Quote from: Alyssa M. on February 03, 2011, 11:48:53 PM
Right ... I told myself that, too. We all did. But hey, who knows?
And maybe you just need to learn that lesson the hard way. I think that's true for a lot of people. To a large extent, it was true for me, too. But let me tell you one thing: I have never met a trans woman who didn't wish she could have transitioned earlier.
I have no trouble believing that you have never met a trans woman who didn't wish she had transitioned earlier because they Are transitioning. I think it's only legitimate that the people who are still here on this forum are here because they went for transition, but the sample is biased! There has to be some people who Have experienced GID, dealt with it and are no longer here to talk about it! And to Alyssa, I am not in any process of transition because I have yet to figure out what is right for me. Therefore, I'm not saying I might "regret transition", I'm saying I have yet to take a decision regarding the necessity of it. And I am pretty sure that there are a very good number of persons who have considered transition at some point in their life, but then decided that it wasn't for them. This is what I am talking about.
I know it sounds a lot like I am trying to fall in denial, but this isn't what I am doing. I'm just trying to have a realistic view of what is happening to me. Right now, my hearth is telling me that I want to be a woman. But my hearth has been wrong in the past. I have had a personal history of depression during which I developed obsessions about being handicapped so that I could get cared about. This was just a phase and I no longer feel that way, but during that period, I was convinced about my stuff. I don't feel like I am in depression anymore, but GID looks awfully a lot like how I felt during that time, and this is one of the reason why I have doubts about the necessity of transition.
Also, I feel like the whole concept of transition hurts so many of what I thought were my core values. Right now, I have a healthy body that physiologically function properly. I also consider myself to be a very balanced person beside my gender dysphoria. I have friends, a girlfriend, I go to school and I have a very satisfying part-time job as a lifeguard. I like to think that I have the capacity to be self-reliant, without being totally dependent on the modern society to provide me with my needs (I have a strong interest in survival techniques and voluntary simplicity). If I choose to go trough HRT, I'll have my whole endocrine system unbalanced by an artificial income of hormones. I'll become dependent on drugs when I pride myself in taking none. If I go trough SRS, I'll take a functional organ and voluntarily turn it into a wound which I'll have to tend to the rest of my life. If I go full time, I'll have to go trough the social turmoil of being considered a marginal being, I'll have to face the fact that I'll be more vulnerable to hate crimes and discrimination.
Of course, I know it's not all bad. HRT would certainly allow me to develop some body features that I crave to see every time I look at myself in the mirror and when I read about the psychological effects it has on the people taking it, I can't help but dream about it. SRS would allow me to have genitalia that actually match how I feel about my body. It would allow me to actually feel my sexuality the way I want to feel it. Finally, being full time would allow me to wear the clothes I've always dreamed about. If I'm lucky, I'll also be passable enough to feel the delight of being gendered as female by the people around me. That is probably the part of transition that I crave the most. This is also the one which cannot be guarantied to work. If somehow, the magic doesn't work and people can't see the woman I am, I'll be forever stuck in a body seen has an error of nature.
I don't like how medical transition is so imperfect, how it puts so many aspects of my life in danger while giving me no guarantee of obtaining what I want the most. I also hate that transition makes me so dependent of our society. If at some point in my life I want to travel, I certainly won't be as adaptable as I could be without all those changes. What hurts the most however is that even while know all of this, even while knowing all this crazy ->-bleeped-<- and understanding that one would have to be mad to voluntarily go trough all this (no offense meant)... I still feel the craving inside of me.
I know that there is a fair probability that I will feel the way I feel now for my whole life. But if there is any way that I can manage to actually find another road, one that wouldn't put so many things at risk while still being happy...
As for my relationship with my girlfriend, I am confident that she will know when this is too much for her. I am very open to her and I don't hide the way I feel. She knows just as much as I do that there is a serious chance that I might choose to go through transition. Like the saying says, let's cross the bridge once we are at the river. Fact is, I'm on my way to the river, but I'm not there yet. If I choose to cross the bridge, whatever will happen will happen. If I choose not to cross the bridge, same goes there.
Thanks a lot to all of you for your insightful opinions, I really like what this place allows me to put forward.