Hey Folks,
I found this group through looking at resources for partners of individuals who have recently come out as trans. I am struggling a little bit with how to be a supportive partner and was hoping to find a space where I could find someone else who is also going through this. I am a gay woman and in March, my partner of almost 5 years came out as trans. It wasn't the first time he had mentioned he didn't like his appearance and wished he had been born a boy, however in the past, he had always come to the conclusion that he was a gay butch woman and that feeling of wanting to be a boy came from not realizing he could be a woman and attracted to women. In march, however, the conversation went differently. He is a boy and has always felt like a boy and is starting hormone therapy. This was the first time since deciding he was a butch woman that he had brought this topic of conversation up.
Everything has been moving pretty quickly since March and Last night, he received his first dose of T. We went together and I had an extremely raw reaction to it and promptly burst into tears. My partner, understandably so, was not happy with my reaction and was upset because he felt that my crying turned it around and made it about me. My intention was not this, however I have felt very much an outsider in this process as my partner has not involved me in the discussion part of anything. He is someone who processes things internally and I am trying to respect that but what it looks like on the other end is, "I've made this decision, get used to it" without the ability of me to discuss my thoughts and feelings on it. I am so proud of the fact that he has been able to go through this and I think he is so brave, but I am upset that I have not been involved in the thought process of anything. I want to be stronger for him, but at this point I feel so overwhelmed with so many different feelings and I'm having trouble with it.
The other side of things is that he has wanted to come out to who he wants when he wants, which I completely respect. However, my best friends and family have been included in this group of people he wants to come out to and he has yet to make time to come out to them. He has had some great support from his friends who I don't know very well and this leaves me with him as my support network and no one else to turn to. The other reason I think I had such a bad reaction to the start of his hormone therapy was because of this lack of support. He works at a trans rights organization and actually discussed his feelings of being trans with his co-workers before he told me and they have added strength to his support network. Yesterday, they had a surprise t-party for him at work which is great because he really needs that support right now, however it was another way that I felt completely excluded from this transition. I was hoping that yesterday would be something the two of us shared privately and it felt like a very public moment for him. I still was unable to share this news with anyone in my network and am feeling incredibly isolated and distant from the process.
I guess I am wondering a few things, for those of you who have been through this process with a partner before, how did you create a place in your relationship that allowed for a support network to flourish while you perhaps felt overwhelmed or weak? And, how do you negotiate the coming out process? I of course don't want to come out for him, however I would love to lean on my family and friends right now. I think they are going to be incredibly supportive but I don't want to overstep what my partner has explicitly asked me not to do. Finally, I have been feeling like I don't have the right to ask questions, be upset or reach out for support because in the end, it isn't my body but it is my relationship. Has anyone else felt the same way? If so, how have you reconciled those feelings? I want to be supportive but I also want him to support me through this process as well.
If anyone has any advice, I would really love to hear it, even if it is something that will be hard to hear.
Thanks in advance for being my support network!