Quote from: ativan on March 16, 2010, 09:57:14 PMBreak'em down a little or a lot. And small steps at a time until you're confident to take larger steps.
Yeah, you're right. It's just sometimes hard to break down when it all seems so overwhelming. Oh, and your advice is also good for anyone who feels overwhelmed about anything.

Quote from: Teknoir on March 18, 2010, 07:50:24 AMMy advice would be to stop telling yourself you're afraid. It's re-enforcing a pattern of thinking that you're obviously trying to free yourself from. By building up the expectation of fear, you're setting yourself up for fear.
I think your advice was really good, too, and actually a lot of the stuff you mentioned about questioning WHY I feel this way and what could happen is exactly what my therapist has been doing with me.
I think I've been pushing myself to do this experimenting publicly because it feels like it will make me feel better faster, but you're right-- I should try it at home first and try not to kill two birds with one stone when it's hard already.
Quote from: Hikari on March 18, 2010, 03:26:59 PMI don't know about you but, for me it feels like keeping everything secret keeps me safe, and once it is known I no longer have control over that information and the for some reason frightens me. This is likely a consequence of never telling my parents about my TG feelings (or anything else of importance actually) I suppose keeping things to myself became my security blanket.
It definitely feels the same to me in a way... but that sure is one oppressive security blanket. I managed to scrape by for years, not knowing why it made me uncomfortable whenever someone tried to make me more feminine or made it clear they thought of me as a girl, but just ignoring the feeling because confronting anyone about it seemed much worse.
I think I had the chance to come to terms with my feelings much earlier. I remember asking my girlfriend at the time, "if I were a boy, would you still want to be with me?" She sharply said no and I dropped the subject. (And she identified as bi at the time, so it wasn't that... hell, she even turned out to be straight). I had also come out to my parents as bisexual a little earlier, and they laughed at me and told me I was either a lesbian or going through a phase, so I had to hide my relationship.
After that, living in the closet, ignoring any doubts about my gender identity, just felt normal. Every step I've taken in coming out--to myself, my boyfriend, strangers at a presentation-- has been full of fear that I would lose control of my life, and everyone who I loved would leave me.
But they haven't, so far. And I know that now that I've come to terms with this, if I don't change things, I can't be happy. And the steps I've taken, no matter how much I had to push myself to take them, have all confirmed to me that I'm doing the right thing.
I hope all of us can find a way to push through our fear.