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Getting over fears in regards of rejection and not passing.

Started by Ltl89, May 27, 2013, 12:53:56 PM

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Ltl89

Let me preface this post by apologizing for my negativity as of late.  Usually, I'm positive, but I've been having some difficulties.

I wanted to know if anyone has any suggestions on getting over fears regarding rejection and ones "passibility".  I'm getting very close to coming out and should be starting hormones within the next two months.  As a result, I have been panicking about being rejected and caste aside by everyone.  While I worry most about my family, I also get scared about what everyone else might say (including strangers).  It's weird, but I really hate the idea of being judged and hated for living as who I am.  The worst part is I believe I will never be accepted as a women by anyone.  Even though it's healthy to not care about what others think, I really feel need to be accepted socially as a woman by others.  However, I don't see that ever happening.  It's as though I'm always going to be see as a man by society.  None of the other girls will see me as one.  No guy would ever want to have me as his girlfriend.   I fear that everyone else will write me off as a delusional man that thinks he is a girl.   Now, I have to transition, but I don't know how to deal with this type of rejection. 

Now, I know passing reduces the amount of societal rejection, but I really don't know if I ever will get there.  Sure, I am young enough for hormones to take effect, but I really can't see it working on me.  Everyday that I look at myself in the mirror, I feel like crying.  I've been told that I have lots of potential and that I will pass well enough, but I can't see it.  I look at others here and can't help but feel like I could never get to that stage.  I hate looking at other women knowing I will never be pretty and never get to look like them.  It hurts to know I probably won't ever pass. Yet, I know that passing isn't everything.  In the end, I need to transition and not worry so much about others.

Sometimes I feel like I should just give up and try really hard to be a boy; however, I know that won't work.  But I really don't know how I can handle the pressures of transitioning even though it's my only chance for happiness.  I just don't see how I can have a successful transition like others have had.  I really don't know.  Guess there isn't much point other than letting my scared emotions out.
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suzifrommd

Quote from: learningtolive on May 27, 2013, 12:53:56 PM
I wanted to know if anyone has any suggestions on getting over fears regarding rejection and ones "passibility".

Several suggestions:

* If you are out as a non-passing trans woman, remind yourself that it is helpful to all of us to put a face on transgender. Showing people that we're not deviants or lunatics, but intelligent, sensible, people who are proud of who we are.

* Ever spent time IRL around non-passing trans women? I have. Many of the ones I know are very happy with their transitions and do not carry the added stress of wondering whether they are being clocked or not. Nearly everyone accepts them as women,

* Remind yourself that, passing or not, you're a beautiful woman.

Good luck, LTL. Hope this helps.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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Darkie

Physical appearance isn't the only thing that makes someone beautiful.  You can have all the physical beauty in the world and yet if you have a nasty disposition or a not-so-nice attitude, it makes you seem less beautiful.  The same can be said for the opposite.  There are people that I know that some would call not attractive at all, but to me they are so beautiful because their heart shines through.  From the short time I have been here and read your posts, you seem like a really wonderful person and I feel that no matter what, you will still be beautiful.
Courage is the power that turn dreams into reality.
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Just Shelly

60% of women are average and some may call them unattractive....I have only recently thought of myself as an average semi attractive woman....only because I have been told and treated as such. Inside I still feel like an ugly woman!! but at least its not a feeling of an ugly man as much!

I understand I will never be treated as just another women with people that know my past. Even though these people have accepted and treated me with respect....I still see (or feel) certain behaviors.

for example....I happen (accidentally) to live across a lesbian couple...I talk to them frequently and consider them friends....the other day they had a friend I never seen over....as I was doing some work in my front yard their friend was giving me some curius looks. The feeling I got is that my neighbors described me as someone that was once a man....I feel she was giving me that look of geezz she use to be a man hmmm I cant tell.  I have been told this before...yes it may seem like a compliment but not one I prefer to hear or "feel"

I always compare my situation to being on a sinking ship...I could go the whole time being accepted as just another women...up until the ship starts to sink and they tell people to get in the life boats. They announce women and children first...as I attempt to get in someone says "oh not you, your not an actual women"  This is just my weird way of describing how I feel that I'm not truly excepted by people that know my past.
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Misato

I feel ya LTL.  OMG do I feel ya.

My best advice is wallow in and enjoy being yourself.  In my albeit brief experience most people see me, clock me, then after about 30 seconds of interacting with me have this little light go on in their head, "yup, she's a woman." and we have no problems.  It's like they see how happy and natural I am and they just "get" it.  No words necessary.  I get invited to girls times out at work.  Stores offer me the same oppertunities to spend money they would offet a cisgender woman. ;)

That Male Fail thread can get me down though.  When I dress andro, I know... I know my past shows. So I do wrestle with this still.

The key thing for me was to just start going out there as me.  I had to experience that life was better for me, even being clocked regularly.  I am optimistic you'll find the same.  Cause, sure there will be a cost to pay in coming out, but, you're paying a mighty price trying to force a male life.  The price of living that false life,  that's hard to top. 

Go get em' (when you're ready) girl.  You're going to do great!
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misschievous

I have had alot of the same fears you have. I am sure your family may be upset and confused for a while, but through time they will accept you for who you are. They are family, after all. As far as  friends go, I am waiting until I start on HRT before I tell them, I think. If they can not accept you for who you are, some probably won't, then time to get new friends. I think it is natural to feel the need to be socially accepted. Like wolves we live in packs, We are a community based animals. I believe you will do fine, your friends you lose will probably be replaced with friends you deserve.

I hope I helped you, and in doing so helped myself. :)
:icon_lips:

"Hands and Feet are all Alike, but Fear still Divides Us."

                                                              "Cry Freedom"
                                                                       DMB
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JoanneB

The simple fact is except for a few rare exceptions you will, somewhere, sometime, somehow, get clocked. Hell, even cis women get accused of being T's. This is where attitude helps. Unfortunately attitude is often developed by lots of practice, self-confidence,  and building self-esteem. Which tends to require going out and having to experience the real world on it's terms.

I found that the overwhelming joy of being out in that real world as the real me more than tipped the scales in my favor and away from "The Fear Factor". I started with baby steps. First just going out to me group meetings, eventually to see my therapist. From there it was WTF, just go out and shop afterwards.

The important common thread here is choosing the venues wisely. All were relatively safe and readily controlled. For months it wasn't a true RLE which was OK since I am only part time. I've gone out to movies alone. I wouldn't dream of going to a red-neck bar.

Stopping fear like most things trans and getting to Carnegie Hall takes practice, practice, practice.
.          (Pile Driver)  
                    |
                    |
                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
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Joanna Dark

I would try not to worry about it too much because there are some things you juts have to do and there really isn't a choice involved. This is one of those things. Well you could choose not to transition but remember that line from Braveheart about you could go home and sure you will live and die in your bed many years from now and then on that day would you give everything in between that day and this just for one chance. (I actually think Braveheart stole that from the St. Crispin's Day speech in Shakespeare's Henry V).

The point is no matter what happens it is much better then shrinking back and settling for the joyless life you will live as a male even if it is uneventful and no one will question it. Imagine that you will pass. Imagine that everyone accepts you. Imagine your life after you transtion and how beautiful it will be!

Oh, and totally don't worry about being a little bit down. Just don't let it happen too often lol JK


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A

As long as you end up passing, the vast majority of people will end up accepting you, even if they have trouble at first. To this I'd like to add that probably 90 % of people convinced they'll never pass properly and be pretty are completely wrong. And of the remaining 10 %, half are partly wrong, in that they might not exactly be pretty but they pass just fine, and/or they still don't think they pass but they do to the rest of the planet.

I haven't seen you with my own eyes, but if you've been told you have a lot of potential, I think I can safely bet you're among the 95 %.

And even if you're in the unlucky bunch, it's still a majority that'll accept you. You'd be surprised. As long as you have the right attitude about it (that is, just generally acting normal and not being an ass), things will go really smoothly. The only exception is maybe Bible Town, Texas (stereotypes, I know~). And even then! I've heard of people in very religious communities who were, surprisingly, widely accepted!

So far, I've had nothing but good surprises regarding people's reactions. Apart from my father, but we've never had a good relationship. And I'm far from living in a big city where people actually know transsexuals, oh no. Yet everyone I've come out to has been at the very least okay with it. Some are also pretty curious and ask bland questions, but it can't be helped. :p

You said you liked video games, right? Ever tried Dungeons and Dragons? Having a lot of people not accept you is a critical failure. 1/20 chance. And having people hate you for what you are is probably a critical failure on the second throw as well. 1/400. I'm not a statistician, but this sounds like a pretty advantageous lottery. Not to mention that contrary to a die, you can help your chances with your actions and how you do the coming-outs (letters are a great idea IMO by the way).

Unless doctors play with you like they did with me (and it would appear I'm a pretty rare case of bad luck), fighting the anxiety and gathering the courage to come out is by far the hardest step, and if not, it's close. After you do, it's all going to go more smoothly. You can just gradually be more yourself as you feel comfortable with it and before you know it you'll look like a girl.

Often you're accepted surprisingly well. Sometimes you have to work a bit to have them accept you. Rarely will acceptance be really hard to achieve.
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Ltl89

Thanks everyone.  I have to transition and will do so, but I really don't want to be rejected by everyone and be unpassable.  I'm really hoping the hormones will work and help me (I'm under 25), but it's not a guarantee and hormones only do so much.   I can't help but feel sad that I'll never be like the other girls my age and will never be accepted amongst them.    It hurts to know I'll probably never meet a guy who could accept me.  And it hurts to know that almost everyone in general will see me as a delusional male.  Yes, I have the acceptance of my friends, but they are really cool and open people.  Not everyone is like them.  Yeah, I live in NY, but there are transphobic people here as well.  And I really don't know what my family will do or say.  There is really no guarantee that I won't be a society's reject. And while I have been told I will pass easily in time, I can't help but feel everyone that tells me that is just lying to me.  I'm not ugly, but I certainly don't look like a pretty girl and doubt I ever will.  I've been told I am handsome, but that means I look manly  and doesn't help me feel better.  If I don't ever pass, I really don't know how I could be happy. I respect those who were able to go through it all without passing, but it really saddens me to know I may never pass as female.  I'm just sick at looking at other girls my age and feeling jealous.  I wish I could be like any other girl my age and not worry about all of this. 
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Tessa James

Dear Learningtolive, 

And what an appropriate title for your situation?  Like your previous corespondents I urge you to put on your most confident smile and get out there.  I was so sure I could never do this.  I could never pass and people would hate and abuse me.  That awful self rejection cost me decades of hiding, denial and a chance to live free at a younger age.  There has never been a better time culturally and perhaps for you as an individual too.  Each step you take can ease those fears and build your strength.  I found strangers to be easiest of all.  People out shopping, for instances, seem much more intent on their own goals and we are just another interesting person with a special smile.  I say keep them guessing and intrigued.  Family and friends with a long history may have challenges and if you give them space to talk out loud about it you are helping them to learn and grow.  Please do not let fears rule your life---I waited a too long time to discover how being ourselves is so very empowering and what a relief!  Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder so start giving some love to that girl in the mirror, she's in there!

Hugs,
Tessa James
Open, out and evolving queer trans person forever with HRT support since March 13, 2013
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muuu

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StellaB

I don't think there's anyone trans out there who hasn't had these feelings.

Having worked in theatre for some years it's no different in any way from stage fright. The cisgendered suffer from it too. I'm currently working with professional actors to get some stuff onto video and sometimes it can be a pain.

'Can we do that again?'
'Can you try another angle?'
'Watch out for my double chin. I don't want anyone to see my double chin.'
'Can I try it again but this time from this side? Standing on that side makes me look fat.'

The only way round is is to develop attitude and to project it out.

Passing can of course be beneficial to acceptance, but the greater part of acceptance lies in being comfortable in your own skin and being able to project that outwards to others. Nobody really enjoys being around someone who's ill at ease with themselves and what's more, if you are ill at ease with yourself you'll only succeed in attracting more attention to yourself. 9 times out of 10 being comfortable in your own skin trumps everything else.

If people don't accept you.. well.. there's 7 billion or so others to work your way through. And I've yet to meet anyone who isn't accepted by anyone. In fact I don't think it's possible to achieve that sort of thing.

Another thing is that there's some standard comebacks if anyone says 'You're trans/a ->-bleeped-<-..etc'

'Yes I know..'
'And...?'
'Your point is...?'
'Are you talking to me?'

It takes a certain amount of stupidity to say or do something to throw someone's gender issues in their face.

Therefore look on the bright side. You'll spend less time wondering whether someone you're dealing with is an idiot or not because the idiots tend to do or say things which remove all doubt.

That's the payoff, you get more chance of living a life which is more likely to be idiot free. That's got to be worth something, right?
"The truth within me is more than the reality which surrounds me."
Constantin Stanislavski

Mistakes not only provide opportunities for learning but also make good stories.
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Just Shelly

May I also suggest you go at it slow...let HRT do a little work....hair removal and being misgendered while still living male will help ones insecurities....although some do just jump right into it!!

You do seem a bit more fragile...like myself. I feared rejection so much that I didn't go fulltime until I was being gendered female almost regularly....the stage up to this point was very awkward since I still at times needed my born gender to be known. I can look back now and laugh at some of the situations...but at the time :(

You will know its time to go full time when children and senior citizens don't look at you weird!! Although come to think about it I still see seniors doing this to many people!!
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RosieD

I don't really have any comforting words I am afraid but I would like to share one of the things I worked through before I fully came out to myself. I had to imagine I was in the very worst post-transition situation I could think of. Rejected and shunned by everyone, most especially friends and family, sacked from my job and unable to find work and stuck in the vile sort of housing I lived in back when I was squatting.

Once I had the picture clear in my head so I could clearly see, hear and feel each excruciating detail I asked myself whether my current situation was worse and if transitioning would be worth it if that was the cost.

Rosie
Well that was fun! What's next?
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dentifrice

Here again, it's almost the same.
I'm feeling that something isn't ok and I need to be more feminine... but I'm not feeling 100%as a girl so that make my transition not necessary to be happy. I'm thinking about partial transition.. but anyway.

I have my girlfriend and I chase her as a guy. And so, even if she tell me every-time that I've to be happy and do whatever is needed to be so... I feel like betraying her if I change. And she not lesbian (at that time -- I make her change while I'm changing too ^^)
I have my family too. Some say that the important point is to be happy... what ever others say. BUT being happy for me is also having good relationships with my parents and grand-parents. I love my family more than being a girl and I'll probably never have a single pill of E if my close family cannot handle this with me. And it's not just about them and me, cause they love me and I'm sure they could accept everything... but about then and the others. I don't want to have my parent facing social discomfort because of me. I can face it, I don't know if they can.

I'm planing to come out to them. Tell the truth about me and what I feel even what I just said. I want to face my transition with them and my girlfriend if I do it. So the decision of starting or not hrt will be a familial one... I hope.
But you seem much more feminine than I do and in that way our needs about transitioning are different and make you situation more struggling.

I really wish you to find your way to femininity =)
If you feel too ugly PM me, I'll send you pic of me and you'll find yourself top model  ;D


(and again, sorry for my english, it isn't my mother tong neither my father one... ^^)
Aux sombres héros de l'amer
Qui ont su traverser les océans du vide
:eusa_boohoo:
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kira21 ♡♡♡

I am scared about all this too. Its true passing isn't the be all and end all, but hey, sue me if I don't want people not wanting their children around me because the idiots think that trans people are some kinda perverts and to have to worry about being attacked just for being read.

I suppose the only way is to try it and see. Unlike you though, I don't think I could find it in me to stop. 

Ltl89

Quote from: Steph21 on May 27, 2013, 05:43:41 PM
I am scared about all this too. Its true passing isn't the be all and end all, but hey, sue me if I don't want people not wanting their children around me because the idiots think that trans people are some kinda perverts and to have to worry about being attacked just for being read.

I suppose the only way is to try it and see. Unlike you though, I don't think I could find it in me to stop. 


No, there is no way I could stop either.  To be honest, I don't know if I can live without transitioning.  I imagine that this will be it for me if I stop.  It's that important to me, so I must continue.  I just really hope I get accepted and turn out to be passable, but I fear the worst.  I have spent the whole day crying about never passing and don't know how to get out of the mindset that I'll never have a successful transition like others have had here on this site.  Maybe, I'm too hard on myself and should just relax until I start hrt.

By the way, you pass quite well from your avatar and I love your hair!
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calico

This is a biggy for me as well,over the years I have gotten more comfortable with myself but in the beginning I was worried about being clocked all the time. As I became more and more comfortable I came to realize the thing that gets us clocked the easiest is we are not comfortable, which pretty much I believe is all of us. Even now I wonder occasionally if someone think's, guess's or even wonders. I suppose we never really get rid of that fear. But learning how to be ourselves and becoming comfortable with knowing that makes us far less noticeable to open the door to give people the opportunity to be curious.
"To be one's self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity."― Irving Wallace  "Before you can be anything, you have to be yourself. That's the hardest thing to find." -  E.L. Konigsburg
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Tristan

Calico is so right. The more confident you are the better. Your so much less likely to get clocked
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