Quote from: nonameyet on December 20, 2013, 09:08:37 AM
okay. so. quick background. most people dont know im trans. its a relatively recently accepted notion for me. ( as in it finally hit me as true within the past couple months) i have a lot of questions and few answers. mostly about vaginoplasty but thats for another post.
right now im wondering how others cope with the pre op recomendations (requirements?) known as the real life test. putting aside the frustrating 'for your own good' mentality i really dont know how comfortable i would be living as a woman if i couldnt pass as one. and especially if i didnt feel like one physically. its seemingly contradictory and may seem dumb in some ways but the fact is that while i truly want to be a woman im still a man. i have the parts. unless im feeling especially girly im somewhat comfortable in guy type clothes. its as much about passing for what i am as passing for what i want to be. and im really hoping someone else gets what im saying. because it probably sounds like im unsure about the whole thing and im not.
i just dont want my first year as a woman fraught with people wondering whether to call me sir.
and aside from that fact. i identify more as a tom boy prone to fits of girlyness. i love dressing up and looking pretty. but if im not seen as fitting the textbook trans woman at all times is it going to hurt my chances at getting recommendations for surgery.
and now that ive spilled my guts about so much is there a single person that can see what i mean.
The thing that scares me about this post is that you're somehow equating surgery with passability... like, it sounds to me like you're not accepting yourself as a woman unless you can get SRS first. Well, I hate to be blunt here, but SRS will not affect your passability whatsoever. If you look like a guy, but get SRS, guess what? To everyone else, you don't just magically become a woman because you have a vagina now, you just become a guy with a vagina.
Looking for SRS as validation to give yourself the mental freedom to call yourself a woman, is generally a bad idea. You're overestimating how much SRS changes. In the grand scheme of things, it changes absolutely nothing. All it changes is that you have to pee sitting down, dilate, and you have sex in a different way. For the most part, none of these things affects your daily life one bit. It pretty much changes NOTHING about who you are. Odds are, if you were unable to accept yourself as a woman before SRS, you're not going to magically start accept yourself as one afterward.
I'm in much the same boat, by the way. I've wanted SRS since I was like 13 years old, I really care about the surgery as an end goal, possibly even moreso than the end goal of being accepted as female by society, and I'm also currently petrified by feelings of inadequacy in regards to beginning that real-life requirement, because I'm scared that I look too male for cis-women to really accept me as a member of their gender. So this is from someone who has gone through many of the same feelings, but then met a few post-op girls who went through SRS, and who basically told me that they were honestly shocked how little about their lives it changed. You've got to want SRS because you're not comfortable with your current anatomy, and would rather have a penis than a vagina... not because you're expecting it to somehow make you feel validated as a woman. Because no matter how much we may want it, we need to realize that it's basically nothing but a cosmetic procedure that changes the appearance of your genitals, nothing more. It doesn't magically make you a woman.