The real life test is not intended to be a point of worry and nervousness but a moment of euphoria. For me the day I walked out of court wth my name change in hand my first thought wasn't omigod what do I do now? It was more like phew, now I am 100% legal.
One thing you really need to realize is that you can have 1,000 operations and it will never change the fact that you are a transwoman. If you are not willing to accept that fact, then no surgery will ever fix what ails you. If you back off and do nothing, it will never alter the core of your being either. So there you have it. if something bothers you and you don't feel like you could live full time without it, then change it simple as that. In my case the 2 things that really bugged me were my nose and adams apple. I wouldn't be happy full time unless they were fixed for good. The rest of it, my forehead work was the result of having talked to the surgeons in person and getting recommendations, that's all. There was no magic involved just what I wanted to do, getting some good feedback from doctors and then doing it.
Another thing for me was voice. I invested $25 in one of those personal tape recorders and practiced for months and months and then one day I had my eureka moment. I found my voice and I wowed myself. Then I had to just figure out how to get myself into the right spot on command. That took a while but was made much easier by my real life test, because it was the feminine voice I wanted to use every day.
The last thing for me was having to shave. If I had to shave just to be out for the day that wouldn't have worked for me. I would have called my entire transition a failure. So I boned up on the electro, with blend electro to play it safe based on recommendations I received from successful and some very stealthy women. That was my plan to get to a real life test in a nutshell.
The rest of it, carrying myself as a woman in the world and navigating the social world, well that's what the real life test taught me and to this day still teaches me. I still learn new things about me all the time.
But that's me and what would make me happy and what would qualify as a successful transition. This process isn't about pills or surgeries or anything else, it's about happiness. If you know in your heart of hearts that you want to live the rest of your life in a new gender, then do it. This year will make 13 years full time and 11 years post-op. I'm still here, alive and kicking and still just as happy as the day I started off on this journey. I know when I started off I always thinking 'oh if only I could be a REAL girl, it would be awesome'. Want to know what I think now? I wouldn't trade being me for all the tea in China, and probably a few luxury mega-yachts thrown in as well.
When I went full time I had only been on hormones for a few months, was fresh out of having facial surgery, but a boat load of electrolysis and had grown my hair out long enough for a feminine hair style. When I first went full time I went super girly, not because I HAD to but because I WANTED to. I was wearing frilly things all the time, long gel nails, crazy earrings, super girly hair styles, you name it. It was the result of years of repressed femininty that came gushing out in one big bang.
I never wanted or tried to impress shrinks, doctors or anyone. All I wanted was to be myself and live my life in peace and quiet. If looking back it was preceived as me "pretending" that i was acting a certain way for surgery letters, I can assure in my case that wasn't true at all. Being a female is definitely me and the real life test proved it to me. The bottom surgery was the icing on the cake and I celebrated it with no fanfare, no weenie roast, nothing. It was my private moment to celebrate me and to experience the euphoria one more time, but for myself.