Quote from: Ms Grace on November 30, 2013, 12:03:38 AM
Not having doubts would probably be a bigger problem. They indicate you have some perspective and aren't in some fantasy where this process is some infallible panacea for your gender dissonance. But doubts can be very unhelpful if they're not constructive.
The best way of putting it, and essentially, the advice that helped me out as well. Doubting and second-guessing are indicators that you're properly analyzing your actions. When people uproot themselves from their homes, they have doubts. So naturally, an event as major as transitioning should have you questioning yourself.
But you're also an intelligent person. I had this conversation with my sister once, and she made the point that she's questioned many things about herself, but gender was never one. The decision to transition can only be triggered by a genuine instinct. So, I'd say, continue to doubt and analyze this series of actions, but maybe include this concept. Like Ms Grace said, doubts and second-guessing can be helpful, but don't let them control you.
And as far as not seeing the changes in the mirror...yeah...that's a difficult one. We see our reflections many times in a day- and many more when we're fixated on our appearance. It's so hard to see the changes when the intervals are only minutes apart, especially when the changes are all long-term. It takes time, but one day, it will click, and you'll realize that what you're focusing on in the mirror isn't "am I passing?," but "oh, f-, my makeup/hair doesn't look right." Or in my case, "UGH I got red sauce all around my mouth, and all over my shirt. Dammit."

Either way, it clicks eventually, and you'll see the girl more often than the guy. And it's amazing.