Thank you, all, for your concerns and advice...
Quote from: mind is quiet now on September 24, 2013, 03:39:51 PM
As i tell anyone always have a job plan B before you start the transition in job plan A. I know its not what most like to hear but never have the cart before the horse unless you know how long it take to get the horse back in front.
My plan "B" is always in the works, as a contractor I can't be too careful. I have a side job that could keep my head above water for a month or two while I find another job. Plan "A" is to do the bulk of my transition working from home with my current company.
Quote from: Isabelle on September 24, 2013, 09:43:55 PM
Start looking for a new job. Working for a cult is a bad idea. Finish your contract, stay on task. They'll fire you for looking up things they can't understand also , they're paying you to do a job. Do that.
Hear, hear! I'm locked in for the first year, which ends in February. If they won't let me be full time at-home, I will find another where I can be (or, perhaps, find an LGBT friendly situation, but in Oklahoma that might be difficult).
Quote from: kabit on September 24, 2013, 05:37:40 PM
I have a LONG way to go, yet... how long can I keep it secret? I have coworkers on FB... and I'm not out, but I'm liking things that might point fairly directly to GLBT. (NOH8 and FCKH8 are two I've liked a lot from).
Something that helped for me is that I had a local career in showbiz... I created a distinct profile on FB for that, and when I came out to myself I came out on that page, inviting people to follow me by PM'ing me for the new page. Of 600 fans, about 60 people have migrated over. None of the fans know my true identity, where I live, what I do for a day job, etc.
Perhaps you should create a new FB page (using a yahoo or gmail address for your new name) so you can friend only those who know about your transition? It helps me a *lot* to interact socially as the woman I am with people outside of Susan's (as wonderful as you all are, I don't know any of you in RL. Yet.

Quote from: Christine167 on September 24, 2013, 04:34:24 PM
Interesting read and very informative. Robin I'm not a developer but I am a data analyst for a unix system so yeah.... Lots of free time, could do the job from anywhere with a decent connection and yet we are required to be there 5 days a week 8 hours a day. And I spend a fair amount of time here just reading on my tiny phone screen in my cube while running reports and audits.
Sounds pretty identical. I feel like a well-paid cubicle ornament.

The problem is that I feel *so* much better integrated with my new life that I am having a *very* hard time being a male programmer, and it's starting to show. No one has asked about it yet, and perhaps I'm just being paranoid, but I really feel like I'm spinning my wheels. I'm also concerned that hormones may blunt my coding edge, and I may need to find a new line of work. Plan "C" involves selling my house, moving to cheaper digs, and starting a new career in project management somewhere, hopefully online through the transition because I'm stuck in OK through kids and custody arrangements for the next seven years. :\
The starting gun has gone off... now that I've admitted my status to myself and have a goal to work toward, I can't imagine *not* transitioning... even delaying seven years is unthinkable.