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Just need a hug

Started by Jessica Merriman, April 05, 2014, 10:24:03 AM

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Jessica Merriman

Hi everybody! This post is kind of a first for me of this nature and I am hoping it will not negatively affect your views of me, but here it goes. I have had a relatively easy time of transition and blending into society as a female. I have been upbeat and genuinely happy with how things are progressing and the acceptance level I have had. It has been really smooth sailing, that is, until last night. I was watching a movie and in it people were at a large formal party having a good time and mingling. I found myself staring at all the beautiful women in their long gowns and being sought out by men for conversation and how they talked to each other so confident and radiant. All of the sudden I started crying uncontrollably and experienced a level of depression not seen since my pre transition days (even then I never cried or showed any emotions). I was suddenly aware of just how old I was and how I would never experience or have any memory of growing up as my true self and the things young women get to do. I would never remember the awkward teen years, dating as a girl, finding myself and thriving, experiencing kinship with other women or carry and have a child. All of these things never happened or will. I will have no memories of being young, beautiful, desired, looking forward to my wedding day or just be totally secure with who I am. This experience floored me and I didn't sleep at all last night. Today I really am just numb and have no idea how to get past this feeling of utter depression and sadness. I suppose I was do a negative transitional experience, but I at least I thought I would see it coming. I am still moving forward with transition, but I feel hollow inside now and hope this doesn't last. I always try to "rub some dirt on it" and get back up, but I cant even get my balance now as the ground was shaken up under me. Any help you can give or guidance would be really appreciated even if it means smacking me in the head and saying "get over it". I just feel really, well, I don't know how I feel. Sorry to bother you all when your problems and lives are far more difficult than mine. I feel so selfish asking for help. :embarrassed:
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mrs izzy

Huge hug your way. I know the feeling GF.

Isabell
Mrs. Izzy
Trans lifeline US 877-565-8860 CAD 877-330-6366 http://www.translifeline.org/
"Those who matter will never judge, this is my given path to walk in life and you have no right to judge"

I used to be grounded but now I can fly.
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Jessika Lin

Quote from: Jessica Merriman on April 05, 2014, 10:24:03 AM... how I would never experience or have any memory of growing up as my true self and the things young women get to do. I would never remember the awkward teen years, dating as a girl, finding myself and thriving, experiencing kinship with other women or carry and have a child. All of these things never happened or will. I will have no memories of being young, beautiful, desired, looking forward to my wedding day or just be totally secure with who I am.

This gets to me too, usually several times a week. Unfortunately I have no guidance to give, but I do have an unlimited supply of hugs so..*HUGS*
There is no, 'One True Way'.
Pain shared is pain halved, Joy shared is joy doubled

Why do people say "grow some balls"? Balls are weak and sensitive. If you wanna be tough, grow a vagina. Those things can take a pounding.



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Heather

Jessica that's just the way you viewed them I highly doubt they felt so confident and radiant about themselves. You can't really know what's really going through a persons mind. Most people wear masks they show to the world to hide how they truly feel about themselves. My only advice is to realize your no less of a person than them and they are most likely going through they're own struggles. Just try not to dwell on what you can't change and focus on what you can which is how you feel about yourself moving forward. Confidence doesn't come from how you were born or raised it comes from knowing who you are and accepting that person fully. :)
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radsi

Everyone needs help sometimes and has a bad day.

You know exactly how i feel about you n i dont need to explicitly spell it out although i probably will end up doing so lol.. Yeah you did miss out on those feelings and experiences and as much as i wish i could get them for you and fix it i cant but every experience you have had previously is what makes you you. And i wouldnt change that.. You are a beautiful woman now and things will only get better as you go further in your transition and i love you for who you are.

You are finally free now to live your life dont let dwelling on this prevent that. If you want a beautiful ball gown or wedding dress u can have that. Theres a lot of things you can have if you want dont beat ureself up over things you cant or it will eat u up inside. Tears are ok too sometimes but u better have ure waterproof mascara on n keep away from my trainers lol

I love you.. You know that.. N im here for you

J xxxx
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Veronica M

Well, someone I know once told me. "That's what were here for is to support each other... Wonder who that was??? Welcome to the human factor sweetie. Even great pillars have cracks in them. Hell, I'm an emotional roller coaster at times. What I try to do is first look deep inside and ask myself if this is good for me. If not I attempt to let it go. I know also that isn't easy to do sometimes. Given we somewhat have a lot in common, I'd bet a good cry and looking what the future has to hold might do the trick. If we look back and go "What if" were not looking in the right direction. Now if we look forward and say "What if", there are endless possibilities ahead... :) :) :)

Love ya Sis,
Veronica

PS: Don't count that wedding day out just yet... You never know what the future might hold... ;D
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stephaniec

I'm a very late bloomer. I've struggled with this damn thing since birth. I really have no incentive to go back and live my past over. Basically I've always been who I am, I just wasn't allowed to wear the clothes I should of been allowed to wear. I made it this far without suicide and I'm very thankful for my transitioning now. I might be different because I've never married nor had children and there is no guarantee that if I would of been born genetically correct it would of been any different as far as marriage and kids. I've lived a decent life although in the wrong body. My body looks and feels now like I've always wanted even though I've still got a ways to go. I'm making the most of this short span on this planet. I just came into a little bit of a tax refund and I'm getting some clothes I wasn't sure I was going to be able to get so I'm a happy little camper. Just the here and now is really what's important.. Or as a child of the 60's , just let it be.
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RosieD

My advice?

STOP!

And breathe. And notice all the noises and movement that breathing brings. Look straight out in front of you and really pay attention to the colour,  form, texture of what you are looking at. Do this for everything you do for the next 5 minutes, be completely absorbed in what you are doing and only what you are doing.

You are correct that all the things you mentioned are true. Now accept that truth and let it go.

Rosie.
Well that was fun! What's next?
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suzifrommd

Oh, hugs Jessica. I've had those feelings many times.

But I'm serious when I say that middle-aged transitioners are the luckiest people in the world.

My delight in being a woman and exploring this wonderful world wouldn't be a fraction of what it was if I hadn't had 50 years of maleness to compare it to. Cis women don't experience the euphoria we do when we realize we're living the way we always wished we could.

Hang in there, sweetie. Don't lose touch with the fact that you're a wonderful person who brings joy into people's lives.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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alena

Hi Jessica,

I understand how you feel. I'm always getting sucked into thinking about what could have or should have been. I'm also getting better at snapping out of these thoughts when I realize they aren't doing me much good, they're wasting a lot of my time and I just feel depressed at the end of it. You shouldn't feel selfish for asking for help, your positive outlook on these boards has been a real inspiration to me!

Huge hug

Alena


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Sephirah

There isn't a fix for feeling like this, Jess. It's not something that you can go back and change. These feelings are going to come if you let them because for us it is a very real sense of part of a life denied us.

However, the key part of that is the words "if you let them". Sometimes it's all a matter of perspective. A matter of the way you view your life. Sometimes I wonder how much do we actually think about how important our gender was to us in the things we have done, other than when we think of all the things we wished we had done. A person we wished we had been.

Perhaps one way to look at it is to think of all the things you've done in your life that you're proud of. All the souls you've touched, all the good you've done in the world. All the little things that make you smile when you remember them. And doing that, keep in mind that you're still that person you were before. You're transitioning now to become yourself externally, but you were always yourself internally - even if that's buried under layers of denial, repression, guilt, no matter what it was. In that sense, everything you've done in your life has been done by a beautiful woman. So you didn't have the same experiences as other women... that's fair enough. But many women don't have the same experience as other women.

Not every woman has had the opportunity to save a life. Not every woman has had the opportunity to make a lasting difference in the world for someone, or many people in your case. There are things you didn't have, sweetie, but there are also things you did have. You had the desire to want to make a difference. You had the empathy, and the compassion to want to help. The presence of mind to know what to do in a tight spot, to be relied on. Trusted. And maybe those aren't things related so much to gender, but they're things that make you someone very special. And someone who, I think, quite a few women would wish they could have done what you've done in your life.

Maybe you didn't grow up being socialised as a girl, or going through puberty as one. But you're doing that now. It's never too late to make up for things like that, sweetie. To reclaim what was lost to you. You are NOT old. Not even close. You have many, MANY more years ahead of you to make new memories, to make your life exactly the way you want it rather than being forced into situations because you don't know any better or believe it's what you're supposed to do.

Jess, your life has given you one very very important thing, sweetie. Self-determination. That, believe it or not, is something that quite a few people would give anything for. The ability to know yourself. To know who you are and what you want. Take that. Use it. Be the woman you always wished you could have been, and inside always were.

Each life is unique. Billions of beautiful flowers in the garden of life. Some open at dusk, some open at dawn, all are beautiful and all take in the energy of the world to be able to function, all bare their innermost petals to the outside. Show your true colours, Jess. Because trust me, they're strikingly beautiful.

*extra big hug and warm smile*
Natura nihil frustra facit.

"You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection." ~ Buddha.

If you're dealing with self esteem issues, maybe click here. There may be something you find useful. :)
Above all... remember: you are beautiful, you are valuable, and you have a shining spark of magnificence within you. Don't let anyone take that from you. Embrace who you are. <3
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Jessica Merriman

Quote from: Veronica M on April 05, 2014, 10:53:11 AM
Well, someone I know once told me. "That's what were here for is to support each other... Wonder who that was???
Uh, I have no idea! ;D Should have seen that coming as well. ;)

I don't dwell on what could have been at all and know I cant change things from the past. Maybe it was being fairly new (5 months)to HRT or whatever, it was just something that hit me out of the blue and was very intense. Kind of a micro burst of realization, I don't know. I compare it to a vivid dream that wakes you and rattles you for a while. I will be OK and go on, thanks for all the replies and hugs, they mean a lot. :)
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Veronica M

Quote from: Jessica Merriman on April 05, 2014, 02:05:18 PM
Uh, I have no idea! ;D Should have seen that coming as well. ;)

I don't dwell on what could have been at all and know I cant change things from the past. Maybe it was being fairly new (5 months)to HRT or whatever, it was just something that hit me out of the blue and was very intense. Kind of a micro burst of realization, I don't know. I compare it to a vivid dream that wakes you and rattles you for a while. I will be OK and go on, thanks for all the replies and hugs, they mean a lot. :)

Good to hear... You should have seen me when I shaved my goat and stash off for the first time in 17 years... I cried for a half hour... Looked in the mirror and had this huge double chin... It's nothing diet and the gym can't fix, but I was a total wreck for a bit...
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Ms Grace

Sorry you're feeling down, sweetie. Grief at coming to terms with not having been born a cis female is not a happy place to be in. I can relate, I had those feelings in spades during my first attempt at transition. The trigger could have been anything. Still remember spending the better part of a bus trip from work crying quietly to myself, just because there were a couple of attractive young women on the bus! I suppose the only small consolation - and it is small - is that we also haven't had to endure some of the truly unpleasant things cis women go through. I know we say we'd want that too, but not even cis women want them, so I doubt we really would them. Anyway I realised that "what if..." and "if only..." were not going to be my friend during this transition so I sent them packing. It really made a difference.

Hope you're feeling back on top of the world soon!

HUG! :D
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Jayne

Big hugs to you from me & Poopie

It doesn't matter what age someone is because we all live with regrets, it's human nature.

When you are transitioning then the regrets are often much deeper but we just need to turn the negative into a positive. I may not have had a girls childhood but I also never really had an exclusively boys childhood, I had "my childhood" & I wouldn't swap those memories for anything (even the bad memories).

I try to live by the Monty Python song "Always look on the bright side of life" so i'll look on the bright side of some ot the points you raised:
Never assume that any experience is out of your reach just because of age, you say you've missed out on finding yourself but we never stop finding ourselves.

You say you missed out on dating but I say you're entering a whole new realm of dating with lot's of fun first  experiences & sensations.

Over the years you'll meet new women who will form a new group of friends with which to share female kinship so you won't miss out on that, through life some friendships come & go whilst new ones form & evolve with you as you grow & evolve.

You say you'll have no memories of being young, beautiful & desired, well I have to concede the young part as I don't know how to travel back in time. . . . yet, but if you don't think you're beautiful then you haven't looked at your avatar photo, i'm in no doubt that you'll meet plenty of men over the years that will desire you.

From what you said about the sudden & surprising onset of emotions i'd simply say "welcome to the world of female emotions", I've had a few silly episodes like this since starting E with random things setting me off, the upside is that I always feel ten times better when it passes, it's as if a huge emotional burden has been lifted.
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Carrie Liz

I know this probably isn't worth much, but I just wanted to say that this is the same problem that I have which always sets me off... feeling inadequate compared to cis-women. So you're not alone. It's a common source of distress.

I guess the way I get through it is just by thinking "I'm doing the best I can with what I have to work with." Where sure, maybe life cheated me a bit, and I will always mourn the natural femininity that I could have had... but there's not much I can do about it. And I'd much rather be where I'm at now than where I was when I started. And when I realize that I'm mostly happy with myself now, and can actually smile at my own reflection, where before I couldn't even do that, things don't seem as bad.
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Joanna Dark

Read the book "Half Life" be Shelley Jackson. There's a lot of paralells to being trans, gay, identity politics, etc. in the book. it's all about a woman who had two heads and wants illegal surgery to chop of her unwanted appendage and just be normal. She wants a Half Life. I heavily identify with it in many ways because Im 31 and think of everything that happened before as the past and the future as my real life, my "half life." My best friend said that I should cut off all my old friends and just start over like I want. He's right. He's always right though. He's wicked smart. And hot. Sorry had to put that...

But, HUGS!! :P
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Ms Grace

Quote from: Joanna Dark on April 05, 2014, 05:27:52 PM
it's all about a woman who had two heads and wants illegal surgery to chop of her unwanted appendage and just be normal.
Wonder what the other head had to say about that?  ???
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Adam (birkin)

*hugs* It's OK, Jessica. Everyone has down days, and that's OK. One thing that I think is important to remember is that those images are just that - images. You'd be hard pressed to find women who are genuinely that happy and secure in their lives, whether they are cis or trans. I bet even women like you describe (desired, confident-seeiming, etc) would watch a film like that and wish their lives were like that. Just because someone appears happy and seems to have it all doesn't mean they do.

I have always admired how positive and settled you are, and I'm willing to bet there are a lot of cisgender women who would be envious of how much peace you have found with yourself.
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Jessica Merriman

Thanks everybody for your replies. I feel a lot better now that I know I am not the only one with these feelings. Please forgive any future freak outs as I hope I learned enough from all of you now to deal with them a little better. My confidence in myself and who I am is still there I just got a little tired physically and mentally and let something affect me that normally would not. I will pay better attention next time and handle it a lot better. Thanks again all as I could not complete my journey without your support! :) Love you all!  :icon_hug: :-*
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