Hi Everyone,
I've been coming to Susan's for a few months now. It took some time to find the courage to register as that meant admitting that I had a problem. Now I think it's time to introduce myself.
My name is Ciara and I'm from Ireland. I'm 54 years old, happily married with a son and daughter in their twenties. I love them all dearly. My problem.....I am a girl living the life of a man.
My story is similar to many of yours. I have always been uncomfortable with my body. I have always wished to be a girl. In my teens I wore my sisters' clothes and continued to wear my wife's clothes throughout my life – always in secret. I kept my feelings of femininity "under control" – or so I thought. A few months ago a teacher friend was staying with us and related a story of one of her students whose life was in torment as she was a girl in a boy's body. In the detail of the story I heard my own life story being told. A floodgate opened as a lifetime of my anxieties and my suppressed emotions came pouring through. I had lost control and I was left alone and exposed, face to face with my gender.
All my life I had told myself that I was a man wishing to be a girl. I now realise that I had it the wrong way around - I was always a girl. Once I accepted being a girl it brought great relief to my life. For the first time I felt in my heart that I am a beautiful and loving girl. I feel closer to my wife, children and friends as a girl.
However there is a downside. Ireland is a conservative country that has little tolerance for people that are not in the mainstream of society. Coming out would result in my wife and children being ridiculed and I would certainly be a social outcast. There is little support in Ireland for transgendered women, especially in their fifties. While I had started on a beautiful journey to discover my gender, I was scared that it may take me somewhere I could not go and where the cost to my loved ones may be very high indeed. And so I arrived at Susan's, scared, vulnerable and alone.
Since coming to Susan's I have met the most wonderful, loving and supportive people. I am still a little scared, I am still a little vulnerable but I am no longer alone........thank you.
While of course I would love to become the woman I am, I am pragmatic enough to know that it will not happen. I am however in a really good place in my life. Lots of good things have happened to me since all of this started.
I feel good about myself
I have accepted my gender, I love being a woman
The gulit that I carried through my life as result of being uncomfortable in my body is gone as I know I had done nothing wrong.
I know what I am and I know who I am and I am really comfortable with both.
I will never again hide my feelings from myself and I hope that this will help me on the path that I must choose. I hope you will continue to be there for me whenever I need help. Sometimes my head tells me that I have gone insane but in my heart I know that this is real. I may never transition but I will always be a woman.
So.........that is my story. I have never before been so honest.
Thank you all for your kindness.
Love,
Ciara.
"I have spread my dreams under your feet,
Tread softly, because you tread on my dreams"
W.B. Yeats.