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How did you deal with accepting your gender

Started by Shawna777, December 18, 2013, 09:47:22 PM

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Shawna777

Hi everyone....

I was just wondering how people dealt with accepting themselves as transgender/sexual

For me I've been trying to deny it my whole life doing everything I could to be more "Masculine" doing guy stuff when it bored the hell out of me, constantly telling myself its just a fetish and feeling guilty about it.

After 24 years I am finally starting to accept myself for who I am.

I guess I am just wondering if other people have dealt with the same situations.

Sorry if my post is to broad first one ever ;D
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Jessica Merriman

I knew all along, but when you get the official diagnosis it kind of freaks you out a little. I was hoping for the Plague, Ebola Zaire, Marburg Virus. Basically anything beside Gender Dysphoria. I guess hearing it officially and having it recorded in permanent medical records brings it home real quick. No stopping now!  :)
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michelle

When I was just a child, I didn't think much about my sexual identity one way or another.   I lived in neighborhoods with just a small number of other kids my age, less than five and we all played together at times and all of it was outside. 

From the time it took me to become self aware that I had a sexual identity it took me forty years of struggle to accept the fact that I was really a female and not a male.  From that time that  I accepted the fact that I was a woman, it took me nine years to become determined to be that woman and was going to try and publicly live like one. 

It took me another five years to declare it publicly on the internet that I was a transgender woman so that all of my friends and past students and family knew about it and insist that I used the women's restroom at most times.

  Now I am struggling with seeking out formal counseling with hopes that I will be able to start hormones.   I am starting to accept the fact that I have gone as far as I can on my own.

Being suicidal is out of the question for me for based upon my understanding of my Baha'i Faith spiritual beliefs,  death is just dying to this physical world and being born into the spiritual world.   In this world we are developing  or spirits to be able to survive in the spiritual world so that whatever I don't deal with in this world will just make me more handicapped in the next.

Here goes.   I just hope that I take less time on the next step in my life cycle.   I am 67 and at the very most only have another 30 years to live.   Each day that I live, makes it one less day that I have left to live.
Be true to yourself.  The future will reveal itself in its own due time.    Find the calm at the heart of the storm.    I own my womanhood.

I am a 69-year-old transsexual school teacher grandma & lady.   Ethnically I am half Irish  and half Scandinavian.   I can be a real bitch or quite loving and caring.  I have never taken any hormones or had surgery, I am out 24/7/365.
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Katie

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FalseHybridPrincess

To accept that you are transgender...it takes time...
but eventually the sadness and dysphoria will get to you and you ll have no choice but to change...

I managed to accept it by thinking the possitives,,,by thinking that when im done with transition I ll be happy.
I guess thats why we fight  ,,,
http://falsehybridprincess.tumblr.com/
Follow me and I ll do your dishes.

Also lets be friends on fb :D
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Shawna777

FalsePrincess:
I couldn't agree more... no matter how much I did to convince myself I was a "Normal Guy" there was always a part of me that would say " who are kidding" and after everything I did I was still completely miserable and alone
I just hope I didn't wait to long to be Happy
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Jill F

Slowly.  I got over it after a lifetime of varying hell and am moving on.  I know that soon enough the transition will be completed.  I don't know when "completed" really is, mind you. Perhaps never?
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noeleena

Hi,

To myself it had nothing at all to do with or with out gender fact is it has no meaning to myself , being nether male or female , i accepted i was different at age 10 and thats all , i did not see male or female .

yes your body can be different for us it is how your brain wired  with some of both male female you dont ?  your self i saw a few things that were different still did not matter to me , i thought i was normal .

so got on with life, and that helped me , i had other issues that made my life harder, so thats where i struggled not the matter of boy or girl, i knew i was female and would at some stage of my life live as a normal female / woman, that does not discount my maleness fact is that is what keeped me alive,

surgerys took place and before that my body went into changes  no meds or drugs so the time came for that to happen over 20 years ago. im accepted as a normal female who has grown into a woman  part of what i have allways been or the prep had to take place first so i could grow into a woman .

i dont care if your female or male thats not the issue what is,   is  in accepting you your self first, for who you are, then allow your self to grow as a person its not about boy or girl .

How i see it and where im coming from is allowing who you are as a person to grow, if you dont do that it makes no difference what you are male or female,  i know some wont agree because they wont allow the growing to take place,     its what they wont and wont it now so with that attitude they dont grow as a person, its that simple,

As i was growing as a person i had lots to learn and as i did it was about being female yet my maleness was still a part of myself and still is and will be . i know many women who  yes they are female born yet have a maleness about them selfs you dont see just a feminine part of them you see all of them and the same for myself  male female born a mix of both and with that what youll see is this is who i am i dont act a part if i cant be proud of myself for who i am then then i have nothing

Love who you are be kind to your self and accept every thing about your self, because this is what makes you you, yes have surgerys go on hormones no drama  importaint as it is it wont change you so remember this really is about who you are as a person, dont try and be who your not all youll do is make your self misserable   .

If your male then allow your self to grow as one , if your female  than again allow your self time to grow as one,  yes i may be weird even nuts  ill tell you what i have a fantastic life and im living it,

...noeleena...
Hi. from New Zealand, Im a woman of difference & intersex who is living life to the full.   we have 3 grown up kids and 11 grand kid's 6 boy's & 5 girl's,
Jos and i are still friends and  is very happy with her new life with someone.
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Tristan

My original response was to shoot myself but after getting locked up in a state hospital they had me looking in a mirror every day and learning about who I was until I could say I was a male to female transsexual. That and heavy medications :)
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Ashey

'It chose me' as I've seen written elsewhere around here. I only denied it once, and that was as a survival mechanism to get through high school. After that, when I stopped repressing at 20, I felt similar to how I did a decade earlier. I wanted to be female. I knew it couldn't go back in the bottle, so I weighed the pros and cons of transition and the pros won. That's how I accepted it I guess. I just felt like there wasn't much of a choice. And though I waited a while to actually transition (because I wasn't able to start HRT until recently), it never left me. I never had doubts, just practical concerns. But at 27, I still feel like maybe I can pull off being 'a kid' a few more years. Still dress a bit younger, and enjoy myself before I have to really grow up. I owe it to the young girl that I longed to be but never was. So that was a big push to get going on transitioning. That and the notion that time isn't going to slow down for me, and I'd regret not transitioning at a younger age while I actually could.
  •  

J

Quote from: Ashey on December 19, 2013, 12:39:34 AM
'It chose me' as I've seen written elsewhere around here. I only denied it once, and that was as a survival mechanism to get through high school. After that, when I stopped repressing at 20, I felt similar to how I did a decade earlier. I wanted to be female. I knew it couldn't go back in the bottle, so I weighed the pros and cons of transition and the pros won. That's how I accepted it I guess. I just felt like there wasn't much of a choice. And though I waited a while to actually transition (because I wasn't able to start HRT until recently), it never left me. I never had doubts, just practical concerns. But at 27, I still feel like maybe I can pull off being 'a kid' a few more years. Still dress a bit younger, and enjoy myself before I have to really grow up. I owe it to the young girl that I longed to be but never was. So that was a big push to get going on transitioning. That and the notion that time isn't going to slow down for me, and I'd regret not transitioning at a younger age while I actually could.

Completely relate to you.  Sadly just a tad bit older even though I feel not a day over 18! xD
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big kim

I repressed it doing guy stuff,the usual muscle cars,bikes and booze thing.I realised at 21 I was transexual and repressed it for another 10 years til I couldn't stand it any longer,realised this was who I am and sought help
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Emmaline

I always knew something was very wrong, but it was not until I read the definition of gender dysphoria that it clicked.  37 years later.
Then it a massive rollercoaster coming to terms with it.  At first I wandered around parks just sobbing and thinking what it meant to my life- playing scenes over and over.  But the thing that finally helped - I researched.   The science behind it, peoples experience and advise on youtube... I just crammed everything in and let it percolate.  Having information at hand helped me digest it all, and accept.  I came out to a close friend and she helped too.

Good luck.
Body... meet brain.  Now follow her lead and there will be no more trouble, you dig?



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evecrook

For me I've always known since 4. It took me along time to not to deny . Along the way I've taught myself to become a woman. Learning to dress properly ,do my hair and make up . I was fortunate early on to hang around a group of girls going to an all girls college. I learned about being a girl . They accepted me as girl friend . Through out my life I've worked at it. I sought out help from therapy ,but at the time I think they  thought the proper road was to try to have me except the male. I was too introverted to pursue the tools I needed to become me. I made it though and I'm one happy little camper.
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KabitTarah

A switch flipped for me. It's just how I work, I think... why fight what you know is true? Give in and go with the flow. That's me on lots of things.

That is to say... I didn't know or believe it was true. I came out as a teen, but it was more of a "I want to be a girl and don't understand any of it" than "I am transgender and this is what that means." This let others influence my situation and repress it.

The years of repression included gender play: online and in my head, both sexually and not. To me it was just a fetish. I also came across the false condition of "autogynephila," which kept me firmly seated in denial and repression.

When I came out, it took about 3 days and I've identified as female gendered and transgender since. I've also back filled all those years - I know I've always been female... I was just trying to change that to match my body instead of the other way round.
~ Tarah ~

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Carrie Liz

I'm going to admit, I'm still learning to accept it.

I've known since I was 13 years old that I was experiencing gender dysphoria... to the point where I knew I wanted to be a girl, I knew I wanted SRS, and I hated every single damned thing about being a guy. And yet, since that same very beginning, I've been repressing it, and refusing to admit it. I spent 10 years in the biggest form of denial of all... actively trying to pray the desires away, and believing that God had "cured" me even though He didn't, and the desires kept coming back. And yet, all this time, I've been running from it.

And in many ways, I'm still running. Even now, 11 months into hormones, having been full-time for a period of nearly 2 months straight, which I consider to be the absolute happiest months of my entire adult life socially, even after coming out publicly, even with my genital dysphoria now reaching the point where I can't even function sexually because it bothers me so much, even after realizing a long time ago that all of my doubts were completely about how society was going to treat me, and being afraid of not "fitting in," I still can't do it. I'm still afraid of that exact same thing, and it's still keeping me from going full-time and getting it over with, because I'm still petrified by the fear of how I'm going to be treated by others. So in a way, I still haven't come to terms with my gender identity. I'm still allowing myself to see it as this deviant thing that I'm ashamed of and that I have to hide from everyone, and I'm still scared to death of being visibly trans. And I'm still fighting against my gender identity, even though transition has improved my functioning on the most basic of levels in pretty much every single way imaginable. I still can't just accept it and get on with my life.

It takes a long time. Especially when you've spent so long trying to tell yourself that it was impossible and that nobody would understand you. Old habits die hard.

The thing that's helping me come to terms with it slowly, is the mirror... because the more and more feminine I'm getting, the happier I'm getting. And the more femininity I see in myself, the more I'm starting to smile. It's pretty hard to deny what your gender identity is when suddenly you're actually starting to like your reflection for the first time in your life, after 14 straight years of feeling completely miserable every single time I saw myself.
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ashrock

I dont really know how to answer this, but i really really relate to Ashey and a couple of others.  I dont struggle at all with accepting my gender, but relaying my gender to other people is another matter entirely.  Internally I know, but logically and socially, I struggle with an accepted way to convey it to others.  Ive been trying to keep this bottled for so long that the protective instincts and posture that I have used to shut people off are hard to stop.  Im lonely, im dieing, and the only person to blame for that is myself.  I have opened up to several friends, and well, noone has freaked nearly as much as I expected.  I accept who I am, but my dilemma is, can others?
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peky

I always accepted it.... even after several decades of playing the male role there was no rejection to the fact that I was and I am a female....

I endured many forms of torture, abuse, and punishment but I never repudiated I never give up...conformed...to do so would have meant death...



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kathyk

Was sitting on a bench next to a corral watching elk on a hillside and yelled as loud as possible that I was transgender, and I couldn't hide it anymore.  It had been bothering me for years, and that day it came to a peak.  It wasn't a brave thing to do 'cause nobody was within 5 miles, just the elk.  And because of fear I couldn't do anything about it for several more years.  But the day I started hormones I knew my life was going to change, and I was never going back.





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Allyda

Quote from: Ashey on December 19, 2013, 12:39:34 AM
'It chose me' as I've seen written elsewhere around here. I only denied it once, and that was as a survival mechanism to get through high school. After that, when I stopped repressing at 20, I felt similar to how I did a decade earlier. I wanted to be female. I knew it couldn't go back in the bottle, so I weighed the pros and cons of transition and the pros won. That's how I accepted it I guess. I just felt like there wasn't much of a choice. And though I waited a while to actually transition (because I wasn't able to start HRT until recently), it never left me. I never had doubts, just practical concerns. But at 27, I still feel like maybe I can pull off being 'a kid' a few more years. Still dress a bit younger, and enjoy myself before I have to really grow up. I owe it to the young girl that I longed to be but never was. So that was a big push to get going on transitioning. That and the notion that time isn't going to slow down for me, and I'd regret not transitioning at a younger age while I actually could.
Ashley's situation above is the one I've read so far that closely resembles mine. Although I knew at a very young age I was different it was a few years until I finally understood why. I then had to because of having an Italian for an adoptive father had to cope as best I could and put on a good front for being a guy. However on the inside I was always a girl. I still remember the horrors as a child of being forced to have my hair cut short. However even with short hair I still looked more like a girl than a guy. Things began to get easier for me when my adoptive parents got divorced. However it would still be years before I could begin my transition due to family and now at 50 I'm hoping it's not too late for me to enjoy life as who I am both inside and outside.
Allyda
Full Time August 2009
HRT Dec 27 2013
VFS [ ? ]
FFS [ ? ]
SRS Spring 2015



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