Quote from: RobinTheAmazon on January 31, 2014, 06:35:31 AM
Wow. I really surprised myself.
My answer was an emphatic, absolute yes.
If that is the case, then it really does simplify things a bit. Then the question starts to become "is it worth it to attempt to be that which you want?", because as I alluded to in my previous post some people define their happiness, and at times even their sense of self from other people. As strange as it would seem transition requires at least a certain amount of love for oneself, since it is almost always easier from other peoples point of view not to transition.
I remember when I asked myself the same question I asked in the previous post, I came up with yes as well, but also had some incredible misgivings about the repercussions. At the time when I got to the point that I realized that I would only really be able to be happy as a woman, I was in a terrible state to actually do so. I wasn't out to my wife at the time, only one of my friends knew, I didn't have a job, or transportation, or parents who could take me in. I was so worried about being homeless or getting into a situation with such despair that I would take my own life. I sense this might be a bit of the driver of your trepidation as well.
I wrote a blog post here, years ago now Called "research suggests, don't jump the gun"
https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,100573.0.html and basically I followed that an it really saved me. I never moved quicker than I thought safe, When I wrote that 2 and a half years ago, I had just got a part time job at a retail store but I was still totally dependent on other people, but the idea alone that I could transition and do so successfully if I just planned things out and didn't do anything faster than I should really has seemed to work out okay for me.
Now, that has been moving really, really slow in my view, I am not a patient woman, I want a body that conforms to my mind; but I did gain total independence, I tripled my income, I bought a car, I came out to everyone who was important to me and when I did no one hated me for it, and I got on hormones. Sure, some people have completed their entire transition in less than 2 years, and I suspect it will be another 2 for me before I have SRS, but really it seems outcomes are pretty heavily tied to planning and having the resources to accomplish what you need to accomplish.
I really hope some of this helped, it is a very legitimate worry that upending your life could just leave you worse than you started, stuck somewhere mid transition, but if you are careful you can really do a great deal to minimize any problems like that, and have a much better chance to having great outcomes.