Quote from: Virginia Marie on November 30, 2009, 07:54:23 PM
Sometimes I think about giving up, ringing the bell, de-transitioning
Part of it is the cost involved. I don't know if I'll ever have enough to complete my transition
This depresses me allot. Also I feel like everyone hates me. More depression
I think about suicide allot. I'm no-one famous. No-one will miss me anyway
Well, Virginia, I would miss you.

You're my favorite mermaid.

I'm pre-op and am looking forward to aligning my body through further hormone use and surgery, but I've pretty much transitioned. I am a woman. People treat me as a woman. My legal name is Katherine but most people call me Kate. I can go anywhere I want as Kate. Sure, my driver's license and passport still say male, but so what? And if it ever looks like I will have the opportunity to cuddle with some sweet guy, we'll have to have a little talk before we get close to doing that, but I can handle that.
For me, the goal wasn't only to have the body of a woman but to
be a woman – the woman I always knew I was inside. How I fit into the world, how people treat me, how I present myself, are all part of that. I know it is not the same for all of us, but that's how it is for me. And I think the year or more of RLE is vital to finding
me – Kate – inside there somewhere.
I don't understand how after discovering the real you during RLE you would want to go back to some remembered-you. I think perhaps if you focus too much on the idea of having a female body (or male body for FTMs), then you may be setting yourself up for disappointment. And that's where therapy comes in – to help you understand what it is you are
really looking for by transitioning.
It's not about the shell you wear. It's about being able to be
you.
The Standards of Care are guidelines. They should be revisited to reflect current procedures and levels of acceptance of transsexualism, but they are guidelines. It is when the medical community sees them as rules rather than guidelines that we have problems. (And often it is the insurance industry that is driving the medical community, but that's another issue.)
Sorry. I'll get off my soapbox now and let others speak.

- Kate