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The question I pose to myself before starting HRT

Started by Samantha L, February 10, 2013, 02:46:26 PM

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Samantha L

If society was accepting of your transition, how soon would you have begun? The answer is short. I would not be writing this now. This is what keeps some bigger fears small.
My first question was: Why is this happening to me? Answer: I stopped asking why.

My second question was: What is this? Answer: you are transgendered.
;D
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bethany

Oh thats easy to answer. As soon as I could have. If parents concent was needed I would have started at puberty. If I didn't get that as soon as I turned 18.
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Heather

As soon as they would have let me. Maybe I wouldn't have been so miserable when I was a teenager.
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Emily Aster

I'm not really sure. I'm sure that I would have done a RLE sometime as a kid with just the clothing, but since I haven't done one as an adult yet, I'm not sure how long it would be before I opted for the rest.
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Angela???

I have known since I was about 5 that I wanted to be a girl, so I would have loved to have transitioned before puberty. 
I'm a girl, I always knew!
Now it's time to stop hidding and show the world who I really am!
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Samantha L

I was 5 when I first tried on girl clothes. Even then I new it was much more than fabric. Now 40 years later, I have had the courage to ask for what I want. I have not started HRT yet (2weeks fingers crossed) but it just shows me how bad I need answers.

My first question was: Why is this happening to me? Answer: I stopped asking why.

My second question was: What is this? Answer: (with help of therapist) you are transgendered.

My third question was: What do I do about it? Answer: you start finding out what it's like to stop being male. HRT and the lot.

(where I am at now) My fourth question is what will hormones feel like? there's only one way to find out. Excited! Scared!
My first question was: Why is this happening to me? Answer: I stopped asking why.

My second question was: What is this? Answer: you are transgendered.
;D
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A

At 18 years old, when I finally accepted I was a transsexual and needed to transition, and that no magic spell would save me. I started at 21 (minus 4 days), because of the delays that were put into the process for various reasons, by various people.

The special thing with me is that it's my own fault I couldn't transition early. I thought transsexuals were yucky old perverted ->-bleeped-<-s (thanks dad for the awesome opinions you've given me). A pedopsychiatrist who I was seeing for something else told me about transsexualism at the age of 11 or 12. She asked me if I wanted to be a girl, and I said no, not really, that I was just a boy who was more like a girl. She put a medical term on that and I was happy with that.

I was oh so convinced that magic or something would save me. Or maybe that conviction came a few years later, and the reason at that point was still that I didn't think I had the right to be a girl, because when I asked to be a girl in my childhood, I was told no. I'm not sure at all. My memory is awful. I don't even remember asking my mother to be a girl at all, actually; she told me a few months ago.

I had a chance to start therapy and possibly puberty blockers, something that the vast majority of transgenders have never come close to having, and I didn't seize it.

I don't know if one day, I'll be able to stop feeling guilty and full of regret for that action, and stupid for having always known I was not a guy yet taking 18 years to do the math and take a decision. It's so hard not to, not just for physical reasons, especially with how much brighter my life until now would likely have been if I could have even only been on puberty blockers and seen a therapist. It would have enabled me to build myself a normal adolescence, social skills and a social life.

My experience is why I think such things should be thoroughly investigated, so the shy/stupid/endoctrined/magical thinking/untrusting/whatever child effect can have less consequences. I know myself. I know if I had been thoroughly made to open up, to confess my feelings and beliefs, and if things had been explained to me properly, I would have changed my mind. But then again, I can't really blame anyone. I'm pretty sure most children would not have acted the way I did.
A's Transition Journal
Last update: June 11th, 2012
No more updates
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Samantha L

I can really appreciate the dad thinking TG people are purvey men. My father to a T.
Anyway a few days before 21 starting HRT? don't feel one bit bad. I wish I had done it that soon. I thought about it back then, but was far far too afraid to try. It was over 20 years later that I found the courage. Not a moment to waste right? That's what real living is all about.
My first question was: Why is this happening to me? Answer: I stopped asking why.

My second question was: What is this? Answer: you are transgendered.
;D
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A

Yeah, but I'm pretty bad at forgiving myself. Also, I wouldn't quite say I've started just yet. I'm on anti-androgens, right, but only on a low dose of estrogens that has done nearly nothing in a year, because of those annoying blood test results that were biased.
A's Transition Journal
Last update: June 11th, 2012
No more updates
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Kevin Peña

However long it would take for someone to tell me, "Society will be accepting of your transition." Timed myself saying it a 2.04s.  :laugh:
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Rachel

Can relate to father issue ( Master Sargent, combat vet, Cop and witnessed expressed predudice towards Transg*).

I guess If I had encouragement 4 or 5 when I was discovered in makeup and my Mom's cloths; not a good day, lots of crying and threats from my Mom to tell my Dad.  My Dad would have beat me. I know why I surpressed.
HRT  5-28-2013
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AwishForXX

The answer for me is easy, if society were accepting of my transition I would have started the moment I would have been allowed to begin HRT.  It would have spared me years of confusion and pain, although two beautiful girls would not have been born had I begun then.  I have often thought of the "what would have been",  sort of an "It's a Wonderful Life" kinda of thing.
Oh how I wish for wings that work.
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Emily Aster

Quote from: A on February 10, 2013, 05:13:28 PM
Also, I wouldn't quite say I've started just yet. I'm on anti-androgens, right, but only on a low dose of estrogens that has done nearly nothing in a year, because of those annoying blood test results that were biased.

There are many that would disagree with me, but in my personal opinion, the second any of us knew is the second that we began our transition. Maybe not in the traditional sense of making the switch, but certainly internally as we try to decipher who we really are and how to handle that information. The road to self-acceptance is part of a transition. In fact, I'd venture to say it IS the transition. The rest is cosmetic to help solidify what you know of yourself, and to allow others to see you the way you see yourself.
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AwishForXX

Quote from: Emily Elizabeth on February 10, 2013, 09:12:09 PM
the second any of us knew is the second that we began our transition.

I thoroughly agree,  Transition begins when you accept who you are.

C.
Oh how I wish for wings that work.
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JoanneB

I always wanted to be a girl since I was like 4-5. Yet, under the hypothetical condition of society being accepting; Now. I really doubt I would be the person I am today nor have achieved many of the successes I have if I transitioned earlier in life when I first tried. I was too immature. Too scared. No self confidence and no self esteem.

But now the chicken and egg situation arises. Was I all those things because I was trans and society wasn't accepting? Would I have felt differently about myself if it were?
.          (Pile Driver)  
                    |
                    |
                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
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Misato

I've found socity at large to be accepting in actuality.  I just had to get over my own fear that I carried with me since I learned about me on Halloween in Kindergarten, and develop a positive attitude.  They were my hold ups.

Though, for full disclosure, I also needed to move away from my hometown.  I wasn't strong enough to start my journey there.

I would, and did, transition as soon as I was over my fear.  So put me in the:

Quote from: AwishForXX on February 10, 2013, 09:15:09 PM
  Transition begins when you accept who you are.

camp.
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Lady_Oracle

I would have started puberty blockers as soon as I could have!!
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Samantha L

Wouldn't the question of acceptances come easier had it had been accepted by society as "normal"?

I now accept who I am, but I felt so wrong about it for so long. I am so much lighter these days, and I've only told 4 other people on the planet.
My first question was: Why is this happening to me? Answer: I stopped asking why.

My second question was: What is this? Answer: you are transgendered.
;D
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anya921

At age of 13, I always liked putting make up and coloring my nails and toes. But at age 13 I read an article about Caroline Cossey and her sex change. That is the moment I realize the changing sex is something possible and I knew it is something I wanted to do. I took the news paper to show it to my mother and  tell her I want to be a girl like this. But I was too scared to tell anything. Guess I already knew she will never understand and I would have probably ended in a mental institution.

So if the society had been theoretically perfect and accepting I would have transition when I was 13.
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Misato

I don't know if my feelings about myself would have been any different if being trans were "normal" in society.  Despite knowing at a young age, this has been a confusing thing with large consequences (see sterility).  I don't believe that transition would be much easier if one thing, any one thing, changed in our favor.  Then even if you change one thing for the better, what about the unintended side effects?

In the end we are responsible for our own journey.  If we don't choose to transition at a given time, that was our choice to make.  Even when things like obligations makes it feel like it isn't.  After all, you could also choose to burn your own house down.  When we choose to transition, and how to go about it, that's our choice too.  Delay or alacrity toward our transition, it's not society's fault, or our SO's, our parents, or our work's, etc... it's always us making that decision yey or nay.

The important thing is you, we, get to acceptance of ourselves and we get to enjoy our lives afterward.  We can and would be wise to learn from our past, but the only thing we are left with the ability to have an affect on is our future.
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