Hiya Ruth,
I have a helpful suggest that might improve your wig experience. I myself do not wear wigs, but I do wear monofiliment hair extensions to my waist, and I've been wearing them for three-and-a-half years. To keep my extensions nice and pretty and natural looking, I find that steam works best. (Please be careful with steam! DO NOT burn yourself!) Working with steam on extensions that are attached to my head is a bit tricky; steaming a wig that you're able to remove from your head will be much easier and safer. I use a very nice Rowenta Valet clothing steamer that I got from Amazon for 100 bucks. You can find much smaller steamers for 20 to 30 bucks. I use the steam to smooth, straighten and arrange the synthetic hair fibers. A nice heat resistant wig or extension brush works great to smooth the length of the hair as you steam it. I like a natural boar bristle brush to smooth and polish the ends. You can then use steam to curl and style your wig. The thing to remember is that, unlike human hair that curls as it heats, monofiliment hair curls as it cools. So wrap the hair around a curler or brush, heat it up with a little steam, and then keep the hair in position until it cools down (a couple of minutes.) Experiment and have fun. This may help you to enjoy and love your wigs just a little more.
Also, I can assure you that when I first went on hormones in 1998 at the age of 33, I felt horrified and suicidal off-and-on for the first couple of years. I felt as though I would always look like a freak, that I would always stand out and draw unwanted attention just by being... a man in a dress.

(Horrifying, I know, but that's how I often felt back then.)
By the end of 2 years on hormones, my body and outlook on life had both changed quite a bit. Since 2001, when I moved to a new city and fell in love, I have honestly and truly lived a mostly stealth existence, in spite of the fact that I'm very flamboyant with pink hair, glamorous makeup and tattoos. As it turns out, I still draw a lot of attention in my life, but it's the kind of attention that any 49 year old woman would draw if she dressed as flamboyantly as I do. (Think Penelope Garcia from the TV show "Criminal Minds". Yeah, that's me with the addition of hot pink and bright green streaks in my hair... oh, and I'm slender.)
Patients, my friend. Patients.
Please feel free to PM me if you have questions about my process of steam straightening and steam styling monofiliment hair.
Hang in there... I know it's a stupid cliche, but suicide is and always has been a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
Hugs,
Miharu
Quote from: Ruth Ruthless on May 17, 2014, 09:23:49 AM
4.5 months on hormones.
Doing IPL DPC treatment for facial hair and body. Also for 4 months.
Doctors diagnosed my hair and said it will never grow.
I have monofilament and lace wigs. They all look fake and become wretched after several weeks of wearing even though I try to get the best ones and I tried to learn everything there is about maintaining them. And when I take them off, I feel even more fake for seeing how I really look. The wigs are all that lend me a feminine look to a small degree, and they are fake.
And the wigs and accompanying products cost a lot of money, money which I barely have for the next year from insurance and I can't get a job. No one will hire me.
What reason is there for me to hang on if nothing will change?