Quote from: melissa90299 on June 16, 2007, 09:59:03 AM
I didn't know how insidious this disease (alcoholism/addiction) is. As my AA sponsor (a sponsor in AA is a mentor who guides you through recovery) said, stopping the use is only the first step, one must work through the steps to deal with the root causes of the addiction.
I really respect your efforts Melissa ... luckily I've never touched the "hard" drugs, and thought transition would alleviate the root causes of my big alcohol problem.
Of course it didn't, ("
first the man he takes the drink, and then the drink he takes the man" sic), and I still use alcohol as the prop to fend off my insecurities, confidence issues, stresses, depressions, and loneliness; in rough periods at levels that would put guys twice my size under the table. I just don't dare tell anyone the truth about the level of my consumption which borders on dependancy. I'm afraid of seeking help, and nobody suspects as I can just about manage a good career, have an OK social life, and seem sober to the outside world.
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When I said that
QuoteThink that if you have a problem with TVs / crossdressers / unpassable TS women sharing your public space then you have a huge confidence issue ?
I was generalizing and not excluding myself.
Sometimes I pop into my local TV/TS group as they "live" just a mile from my front door and I want to offer my support.
Having lost the nice venue they had they're now stuck with a bleak upstairs room in the local "International Soliarity Centre" which has a nice bar with global food, organic beer and wine, and often good music downstairs. As a predominantly TV group of only about eight that evening we decided to "brave it" to find a table in the bar ...
... I who would happily go into the seediest of city bars on my own found I had huge problems being seen in public sitting an drinking with a group of soo obvious "men in frocks", even in a really liberal, right on, politically correct venue ... I almost chickened out ... WHY

?
I've supported friends in their transition, while they were still in "guy mode", with the constant thought "would I want to be seen in public with her once she goes full time ?".
Its all about insecurity, and fear of being ridiculed "by association", especially as I've survived transition without once being "sir'd", without anyone being anything other than really really friendly to me, or a malicious or denigratory comment being uttered. If such an incident happened now it would really shake me up.
This spring myself, my TS best friend, and her husband were drinking with maybe 60 others outside a Soho bordering pub, Soho being the "gay village" of London. What passes by but three very obvious TVs "dressed" for an evening out ... everybody turns their heads and looks in amusement ... but nobody sees the two TS women chatting and drinking in their midst ! What does that say ?
Laura x