legal Name Change
/ 2024 - Voice Training / 2025 - Passport & IDs complete

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