Hi mandonlym,
To get you through, until you meet again, focus on your positive aspects. Don't dwell on any negative assumptions.
I hope in the fullness of time you are able to take a lot from this event in which to strengthen yourself.
When it comes to relationships, making assumptions about how others think, what they know, how they'll react, what they like, is a MAJOR no no. The word assume is self explanatory. You don't want to make an ASS out of U and ME.
This is where the subtly art of communication plays it's role. On any topic you are not certain how someone thinks, you just need to ask them questions about it. Remember, whoever asks the questions, controls the conversation. Opened ended questions like, "How do you feel about .... What do you know about ....... " the answers from which, will give you the knowledge of where to go from there.
My second point regards our own self respect, and how to maintain it. The most important organ in our body, is our brain. It governs everything we do, say, think, like, etc. It pumps our blood, makes us breath. There is well documented medical papers detailing the substantial differences between the male and female brain. If you were born with a female brain, you are a female till the day you die, regardless of how many arms, legs, heads, fingers or toes you're born with, including genitalia.
You were obviously born with a female brain, making you a women, with a few bodily defects. Society deemed you to be masculine gender, just because of the way you presented yourself. To satisfy your self respect you needed to transition from this masculine form to your predetermined feminine gender. Again, society wanting labels, labelled you as transgender. You therefore underwent surgery to correct this defect. Once your body's gender conformed to your brain gender, you were no longer transgender.
The point I'm making with this explanation is you are no longer Trans, as much as someone who has been cured of cancer is no longer a person who suffers from cancer. I have met far too many women who still consider themselves Trans, after surgery. Carrying this inappropriate mantel like some old beleaguered baggage they fail to use the empowerment, surgery has provided, and miss so many opportunities to grow and develop into women of substance.
You are a very intelligent woman, moving forward into your rightful place in society, with much to give. Don't drag your past with you. There's nothing you can do about it, you can't change it. The future is all yours to determine how it plays out. Make the most of it. It's the only thing you have control over.
Huggs
Catherine