Quote from: Mister on August 28, 2008, 01:21:55 AM
I didn't mean to infer that he was a gatekeeper. Not my thought, not my intention. Apologies if it wasn't clear.
No prob.
Quote from: Mister on August 28, 2008, 01:21:55 AM
Not saying you need to jump through hoops to impress the guy, but it's still nerve wracking to know that any progression is up to him at this point, unless you were to switch therapists.
Definitely nerve-wracking. He doesn't question that I'm transgender, but I'm not altogether clear on what I have to do to get the green light to move forward with transition. I've had too many trust issues up till now to even think about that. Now that I'm getting used to the sessions and feel pretty safe--it happened way faster than I expected, so that's a plus--maybe I should start thinking about writing down some questions about how the process works. But I still want to take this slowly. I have to navigate around a number of life issues and obstacles before I can seriously consider going forward with transition.
Quote from: Mister on August 28, 2008, 01:21:55 AM
Your post leads me to an interesting train of thought, but it's probably a new thread altogether. Seems a lot of folks in here are in therapy to figure themselves out, whereas I went in having figured myself out and ready to transition (i mean this in the medical sense, not the social sense- that had already happened.)
You may be right about some of the other guys here, but I think quite a few are pretty sure of what they want and don't really need much therapy to figure that out. You should start a thread on that topic--it would be interesting to see how many guys have achieved a high degree of certitude without lying on the couch!
Do your previous posts talk about how you arrived at that point? I'm curious as to how you achieved it--unless it wasn't a tough call at all. It isn't, for some.
Posted on: August 28, 2008, 02:21:53 AM
Quote from: Jack Daniels on August 27, 2008, 05:42:13 PM
You re parents were super conservative, were'nt they?
Yeah, my parents were (and, no doubt, still are) conservative Republicans. They voted for Nixon, they voted for Reagan...and the last time I knew her, my mother was some variety of born-again Christian with fairly fundamentalist views. Oddly enough, they didn't really indoctrinate us kids. After giving us some churchgoing experience, they left it up to us to decide whether we wanted to continue. I think that this freedom was mostly a compromise that my parents arrived at between themselves--my father seemed relaxed about religion, so I think he made her back off. Anyway, I've had skeptical leanings since I was five, so quitting church was a no-brainer.
Occasionally, my mother regretted allowing us such latitude. Every once in a while, she would go through a half-hearted conversion cycle and try to get me some religion. It didn't take, of course.
Whatever I may think of my parents, I have to give them credit for certain things. They taught me the value of a dollar, they brought me up with a solid work ethic, they took me all around the world, and (barring the odd slip-up) they allowed me to make my own decisions about religion. It wasn't all bad.