Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
I wanted to start moving towards transition bit by bit and make enough changes over the summer that I could come back to school as a boy in the fall, maybe even tell my teachers too so that I won't have to put up with that part of it. I have a guidance counselor at school who knows but may have forgotten, and I'd love to go see her about it but there's never time.
Then do it. Just do it. You don't need anyone's permission.
If you want to see the guidance counsellor, make an appointment even if it's during your lunch break or before/after school (if that's practical). She's probably just forgotten or your problems aren't on the top of her list. But they are on top of
yours, so push for what you need. You need to drive this forward if you want to get anywhere. If you wait for other people to do what they're supposed to do, you'll wait for your whole life.
You'd be amazed how many people will be supportive and will try to help you if only you ask. Heck, you've even got a perfect stranger in England trying to help you right now.

Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
I don't get an allowance; my mom occasionally gives me some money to go see a movie with a friend or go grab a snack with my boyfriend. I was really trying to split what I had between tickets to see my friends' band play and saving up for getting a gift card to get a binder to alleviate some of my dysphoria, but the fare hike on the metrocards is killing me because we've needed to use something around $25 in fares in order to see all these doctors. There's no way to ever park near there, so we've taken public transportation and each paid for our own fares. Which sucks.
So save up any money you can get your hands on. Ask for money for a movie or to grab a snack, even if you don't intend to do so, and squirrel that money away. (Giving you this advice may have just cost me my Parent Card, but so what? That's what I used to do to survive when I didn't get any pocket money.)

If you're old enough to get a part-time job, is that a possibility? Or could you do a part-time when you're at college? You could save that money up for the things you need. I worked 7 days a week to pay my own way through college and I still had a bit left over for the things I needed. I'm not suggesting you do the same, but a part-time job will help you get some savings behind you.
Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
They think that not being an adult means I can't possibly be trusted to do anything. The way everything is set up is so unfair- they're less mature and informed than I am, and this is my body and my life, not an extension of theirs as my father claims. I should be able to make decisions that improve my well-being, whether or not they agree with me...but support would be so nice. I didn't ask for any of this.
Yup. Many parents are the same and it
really sucks. The only known remedy is to grow up & move out... so hang in there until you can do so.
Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
And by shoving it to the side, I know I can't shake off how I feel, but the work I'll have in college and supporting myself while there would most likely stop me from having time and money to act on anything, even when I'm out of the house.
If it is truly important to you (and I don't doubt it is), you will prioritise it. You'll
make the time for it, no matter what. Even if you have to eat nothing but tinned spaghetti hoops for 3 years straight, you'll find ways to save up for what's important to you.

Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
Every time I think about the sheer number of days I'll have to go out not looking anything like how I should, it makes me feel sick inside. I hate this so much, yet my thoughts always come back to it and won't leave me alone. My mom won't hear me out, and I can't even say I was dressed as a cowboy for a talent show when we're on the couch remembering things because it has the word boy in it and I must be manipulating her. My dad is an utter nightmare to talk to about it; he was understanding at first and I thought he was taking a scientific approach to it, but that took a sharp turn into a transphobic and homophobic viewpoint, and he takes it as either a joke or psychosis and makes like I'm killing him if I bring anything up. My friends wouldn't possibly understand about this and I don't know how to trust them the way I do my boyfriend, but he gets even sadder than I do about it and I don't want to hurt him.
Perhaps the best thing to do is to simply not discuss things like this with them for a while. Give yourself (and them) some space to breathe.
Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
So I feel like I'm trapped alone with these thoughts with no place to go away from them.
This is only a temporary situation. And in the meantime, you have us.

Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
I know 18 seems young to so many of you, and I'll excuse my whining, but events in my life caused my perception of time passage to slow to a grinding halt, yet even within that I feel it running away from me.
It's not whining; many of us (particularly the 'always-knew' crowd) had also reached the limits of our patience by the time we were your age. It's very frustrating to be on the cusp of your adulthood; knowing that you feel ready to make your own decisions, but being treated like a toddler by your parents. It's a time of your life that can make you hypervigilant about every little (and big) problem in your life. But just as you're adjusting to your new-found sense of personal responsibility, your parents are adjusting too. It just takes them longer because they're not in the thick of it.

Quote from: Liminal Stranger on March 28, 2013, 11:12:32 AM
I'm not really sure what my future is going to hold; now there's yet another scare in the medical department. It always seems like someone suspects cancer or some horrible disease that will leave me without mobility, especially with the fact that my calves show muscle wasting despite me using them quite frequently and the disappearance of my arches somewhere along the way. I want to get this over with so that if I go through that, I do so as myself and without the additional pain of being known as a girl and being too sick to do something about it. Oh, the melodrama.
Yes, that is scary. Nobody knows what the future holds: we could live to a ripe old age or we could all be wiped out by a meteor tomorrow.
I'm pushing forward with my own transition because, amongst other reasons, I am now two years older than my mother was when she first contracted the cancer that killed her. Illness or immobility may be just around the corner for any of us, but we must just keep pushing forward regardless.
Y'know, Max... you have a great sense of humour and an excellent outlook on life which shines through in your posts when life isn't getting you down. This is probably just as well because a sense of humour is often the only way to cope with what we trans people go through. But I'm confident that you have it in you to come out on the other side of this dark patch. Hang in there... you're going to be OK.