Community Conversation => Transsexual talk => Topic started by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM Return to Full Version

Title: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
There was probably a thread already opened on this topic but... I make this thread because I never wanted to transition and here are the reasons why I do and don't want to.

Pros of Transitioning
* I can appear and be percieved as my desired gender.
* I can finally be able to happily and openly do female things!
* I can finally have the rights and privleges of being a woman and I can be free of the hell that I've lived through all my male life!

Cons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.
* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.
* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.
* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.
* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!
* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.
* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.
* I'm going to miss the male body that I once had.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Janet_Girl on November 21, 2009, 08:23:07 PM
Transition.

I have a male body with maybe small B bustline ( 19 months HRT ).  Still have the growth, although the evil twins are now gone.  Lost my job, but thanks to the SSA I might be able to get a better job.

I went to a TDOR ceremony yesterday, and there were many Transwomen who were barely passable, but happy.  And after all that is all that matters.  Being happy.



Janet
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Fenrir on November 21, 2009, 08:50:17 PM
Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
* I can finally be able to happily and openly do female things!
* I can finally have the rights and privleges of being a woman and I can be free of the hell that I've lived through all my male life!
As Janet said, being happy and fulfilled in life is the main thing to aim for your life to be about. After all, you only get one. (Actually, that depends on your views on reincarnation, but still...) And if you have to stop yourself expressing yourself in your natural way, whether you are male-bodied or have transitioned to female, then that leads to you not living life to the best of your abilities.


Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.

Chances are, no-one is going to be doing a chromosome test on you anytime in your lifetime. And very few people have their ideal figure, whether they are male or female or something in-between!  :D Transition will bring you closer to it, though.

Despite all I have said, don't feel pressurised to transition if you are still unsure or if you are not ready. These decisions are all about you, not us, and it is up to you to find the place you are most comfortable at. There are plenty of people who lives their lives happily at all stages of transition, including non-ops. Take your time deciding. All the people on this forum are here for you whatever you decide.  :)
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Megan on November 21, 2009, 08:57:01 PM
Quote from: Janet Lynn on November 21, 2009, 08:23:07 PM
Transition.

I have a male body with maybe small B bustline ( 19 months HRT ).  Still have the growth, although the evil twins are now gone.  Lost my job, but thanks to the SSA I might be able to get a better job.

I went to a TDOR ceremony yesterday, and there were many Transwomen who were barely passable, but happy.  And after all that is all that matters.  Being happy.



Janet

Being passable is being happy.

What's the point of just looking like a man in a dress or a obvious transsexual when the goal is female.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Fenrir on November 21, 2009, 09:00:53 PM
Quote from: Megan on November 21, 2009, 08:57:01 PM
Being passable is being happy.

What's the point of just looking like a man in a dress or a obvious transsexual when the goal is female.

Well, because you never know until you try. What else do you expect people to do? If other people can find happiness despite their physical imperfections, don't put them down.  :police:
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: K8 on November 21, 2009, 09:26:02 PM
I was always afraid to attempt to transition because I knew I would never pass as a woman.  Finally, I decided I would rather be an ugly woman than a passable man, and if I never passed than so what?  I would live the rest of my life as a woman-wannabe if that's all I could do.  I just couldn't live the lie of pretending to be a man anymore.

When I started this, my doctor told me I had the right to be happy.  After several months of living as the neo-woman Kate, even though I still had the wrong body, I told him it really isn't about being happy.  It's about being whole.

As Fenrir said, this is about you and what you need.  What we needed may not be what you need.  There's a lot of soul-searching that goes into the process.  Just what will you be able to accept?  Years ago I couldn't accept being a halfway woman.  Now I will be as much woman as I can, even if it's only a little, even if I'm the only one who thinks I'm a woman.  It just depends on your needs, BigLover.

And yes, Megan, passing helps.  But some of us get to the point where we have to do this regardless.

- Kate
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: CodyJess on November 21, 2009, 11:05:06 PM
I'll give a response a shot here. A post that defends a point without provocation asks to have that point argued, after all.  :laugh: (all in good humor)

Quote
Cons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.
* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.
* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.
* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.
* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!
* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.
* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.

The cost of transition is only 'entirely too high' if you don't think it's worth it. (for good, solid advice on how to 'afford' transition, go find the financing page on TSroadmap)

It entirely changes the fact that you were born with a male body. That's the point of transitioning, isn't it? To bring your physical form in line with your mental self-image through some changes on the part of both (but mostly through physical changes).

Moving is only a requirement if you find it too difficult to explain yourself to the people around you (which can be fixed with a little effort and education, and a lot of patience) or the people in your family/work become hostile.

The physical risks of transition are relatively small. Don't take my word on it though, educate yourself; a short talk with a doctor will explain everything.
There's also the consideration that at soem point in a lot of people's lives, it's more of a physical risk to not transition. Not always due to suicide or self-injury, but also because people who don't like themselves tend to neglect themselves (poor hygiene, poor nutrition, poor overall health).

There are a lot of biological women who don't menstruate (or menstruate irregularly) and are infertile. I understand that nothing will ever be able to replace that, and that for a lot of people adoption just never 'makes up for' not being able to get pregnant, but, from my perspective, it seems a bit sad to deny yourself all the other benefits of being your desired gender just because you can't have everything perfect.

Your chromosomes don't matter in the slightest. Honestly. Maybe someday when gene therapy comes into vogue, but I don't see that happening in the next 50 years, so there's nothing to worry about there.
Quote
* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that I once was because she liked what she saw.
This is... I'm not sure what to think about this. Why don't you ask? It's worth the effort, rather than letting 'just might's stop you from pursuing happiness in your life. If this really is the case, then you'd need to decide if what somebody else 'might miss' is more important than your happiness. You deserve to be happy. Consider thinking this one over again.

The last one: ideal female figure. Almost no woman or man ever gets their 'ideal figure'. It's an ideal, something to look up to and strive for; not something that's really ever meant to be achieved. Again, try not to let 'maybe's and 'if's stop you.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 21, 2009, 11:05:42 PM
Well, people. Thanks for answering my thread.

I know I have the unresticted right to transition if I feel the need to. It's just that my Pros-and-Cons analysis made me unsure because, as you all can see, the list of Cons exceeds the list of Pros. All my life I swore to myself, I promised myself that I wouldn't undergo this change because of the list of the Cons list and its length compared to the Pros list I added something to the Cons list, let alone. I've even done some talking to The Creator. I know we are the creators of our reality and that The Creator gave us free will. But if The Creator is trying to teach me something, I want to learn it before I screw it up and have to be taught the lesson again because I failed to learn it here. I've asked that He'd give me my ideal female body in the next life. I know there is a reincarnation. I know I'm supposed to believe in God and with that being said, i thought of transitioning now as in a lack of faith. It's that in my next life, I'm going to forget I wanted to be her if I AM her - and if I transition here I'll never feel so alive.

I do understand that if I choose to live the rest of my life as a man, that's on me and that's my choice. I sort of feel bad about taking pictures I found off some girl's myspace and saying it's me (I opened a thread about this before too). This is just going to have to be a VERY difficult desision that I will have to make, and for that I need a Gender Therapist I will have to find. I was never able to.

If I do, I have to move. I live near Philly. I love Philadelphia, and I would hate to leave. Well, there's always Camden, Trenton, New Jersey I could move to. But if I have to go far away, there is Auckland, New Zealand. Of course I can move TO Philadelphia, but still... that's too close...

To Fenir;
I know no one is ever doing a chromosome check on me ever! It's just that having the XX chromosome is female and I wanted everything to do with a biological woman as possible. And as for the ideal body though, yes I know (I rhymed!). There are others who live without their ideal bodies. However, I should not have to be one of those people. Women want to complain about it now, but I want to be able to menstruate, as I stated in previous as well as THIS thread, and I want to be able to get preggo, not that I want to have children anyway, but I like for some strange reason the big belly! Like I said I have a very difficult decision to make and if I win the lottery, that will make my decision a little less harder to make but I just know The Creator loves me unconditionally reguardless or not, I choose to change my body.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: justmeinoz on November 21, 2009, 11:23:52 PM
Hi BigLover,
Firstly I guess the main thing is that it is your life, to do with as you wish.  There are no rules regarding how far you must go. If you are happy as you are, then that is ok.

Pregnancy and menstruation?  You don't say how old you are, but personally I am old enough to be post-menopausal anyway, so it will change.

Regarding possible risks of surgery, there is always a risk with any operation. Before accepting anything as true, especially off the internet, I would look at the source and see how reputable it is.  Also look for as many reliable sources as possible.

With regard to family, friends etc, I have decided to stand Dr Phil's question, "have you thought about family etc" , on it's head.  Have they thought about YOU? 


Remember what Jim Morrison sang, "No-one here gets out alive."  Go Girl!    Sandra.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Hannah on November 21, 2009, 11:31:16 PM
Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
I'm going to miss the male body that I once had
Prolly ought not to mess with it then. The rest of that stuff doesn't really matter if that's truly the case. Is it, or is this the grief stage of dealing? The list of cons is pretty long and look mostly like fear-based excuses to me.


QuoteBeing passable is being happy.
What's the point of just looking like a man in a dress or a obvious transsexual when the goal is female.

Your'e absolutely right Megan, but wouldn't you agree that it does sometimes feel good? I relate to the long term need to blend but when the real you starts getting loose and checking out her new life it kinda happens faster than the physical changes. Even if it's just make believe with some friends for an evening, it's better than sitting home and crying and waiting to emerge transformed (says the girl who hasn't gone out in two days).
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Alexmakenoise on November 22, 2009, 04:05:52 AM
I think most of the points you made apply to just about everyone who considers transitioning.  Here's my take:

Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
Pros of Transitioning
* I can appear and be percieved as my desired gender.

The importance of this can be easily underestimated.  Have you tried any "real life experiences" (for example, going somewhere where you don't know anyone, presenting yourself as the opposite gender, and seeing how you feel - whether or not you pass)?  Being perceived as your desired gender might have a HUGE effect on how you see yourself, and your level of happiness overall.  And, fortunately, there are plenty of ways to "test the waters" to get a sense of this before you make any major changes.

Quote* I can finally be able to happily and openly do female things!

See above.  Sounds like you really have a strong desire to be seen as female.  The counter-argument is that you can probably do some female things openly and happily while also presenting as male.  Another option is presenting as male in some situations and female in others.  There is a lot of middle ground.  But how accessible that middle ground is can vary according to your circumstances (sounds like you live in a small, conservative town?).

Quote* I can finally have the rights and privleges of being a woman and I can be free of the hell that I've lived through all my male life!

Again, sounds like you really do see yourself as female.  This will probably continue to affect you throughout your life.  Doing something about it is worthwhile.  A good start is to simply explore the possibilities, as you are doing here.[/color] 

QuoteCons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.

Yeah, it sure IS too high.  This 1 reason why a lot of people do their actual transition as a long, slow process.

Presenting CAN be a different story, though.  Changing your gender, as people in general will view you, can switch more suddenly, with fewer (if any) costs involved.  But, again, there are a lot of variables involved.  You'll have to come out to the most important people in your life.

There's a lot of info on stuff like this on this site (not specific costs but advice about how to time what, and what the exact steps are).  Look around.

Quote* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.

Assuming you transition, that's something you'll have to learn to accept.  And hopefully see as an advantage!   ;)  (Plenty of good advice and role models around here.)

Quote* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.

I'm sorry to hear that.  That's an unfortunate extra hurdle that some people face.  I don't have much to offer because it's outside my realm of experience, but I bet some other people here can offer advice and words of wisdom.  You're not alone.

Quote* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.

Definitely something to do research on.  Check out the wiki on this site, look at other sites, and most importantly, talk to your doctors about any questions or concerns you have.

Quote* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!

A good question to bring up in the MTF section.  As an FTM, I feel unqualified to comment. 

Quote* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.

Well, MAYBE the technology will exist at SOME point in the future . . . .

But, realistically, what impact will this have on your day to day life?

Quote* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.

That's a very significant topic that is often discussed here.  I recommend reading threads that relate to this type of situation, and talking to people who have dealt with or are in similar situations.

Quote* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.

What is your ideal female figure?  How many of people do you know who truly consider their figure to be "ideal"?

Transitioning can be like a shot at an ideal figure that most people will never get (for instance, you can choose your breast size).  It can also make your body seem less perfect in some ways.  But keep in mind that almost everyone is unsatisfied with some parts of their body.

The point of transitioning is typically to make your body (and therefore the gender people see you as) in keeping with the gender you are mentally, emotionally, spiritually, etc.

Quote* I'm going to miss the male body that I once had.

Good reason to take your time to do plenty of thinking, talking, researching, and soul-searching before doing anything you might later regret.

[/color]

Good luck!   :)
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: DamagedChris on November 22, 2009, 07:32:42 AM
Pros of Transitioning
* I can finally be able to happily and openly do female things!
You can do this now--especially if you don't mind coming off as a gay male sometimes (which if you choose to get manicures and such you will).

Cons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.
It is high...but it's one of those parts of life I wouldn't want to buy from the "discount" section...as with much else in life, with cosmetic surgery you get what you pay for. That said there are tricks to cost cutting, such as seeing if there's a free clinic that will do blood tests near you. My transition is going to take a couple years of eating PB&J sandwiches, but the end result will be lifelong.

* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.
True...but people don't need to be privy to this knowledge if you don't want them to be.

* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.
Moving might be the cure for sure...but chances are you'd want to tell your family and work with them anyway to keep them in your life. Also, moving doesn't have to mean moving cross-country...you'd be amazed at how well just moving a half hour away works, especially if the people you move from aren't expecting you to be a woman. I'm just a half hour from my previous address and see virtually no one that I knew before in my daily life (not that I get out much).

* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.
Talk with your doctor about it. That said, many TS's would prefer to die 10 years earlier in their desired gender than old and unhappy in their original.

* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!
IMO, menstruation is overrated (but then, I'd be happy to scoop out my ovaries with a spoon at this point)...and plenty of women don't/can't get pregnant or menstruate. Even before I started T my menstruation cycles were REALLY off, would only have maybe 1-2 periods a year.  Also...in your second post you mentioned just liking the belly and not really wanting kids. Make sure that this isn't just a sexual interest in having a female body...do some soul searching.

* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
There are XY females in the world.

* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.
A lot of TS's have encountered this problem, myself included...it's really dependent on which you feel is more important.

* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.
I'm gonna echo everyone and say that very rarely do bio-female and bio-males ever end up with the bodies they want...the joys of our culture, we are bombarded with pictures of how everyone in society "should" look on TV or movies where everyone is trim, beautiful and perfect. In reality, there are plenty of people out there that aren't, and just like the bios we will probably never see the bodies we want...I'd LOVE to be taller, more masculine, but I'll be happy to be a shrimpy, short man too.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Pippa on November 22, 2009, 07:40:54 AM
You have to remember that there is a wide variety of individuals tagged as Transgender and not all go as far as SRS.   For many the ability to pass as female and live as a woman is enough, genital surgery is not on the cards.  Others will only be truly happy if they are physically fully female.   That is why therapy is important.   I have seen and read articles by may people who either were not happy following transition and regretted full SRS as they would have been far happier with life in both genders.   Therapy helps you come to terms with your body image and what is the right level of transition for you as an individual.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Miniar on November 22, 2009, 09:00:19 AM
Numbers in pros and cons are not an accurate representative of how "much" they weigh.

The pro that outweighed all my cons were my own personal happiness.
Honestly, I don't care if other people see me as a "male impersonator" I'm doing this for me, for my own sanity, my own happiness, my own comfort in my own skin.
So what if I don't end up with the body of Brad Pitt or Vin Diesel, What man does? Only Brad Pitt and Vin Diesel can have their own bodies.
Go to the local mall and look around and count how many women you see that have what you could consider your "ideal" body, but Also, count how many women you see that don't have something you'd consider "ideal".
And ask yourself, do these women that have what you'd consider "ideal" see their bodies the same way as you see them?
Do they feel "happy" with their own bodies?
Chances are that the answer is no.
Only a rare few people are fully happy with their own bodies and they're only happy with them because they've accepted their bodies, flaws and all. Which I tried with mine, but I can't accept it's sex, so I'll just fix that, and then re-tackle that situation.
I've accepted that I'll never look like Vin Diesel, but I'll do my best to look like "me".

Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: The None Blonde on November 22, 2009, 09:19:51 AM
Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
Cons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.
* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.
* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.
* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.
* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!
* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.
* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.
* I'm going to miss the male body that I once had.
Miss the male body you had - so gender dysphoria fits in where?

Girlfriend will miss your male form because she likes what she saw - is there a point being with her if she only likes you for your apearance?

XY or XX really doesnt matter... theres plenty of women with xy that were born women, who are abosltuely fine.

Figure: well you can actually get a fairly natural figure, but the mention of large breasts, and your nickname makes me wonder if this is some inverted fetish going on?

Transition can cause physical body damage: uh, only if done wrong, and with underliying liver and kidney conditions.

People wonder what happened to you: Generally that involves 'coming out'

Expensive: If its what you really need, you don;t even consider that fact.


Tbh, I'm not sure where this is going, but i heavily recomend you see a therapist, Soon.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 22, 2009, 06:30:48 PM
Quote from: justmeinoz on November 21, 2009, 11:23:52 PM
Hi BigLover,
Firstly I guess the main thing is that it is your life, to do with as you wish.  There are no rules regarding how far you must go. If you are happy as you are, then that is ok.

Pregnancy and menstruation?  You don't say how old you are, but personally I am old enough to be post-menopausal anyway, so it will change.

Regarding possible risks of surgery, there is always a risk with any operation. Before accepting anything as true, especially off the internet, I would look at the source and see how reputable it is.  Also look for as many reliable sources as possible.

With regard to family, friends etc, I have decided to stand Dr Phil's question, "have you thought about family etc" , on it's head.  Have they thought about YOU? 


Remember what Jim Morrison sang, "No-one here gets out alive."  Go Girl!    Sandra.

And yes, I understand that there are bilogical women (born with a female body) that are unable to menstruate and undergo pregnancy. But, the thing of it is, I never wanted to get pregnant, really. I just wanted to have a monthy period and be able to undergo pregnancy because biological women can and I want everything to do with a biological female as possible.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: The None Blonde on November 22, 2009, 07:51:08 PM
this does not sound like transsexuality... it sounds like fetishised crossdressing... Hon, please see a therapist.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Just Kate on November 22, 2009, 11:17:35 PM
Are we allowed to add more pros/cons?  I have some ideas. ;)
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Autumn on November 23, 2009, 01:51:55 AM
Quote* I can finally have the rights and privleges of being a woman and I can be free of the hell that I've lived through all my male life!

* I'm going to miss the male body that I once had.

That last con is the red flag. Generally speaking, trans people don't like the body they have. For the first time in my life, now that I'm on real HRT, I'm taking extra care of myself and working harder on self improvement in other ways too.

The first one, a lot of men seem to have this chip on their shoulder that women have things so much better. People buy them drinks. They don't have to open doors or carry heavy ->-bleeped-<- or whatever. The rights and privileges of a woman are to be ignored by men who think you're stupid even when you know more than anyone else around you and to be sexually harassed at work by employees or customers.

It's not like the literotica transsexual section where guys get all dolled up and go out and get treated to free things and get fawned over and sleep with an entire biker gang with 9 inch members and make a new happy life as a woman.

Also is your avatar of your ideal woman that you want to be, or that you're attracted to?
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Hannah on November 23, 2009, 02:05:06 AM
An entire biker gang! Nobody told me that was part of the package, be still my fluttering heart!  :icon_dance:
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 23, 2009, 10:41:45 AM
Quote from: interalia on November 22, 2009, 11:17:35 PM
Are we allowed to add more pros/cons?  I have some ideas. ;)

Sure. Go right ahead!

And None Blonde, I've been trying to find a gender therapist! I don't know how to go about doing that! ???
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Robin. on November 23, 2009, 07:05:18 PM
Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PM
There was probably a thread already opened on this topic but... I make this thread because I never wanted to transition and here are the reasons why I do and don't want to.

Pros of Transitioning
* I can appear and be percieved as my desired gender.
* I can finally be able to happily and openly do female things!
* I can finally have the rights and privleges of being a woman and I can be free of the hell that I've lived through all my male life!

Cons of Transitioning
* First off, the cost of transitioning is entirely too high.
* This doesn't change the fact that I was originally born with a male body.
* I have to move somewhere else, and start my new life because my family, co-workers if I get a job, and others will wonder what has happened to me.
* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.
* I still won't be able to get pregnant, or menstruate like biological females (a person born a female) could because I still won't have ovaries!
* I will still have XY chromosomes and they can't change them to XX chromosomes.
* My girlfriend/wife just might miss the me that i once was because she liked what she saw.
* I still won't have my ideal female figure except that I could still have large breasts.
* I'm going to miss the male body that I once had.

The pro's may be fewer than the con's but it is not the number of things that counts, you should consider their worth. In utilitarianism people would give each pro and con a sort of number value (say 1-10) and then assess the difference. And then some of the pro's you may have over simplified and could easily be broken into more.

For example, to appear and be percieved as one's desired gender, is also to be able to relate your true thoughts to others, relate your emotions, and share love and find love in the way that is truely you. And without these things alone I found myself falling into insanity, litteraly.(I'll explain that if you want.)

Being able to happily and openly do female things, is important in much of the same way as the last pro. To follow your interests is very important, and to be able to do such things is important to being content with life. But these things can be done without being female and happily so, if you don't mind others as maybe seeing you to be gay or something.

As for your 3rd pro it is sort of a restatement of the others.

As for your cons:

The cost is high but around 50% of the population drive around in a cars that are more expensive than what it can cost, in america at least. And even without a middle class income, with the right tenasity it can be achieved.

As for the body it may have been male and you may still have that y chromosome, but it is not the body, it is the mind and the spirit. If others know what you are they might not agree with that, but many would.

Physical damage is only a very low possibility.

As for your GF, if she can't love you for who you are then she is not the right one for you. And as for your family...don't let duty to genetic family out weigh the importance of happines with loveing family.

And yes you may have to move away, get a new job, miss old friends. But the new is always frightening at first. A new place, a new job, new friends, all of this can be exiting to have and to work for.

You may not have your "ideal" body, but few do TG or not. Although It may be statisticlly more likely for a TG to be sexier than a non-TG... I'll have to look into that. It is mostly what is on the inside that matters to one's self and to others. I admit that even I don't want to look like I hit every branch falling out of the ugly tree, but it is unlikely that one would turn out that way...unless they were already that ugly, maybe... but plastic surgery has come a long way... and you'd be amazed at what one can do with proper application of make-up!

As for the menstruate thing, if you truely are a female in the inside you will realize that is not that important. It may be odd to other women that you don't, but if it mattered to you what they thought U could always lie and say you have early onset menopause or something...had overian cancer..etc.
For me, that is one thing that I am glad I do not have to deal with that. I am a paranoid person, and I know that I would be afraid everyone knew and was watching me, If I walked out of class to go to the bathroom with my purse(a sure sign, in my opinion). Not to mention the discomfort of a pad, if thats what you used...And as for children you can always use a sperm bank.

If you are really going to miss your male body...that is odd. I can understand missing some of the things that having the male body allowed you to do, not that I can think of any though. Maybe pissing while standing up... But if you really think you would miss it, think deeply and be sure you arn't just thinking the grass is greener on the other side.

I guess I should ask you, why do you say you would miss your male body? What is it that makes you say that? Is it particular things about it, if so what are they? Or is it things you could do, what are they if so? Both?


Post Merge: November 23, 2009, 07:08:33 PM

Quote from: BigLover on November 23, 2009, 10:41:45 AM
Sure. Go right ahead!

And None Blonde, I've been trying to find a gender therapist! I don't know how to go about doing that! ???

Try some of the links on this page http://www.tsroadmap.com/mental/therapy.html (http://www.tsroadmap.com/mental/therapy.html) it should help you find therapists in your area.
If you already have a therapist use that one or at least ask that one if she/he knows of any Gender therapists.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 28, 2009, 04:34:30 PM
Quote from: Autumn on November 23, 2009, 01:51:55 AMIt's not like the literotica transsexual section where guys get all dolled up and go out and get treated to free things and get fawned over and sleep with an entire biker gang with 9 inch members and make a new happy life as a woman.

I didn't quite understand where you were going with that but it's kind of funny you should mention literotica due to the fact, I have an account there.

Quote from: Autumn on November 23, 2009, 01:51:55 AMAlso is your avatar of your ideal woman that you want to be, or that you're attracted to?

Both.  :)

Well... I've been in and out of here these days and I've been thinking about all this gender change thing, and there were some stuff I wanted to cover being that I've been away so long.

Now, I am well aware that there are some biological who cannot menstuate nor get pregnant. Did any of you know Frida Khola was one of them? But however doesn't it make perfect sence that some trans women would want everything to do with a biological woman as possible?

About my voice- I do have a high-putched voice but it still sounds too male, and will they be able to get rid of my adam's apple? I will have to resort to expensive surgery, I know, but if it means softening my voice to sound female and getting rid of my adam's apple, then so be it.

The female figure- My ideal female figure, I wanted to have a little more meat on my body. I don't know why, I always had a thing for plus-sized women and wanted to take on that figure. Well, there's always eating a lot of junk food and fattnening foods but perhaps it's a part of my metabolism and can't get any wider. Plus, I always liked being thin and skinny... as a male that is...

About what I said about missing my male body, well I guess I shouldn't. Because you know, although most people think it isn't possible, there actually is "a turning back". I've read about a male-to-female-then-back-to-male transexual, born a male, became a trans woman, and then went back to male. I know money plays a big-behind factor in this but I just don't feel like getting the same ol' bull->-bleeped-<- that there is no going back to male because if it was possible for him, it's possible for me to. Not that I would change my body just to go back but if I ever feel that I miss my life and I have the money, I will revert back to my male form. As I typed all this, I just thought about just trying one year of being a trans woman and if I want my life back, I will go back to male... If I have the money that is!

I swore black and blue that I wasn't going to do this... but now I think I may have to do this thing.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: FairyGirl on November 28, 2009, 05:59:20 PM
Quote from: BigLover on November 21, 2009, 07:51:43 PMCons of Transitioning

* I read somewhere that transitioning could cause physical body damage.

Only if you count becoming permanently sterile, having real breasts, changing your body shape, and getting your male genitalia surgically turned inside out to form a vagina as "damage".
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: K8 on November 28, 2009, 07:44:57 PM
Standards of Care state you should live full time (24/7) in your target gender for a year before having surgery.  Part of the reason for that stipulation is to find out if this is indeed what you want and to find out if you can manage it.

You can live as a woman full time with no surgical intervention.  That way if you do want to go back to male you can, and it won't cost you a fortune.

Genital surgery, where they remove your testicles and change your penis into a vagina is not reversible.  If you are unhappy because you can't menstruate or get pregnant as a woman, think how you would feel as a man with no testicles and no chance of ever having them again.

Transition isn't an easy process.  It isn't just putting on a dress, taking some pills and lying on a table to get cut up.  BigLover, I really think you would benefit from talking one-on-one with someone knowledgeable about all this – a gender therapist (or at least a general therapist).

- Kate
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: bigbreastlover4269 on November 28, 2009, 10:53:35 PM
Quote from: K8 on November 28, 2009, 07:44:57 PM
Standards of Care state you should live full time (24/7) in your target gender for a year before having surgery.  Part of the reason for that stipulation is to find out if this is indeed what you want and to find out if you can manage it.

You can live as a woman full time with no surgical intervention.  That way if you do want to go back to male you can, and it won't cost you a fortune.

Genital surgery, where they remove your testicles and change your penis into a vagina is not reversible.  If you are unhappy because you can't menstruate or get pregnant as a woman, think how you would feel as a man with no testicles and no chance of ever having them again.

Transition isn't an easy process.  It isn't just putting on a dress, taking some pills and lying on a table to get cut up.  BigLover, I really think you would benefit from talking one-on-one with someone knowledgeable about all this – a gender therapist (or at least a general therapist).

- Kate

Really? Then is does the same apply for turning the vagina into a penis? Just curious...
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Nero on November 28, 2009, 11:03:41 PM
Quote from: Robin. on November 23, 2009, 07:05:18 PM
As for the menstruate thing, if you truely are a female in the inside you will realize that is not that important. It may be odd to other women that you don't, but if it mattered to you what they thought U could always lie and say you have early onset menopause or something...had overian cancer..etc.


Actually, you probably wouldn't even have to explain anything. If menstruation comes up in conversation with other females and you want to say that you don't menstruate, you can say you never have or just that you don't. Most people probably won't pry because they recognize that infertility is a sorrowful subject for women who are. It's not something people are going to think is weird no matter your age as plenty of women are infertile and nobody's going to guess you're trans because of it.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: DamagedChris on November 29, 2009, 12:07:45 AM
Quote from: BigLover on November 28, 2009, 04:34:30 PM
I didn't quite understand where you were going with that but it's kind of funny you should mention literotica due to the fact, I have an account there.

Both.  :)

Well... I've been in and out of here these days and I've been thinking about all this gender change thing, and there were some stuff I wanted to cover being that I've been away so long.

Now, I am well aware that there are some biological who cannot menstuate nor get pregnant. Did any of you know Frida Khola was one of them? But however doesn't it make perfect sence that some trans women would want everything to do with a biological woman as possible?

About my voice- I do have a high-putched voice but it still sounds too male, and will they be able to get rid of my adam's apple? I will have to resort to expensive surgery, I know, but if it means softening my voice to sound female and getting rid of my adam's apple, then so be it.

The female figure- My ideal female figure, I wanted to have a little more meat on my body. I don't know why, I always had a thing for plus-sized women and wanted to take on that figure. Well, there's always eating a lot of junk food and fattnening foods but perhaps it's a part of my metabolism and can't get any wider. Plus, I always liked being thin and skinny... as a male that is...

About what I said about missing my male body, well I guess I shouldn't. Because you know, although most people think it isn't possible, there actually is "a turning back". I've read about a male-to-female-then-back-to-male transexual, born a male, became a trans woman, and then went back to male. I know money plays a big-behind factor in this but I just don't feel like getting the same ol' bull->-bleeped-<- that there is no going back to male because if it was possible for him, it's possible for me to. Not that I would change my body just to go back but if I ever feel that I miss my life and I have the money, I will revert back to my male form. As I typed all this, I just thought about just trying one year of being a trans woman and if I want my life back, I will go back to male... If I have the money that is!

I swore black and blue that I wasn't going to do this... but now I think I may have to do this thing.

As far as the MtFtM....well, go to the FtM sites for surgery and check it out a bit. It's not like they put his bits back just the way he had them...the guy probably paid to get an arm penis and while its better than NO penis (for those of us that want them  ;)) its still nowhere near as good as a homegrown bio-dick. Not to mention the sterility and inability to ejaculate...and honestly I doubt a lot of sexual sensitivity survived through all that. Even if you just went on HRT, there are some effects that are not temporary and will stay with you--breast growth for instance, which if you have removed will cause scarring. So whatever you do, DO NOT approach transition with the attitude of, "well if I don't like it I can just go back"...because yes, technically you can go back to being male-looking, but you won't be as you are right now.

The comment of "I have always had a thing for big women so I want to look like that"...keep in mind the chances of you looking like your ideal woman are VERY slim (it even is for ciswomen for that matter). I know I'm not going to look like my ideal man by any stretch of the mind...but is worth it to just be a man, even if I don't have the reflection I dream of. So before even considering transition, can you deal with the idea of being a homely woman if it came down to it?

The same thing with the voice. There are vocal surgeries, but no telling how they will turn out, and theres a chance you can even go mute permanently from them. They can do a trach shave to eliminate the adam's apple yes. Chances are though, you'll just want to train your voice.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Janet_Girl on November 29, 2009, 12:16:57 AM
Once my bits are removed, I would never go back to being male. I would rather died poor, homeless and a woman, than be a rich, mansion-owning, man.

The last time I tried suicide I was working at a good job, had a home and a family ( step son and wife ), but I was still male.  I now live in a 30' trailer, unemployed, but I am happy because I am further along being a completed woman.  ;D



Janet
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Hannah on November 29, 2009, 12:46:03 AM
Quote"well if I don't like it I can just go back"...because yes, technically you can go back to being male-looking, but you won't be as you are right now.

That is really profound, well said.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Alexie on November 29, 2009, 01:40:26 AM
Not that I'd know, but I'm going through exactly the same sort of list and weighing up the pros and cons. Pretty near the top of the list in "pros" is I DON'T like my male body. This is one of the (for me) major considerations as to why I want to transition. I have always felt female, but never liked my body after puberty.

I feel I qualify in this discussion because I'm in the "consider my options" category. As I've said in my earlier posts, that warm fuzzy feeling I get when I dream of being in the female form is a serious motivator. I want to be happy and contented in myself and if transitioning is ultimately the answer then so be it.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: rejennyrated on November 29, 2009, 03:52:24 AM
It always seemed to me that actually there was only one question worth bothering with.

Can I put up with having an outwardly male body (with some ambiguities in my case) all my life?

The answer was no, because all I was doing was going through the motions of living, people never met the real me. So I reasoned that as I was a kind of female ghost I'd be better off dead! And once I had admitted that to myself then that awful suicidal feeling trumped all the rest of the pros's and cons and I knew that no matter what the cost I HAD to do it. I HAD to be myself. About three decades later... no regrets.

I wrote a poem about it for my MA in creative writing actually here it is. It's one of a portfolio on "becoming myself" that I wrote (and if anyone wants to read or indeed publish the whole cycle please PM me) Enjoy:

The Inverse of Vanishing

For years I thought myself invisible,
People passed me on stairs
or shook my hand at parties.
"Pleased to meet you," they said,
even though they didn't.
The ghost in their machine,
truth trapped behind mirrors,
dwelling in the land of fantasy,
dream, or nightmare.
But then the mirror cracked.

I slipped into this world through a hairline.
Now it is you who are the imaginary.
A world of delusions,
each striving for their reality.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Alexie on November 29, 2009, 04:49:09 AM
Quote from: Janet Lynn on November 29, 2009, 12:16:57 AM
Once my bits are removed, I would never go back to being male. I would rather died poor, homeless and a woman, than be a rich, mansion-owning, man.

The last time I tried suicide I was working at a good job, had a home and a family ( step son and wife ), but I was still male.  I now live in a 30' trailer, unemployed, but I am happy because I am further along being a completed woman.  ;D



Janet

Thanks for that. It's comments like that which give me some solace. You are indeed an inspiration.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Just Kate on November 29, 2009, 07:25:00 PM
As others have said, transition is not something to be taken lightly.  I am MTFTM and am incredibly fortunate.  I have met others who have detransitioned and they have some monumental challenges involving their personal and social lives due to the choices they made while in transition.

Pros and cons are important to consider, but try not to engage in "absolutist" thinking.

Quote from: rejennyrated on November 29, 2009, 03:52:24 AM
It always seemed to me that actually there was only one question worth bothering with.

Can I put up with having an outwardly male body (with some ambiguities in my case) all my life?

This is an example of what I'm talking about.  This type of thinking can easily be used to justify transition to an unhappy individual even if transition isn't the best choice for them.  Perhaps ask, "can I deal with being male today?"  There may come a point where that answer is "no" and some action might need to be taken, but surely people can live within the extremes.  For instance, I could not be happy living as the male I once was.  Extremist thinking dictated to me that I needed to transition to being a girl.  I didn't know there was a middle ground back then, something I found later on.  I still don't like my boy bits or many aspects of being male and often believe being female would be preferable, but I can manage the discomfort of being male now making full transition largely unnecessary due to its high costs (socially, emotionally, and financially).

It is a very difficult decision and one, often once made, is almost impossible to return from.  Counseling is your very best friend so seek out a qualified professional - it will be worth the cost.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: rejennyrated on November 30, 2009, 02:52:53 AM
Quote from: interalia on November 29, 2009, 07:25:00 PM
Pros and cons are important to consider, but try not to engage in "absolutist" thinking.

This is an example of what I'm talking about.  This type of thinking can easily be used to justify transition to an unhappy individual even if transition isn't the best choice for them.  Perhaps ask, "can I deal with being male today?"  There may come a point where that answer is "no" and some action might need to be taken, but surely people can live within the extremes.  For instance, I could not be happy living as the male I once was.  Extremist thinking dictated to me that I needed to transition to being a girl.  I didn't know there was a middle ground back then, something I found later on.  I still don't like my boy bits or many aspects of being male and often believe being female would be preferable, but I can manage the discomfort of being male now making full transition largely unnecessary due to its high costs (socially, emotionally, and financially).

It is a very difficult decision and one, often once made, is almost impossible to return from.  Counseling is your very best friend so seek out a qualified professional - it will be worth the cost.

That is an interesting point of view and one which has some merit but I guess it also shows how difficult it is when you take a part of a post out of the whole... because of course the point was that such a decision isn't made in an instant. It was when every single day the answer kept on being no, and I became suicidal which lead to the realisation that action did have to be taken.

It's also slightly different for me because of course I am looking back from the prespective of someone who not only transitioned but also had SRS over 25 year ago, and has been happy ever since. So obviously for me it was a good decision. But that makes it almost impossible to look back without my view of the decision making process being coloured by what I know came afterwards...

The thing is, as you say, when in the thick of it, you have to take one day at a time. But the problem is when you have made a decsion you can't know for sure what would have happened if you had taken that other road. So I personally found, and still feel, that councelling (and I had plenty from the ages of five to 20) was not so much help because we kept going round in circles. In any case it's a bit late and not really much needed now ;) (ok I know you didn't mean for me... you meant for others who are making the decision now, and actually I agree everyone should try it.)

That's also part of how I made my decision, because eventully I reasoned that there were no guarrantees of any absolute outcome either way. Either road could lead to disaster and unhappiness, but I am a person who would always prefer to fail because of something which I DID than because of something which I failed to do or failed to try. I am someone who easily accepts my failings and failures as long as I feel that I did my best.

In this instance 25 years postop happiness says that I didn't fail. But it certainly doesn't follow that anyone else will necessarily be the same.
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: jesse on November 30, 2009, 04:53:38 AM
as long as those cons still outnumber the pros dont transition end of story
jessica
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: K8 on November 30, 2009, 07:08:48 AM
When I retired I decided to move.  I've lived all over and this was the first time it was completely my choice.  There were two places I was interested in moving to and I couldn't decide.  I made up a list of the pros and cons of each place.  As I kept working on the list, I found that I was skewing the data – making the pros for one place sound better and the corresponding entry for the other sound less good.  Once I realized that, I knew what my choice was.

A pros-and-cons list can help, but in the end it is a choice that you make according to your feelings, intuition, and limited knowledge of the possibilities.  Making the list may help you figure out what those feelings are, but it is only an aid.

- Kate

BTW: I'm happier living here than anywhere else I've ever lived. :)
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: Pippa on November 30, 2009, 12:52:36 PM
If you are in two minds then you are not ready.   We all go through periods where we ask ourselves if we are doing the right thing but you should only transition when you are 110% ready to take on the consequences
Title: Re: Transitioning Vs. Not Transitioning
Post by: YellowDaisy on December 04, 2009, 10:09:14 PM
Quote from: BigLover on November 22, 2009, 06:30:48 PM
And yes, I understand that there are bilogical women (born with a female body) that are unable to menstruate and undergo pregnancy. But, the thing of it is, I never wanted to get pregnant, really. I just wanted to have a monthy period and be able to undergo pregnancy because biological women can and I want everything to do with a biological female as possible.
well, most transsexuals would take all of that if they could just get it, and it was that easy, but those features really don't even matter. just because you don't have them doesn't mean you aren't enough of a woman. i consider those features "toppings." they are just the crowning of society's view of the "perfect female." it's like a sundae. you can choose everything you want on it, and everyone wants a cherry on top for perfection, but it's that easy, because you can choose. if you don't put a cherry on top or take it off, it is still a sundae like any other sundae, and people will enjoy it.