Quote from: OlderTG on September 19, 2014, 09:11:25 AM
The latest piece of this has been that my wife said that IF I don't transition we could stay together and that I needed to consider this with my shrink. Last shrink session as I tried to play my own devil's advocate, shrink commented that I seem the happiest and most comfortable when I'm accepting my TG self.
Next up, I've got to tell my wife that I can NOT promise not to transition; that it doesn't mean I don't love her but that I have to love myself also. Of course I'm torn. And I still recognize what a horrible situation this is for her.
Soon after that I need to face my two daughters in their mid-late 20's and my son getting close to 40. My son will be the most difficult to tell and with the most disastrous results, but who knows.
I've felt wonderful support from people here and I'm looking forward to meeting Julie this Sunday!! Finally! A face to face personal talk with someone who is further along in this process of becoming who we're meant to be!
Last night I told my married gay friends and I couldn't have asked for more love, support and validation. I've only taken those first one or two steps and am somewhat daunted by what lies ahead and yet while I'm scared stiff, I'm anxious to be on with my life.
Hi there,
As a late transitioner who has preserved both her mariage and her relationship with her three adult kids (all relationships actually stronger and healthier than before), I'd like to throw a few ideas at you.
I came out to my second wife regarding my strong identification with all things feminine almost from the day we met. That was back in April 2005 and at the time I frankly had no idea that I would end out transitioning. Like you I cross dressed a lot and felt far closer to the feminine world and to women than I did to men, that was it.
The woman who was to become my second wife accepted this side of me and when,
3 years later, I started to test the waters regarding a transition (first experience with HRT) , she understood where I was coming from and was very much involved in the decision making process.
I did not come out to my kids until I was pretty certain I was going to transition and
that didn't happen until three years later again, in July 2011, when I took the first really irreversible and very visible step in my transition process, FFS.
All of that to say that I would question the wisdom of coming out to anyone other than my wife until I am absolutely sure that I want to go ahead and transition. By coming out to too many people too early in the process, you are setting yourself up for a huge amount of grief, possibly for nothing if, like many people who identify as TG, you finally decide not to transition. There is a French expression which goes "Vivons bien, vivons caché" which translates as "Live well, live hidden..." which applies very well in this case. Right now, if you haven't decided to transition, you don't actually need to come out to anyone so why do it?
At the end of the day, like any other decision we make, the decision to transition needs to be weighed up on a cost/benefits basis. In my own case, if transitioning meant sacrificing the relationships that meant most to me (wife and kids), I am not at all sure I would have gone through with it. Most of all, it was the support of my wife that carried me through. That support came willingly because over time she saw who I was, not because I tried to force it down her throat.
So, I agree, right now you need to breath deeply, stop and think, ideally with the help of a third party who can stand back and help you identify what is really important to you so that you will be comfortable with whatever decision you finally make.
Wishing you all the best!
Donna