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Social Media Coming Out Postings

Started by JenniR04, January 19, 2015, 03:57:50 PM

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JenniR04

I was wondering if anyone would be willing to share their own personal coming out statement that they may posted any of the varied social media networks (ie: Facebook or the like). I would like to hear how it was received as well.

I am out to my immediate family, and will be conquering my extended family within the next few weeks. I also out to a few of my closer friends whom I see more often than others. I am looking to come out fully to my extended friends on Facebook, some of whom I have not had contact with since high school over 20 years ago.

I appreciate everyone's feedback in advance.
"Being with no one is better than being with the wrong one. Sometimes, those who fly solo have the strongest wings!"
Hugs, Jenni R.



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AbbyKat

Quote from: JenniR04 on January 19, 2015, 03:57:50 PM
I was wondering if anyone would be willing to share their own personal coming out statement that they may posted any of the varied social media networks (ie: Facebook or the like). I would like to hear how it was received as well.

I am out to my immediate family, and will be conquering my extended family within the next few weeks. I also out to a few of my closer friends whom I see more often than others. I am looking to come out fully to my extended friends on Facebook, some of whom I have not had contact with since high school over 20 years ago.

I appreciate everyone's feedback in advance.

I'm nowhere near that bridge yet but... have you considered just deleting most of those people?  Especially the less enlightened ones?  I have a feeling I'll be clearing out my "friends" list quite a bit before announcing anything like that.  The last thing I'll need are people I haven't heard from for years suddenly coming out of the woodwork (probably literally) to tell me I'm going to burn in hell for my condition.

You say you haven't had contact with some of them for 20 years and extended family is there just for an arbitrary connection, usually. 
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Jo-is-amazing

https://www.facebook.com/Johanna.little.5011?fref=ts

Certainly take a look at my fb if you wish. It's a tad more confrontational then I wanted but hey it did its job
I am the self proclaimed Queen of procrastination
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androgynouspainter26

I didn't do anything overt; I just changed my name and profile picture.  The people who already knew didn't care, and the people who figured out what was going on were usually quite accepting.  I did get a few uncomfortable messages, but I just deleted anyone who gave me a hard time.  It's a very good way of sorting out the people worth keeping and the ones you'd be better off without without painting a target on your head.
My gender problem isn't half as bad as society's.  Although mine is still pretty bad.
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jessical

I opened a new profile, and then I posted on my wall a note saying I was going through gender transition, and put link to the new profile.  It worked well.  The closest people I contacted before hand.  It was surprising who actually came over to the new profile.  A had a few very conservative people come over.  Then some people who were very progressive (but I am not super close to), did not.
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Sydney_NYC

After coming out to my immediate family, clients and close friends, I came out on FB. I simply changed my gender and name then posted a status like this:

"Your probably wondering about the name change on my Facebook profile. ....." then the rest of my coming out message.

The result was amazing. I got tons of positive comments and didn't loose a singe friend. In fact I gained a few when my wife shared my post.
Sydney





Born - 1970
Came Out To Self/Wife - Sept-21-2013
Started therapy - Oct-15-2013
Laser and Electrolysis - Oct-24-2013
HRT - Dec-12-2013
Full time - Mar-15-2014
Name change  - June-23-2014
GCS - Nov-2-2017 (Dr Rachel Bluebond-Langner)


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Carrie Liz

Basically how I did it was the following:

I basically started a photo album called "My Transformation, In Pictures." For months and months, as I progressed with HRT, I posted a new picture every few weeks or so. I was losing weight at the same time, and always posted my updated weight along with my picture updates, so everyone just assumed that the "transformation" I was talking about was weight loss. Unbeknownst to them, they were watching me feminize right before their eyes.

Finally, after about 7 months of playing this game, I decided it was time to come out. So basically what I did was post a picture which included my already-B-cup boobs in an athletic body-hugging outfit, with a feminine heart necklace, along with the following message:

Quote
"I've been debating whether or not to post this photo for a long time now... because I know what it's going to mean once I do. But you know what? I'm tired of this little game of "figure it out" that I've been playing recently. And above all, I'm tired of this act of normalcy. After 14 years of hiding who I am on the inside, this picture should make it pretty obvious exactly what kind of a life-changing transformation I've been hinting at for the last 10 months. Let's just say that there's a very good reason why I'm growing my hair out. And due to some significant hormonal changes, certain appendages have been growing while the rest of my body mass has been shrinking. (Holds breath and hopes for the best here.)

(and if this picture doesn't make it obvious enough... here's a picture of me in my Halloween costume, which should remove any doubt. http://i43.tinypic.com/2w312xw.jpg )

My childhood (gay) friend immediately rushed to my support. As did all of my friends from work who I'd already come out to months before. (Basically I was fired from my job, and right after getting fired, I'd heard that some people had been whispering about my increasingly-feminine appearance, so I just decided to come out on my workplace's Facebook page, so probably 40% of my friends' list knew already.) A ton of people told me that I looked great in my Halloween costume. A family friend replied "you're my friend, whatever." Another childhood friend sent me a PM to basically say "holy s***, dude."

The next day, following the picture coming-out, I changed my gender marker from male to female, and then posted the following official coming-out announcement:

Quote
So, in case you haven't seen by now, as of yesterday I'm now officially out as transsexual. And it apparently came as a shock to many people, so I guess I owe all of you at least somewhat of an explanation. So here we go:

Basically, around the age of 12, I started feeling something called "gender dysphoria." Which basically means that I started feeling like my physical body didn't match the self that was in my head. For whatever reason, every single one of the changes associated with a male puberty made me feel detached, as if "no, this can't be happening, this shouldn't be happening!" And I stopped feeling comfortable in my own body. Every single time I looked in the mirror and saw body hair, heard a deep voice, had to fight against my newly-enlarged sexual anatomy, it made me feel like complete and total crap, and I'd look at the girls and just feel this deep-seeded feeling of longing, of "why am I not like them? Those changes that they're going through, that is what would feel right to me."

I've lived with this feeling as my default state of existence for the last 14 years straight, doing EVERYTHING in my power to get over it, including flat-out denial in the form of trying to become a fundamentalist Christian and pray away these transsexual desires.

Around last Christmas, I finally realized that it was never going to go away. Despite all of my best efforts, despite officially renouncing my transsexual desires at age 21 and declaring myself cured, I was just kidding myself. They ALWAYS came back. And at that point in my life, I had absolutely everything that I had always thought I wanted. I was finally done with school, I had a great-paying job now, I was well on my way to financial independence, I had a girlfriend, I was eagerly looking forward to a possible future family, I was established, and living the life I'd always thought I'd wanted, and I should have been happy in every single way. And yet I wasn't. Because no matter how great things were on the outside, I was still at war with my own body on the inside. I was still stuck in this "dull grey drear" mode where nothing ever seemed to bring me real joy. I was bitter and angry and snappy all the time for no reason whatsoever, and social interactions felt like a chore. And every single day I was still waking up in a body that I hated, not feeling the emotions that I felt I should be feeling, not feeling truly alive for a reason that I just didn't understand.

With that in mind, I decided that it was finally time to quit running from my transsexual desires and face them. And on January 8th of this year, I officially started hormone replacement therapy. And for the first time since I was 12 years old, I am FINALLY starting to feel happy in my own body again.

That's really all that there is to it. I was miserable for the entire 14 years of my life that I had testosterone in my system, and now I'm finally becoming happy with myself again. That's why I'm doing this. Because it makes me feel happy. Because I finally feel like my body is starting to match my internal identity again. Because I'm no longer at war with the body hair, and the male sex-drive, and my emotions finally feel right, and I feel happy on a core level where previously I felt miserable on a core level, even though now I'm WAY worse off in terms of life situations.
(there was also an Q&A at the end where I answered what I assumed would be some common questions about surgery, hormones, my sexual orientation, what my new name was going to be once I finally did legally make the switch, etc, but I don't feel the need to repost them.)

I was shocked at the sheer amount of people who gave that note a "like." Childhood friends, high school friends, college friends, my ex-girlfriend, friends that I'd met through her, work friends, and even some of my old teachers from middle school.

And to be honest... only one person seemed really surprised. (An old friend from my childhood secret club.) Apparently everyone had been assuming I was gay all of these years without anyone really telling me outright, so yeah, the response tended to be support with a side dose of "yeah, I could kind of tell, but it's glad to see you finally come out and be authentic about yourself."

And then about 5 months after that, once I legally changed my gender marker, I changed my name on my Facebook profile to my female name. My aunt wasn't happy about that. She wrote me a reply about how I should keep my birth name because I'm named after my great-uncle, and I needed to honor that. Friends immediately counter-posted about how they loved my new name. (I love my friends sometimes. :) ) [And my aunt later calmed down after I explained to her that I was still named after him, just using the feminine version of the name "Charles," Caroline, instead.]

Aside from that one protest from my aunt about my name, I didn't encounter any open hostility whatsoever. Anyone who didn't respond or "like" my trans-related posts pretty much just said nothing and haven't said anything about it since. However, a few days ago when I was looking back at my friends list, I noticed for the first time that 2 or 3 friends had quietly de-friended me without saying anything. So some people weren't okay with it, but they were too polite to say anything to me, and just decided to leave my Facebook page.

That's it. I've had some drama with my dad behind the scenes, but in terms of Facebook, it couldn't have gone smoother.

I deliberately decided to come out in as direct of a manner as possible, just outright changing my name and gender marker on my primary Facebook account rather than doing the two-profile method, because I didn't want to give people the option of clinging to the old false me while ignoring the actual me. And for me at least, it had exactly the desired effect. I treated being trans as nothing to be ashamed of, just an immutable part of me that they were going to have to learn to accept, since day 1, (and I tried to do it all in a very matter-of-fact tone rather than being confrontational or sensationalistic about it,) and people have responded that way right back, with surprising amounts of acceptance.
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Jessica Merriman

I simply privately told immediate family first. Then I posted it on my male page (coming out/transitioning) and invited positive people to my female page. After one month the male page was closed. To my surprise I went from a mere 17 friends on my male page to over 200 on my female page, most of whom I communicate with regularly.  :)
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alexbb

i found it worked quite well. i made a simple blog with information, videos, things like that, and my thoughts, and sent people i loved to it. they were all fine. so i put it on facebook. out of 1500 people not one said anything horrible and several hundred wrote messages of positivity and kindness. in a way, i feel i can be myself now, no matter what type of genitals are between my legs or how well i pass. everyone now knows so might as well just do it. so i bought some nice clothes i consider stylish and just go about my business as a transitiong mtf.. its so relaxing. 1 button click never did me so much good.

Rosemary

I'm not there yet, but I have a profile for my feminine side, and I'm considering as a first step at least befriending myself. It might work as a very casual way to do it.
Trying to hide my girliness less every day.
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ImagineKate

Quote from: Sydney_NYC on January 19, 2015, 08:44:28 PM
After coming out to my immediate family, clients and close friends, I came out on FB. I simply changed my gender and name then posted a status like this:

"Your probably wondering about the name change on my Facebook profile. ....." then the rest of my coming out message.

The result was amazing. I got tons of positive comments and didn't loose a singe friend. In fact I gained a few when my wife shared my post.

That's kind of not possible for me. My wife doesn't want me to tell our inlaws, because we don't talk to them anyway but I have a few of them on there to share pictures of the kids and the like (I know, it's a little weird). So I'll be pretty much leaving behind my social media presence. It's kind of sad because I met so many nice people on my current fb account.

I've been meaning to get rid of it anyway. I have a lot of people on there who just hate anything not straight and cis, and not good old christian boy sorta stuff. They're not really friends, just people I know.
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alexbb

"My wife doesn't want me to tell our inlaws, because we don't talk to them anyway "

Not doing things because of some relatives you dont even like is I think a bad move. Fk em!!!

Dex

I had a multistaged approach to telling people. My wife and our kids have known how I felt as long as we had been together (and she has always identified as straight so I really feel like she fell in love with my male soul and not so much my wrong body exterior). When I decided I couldn't live in my wrong body anymore, I told my mom. Then I told my boss and my boss's boss because I wanted to make sure I wasn't at any risk of losing my job. I started going by my chosen name at home and when I knew I'd be starting HRT soon, it became too much having to live two separate lives (or so it felt to me at the time) so I decided it was time. I told my direct reporting staff in person in a meeting and then sent out an email to roughly half the department and counted on word of mouth to reach the rest. On facebook, I private messaged people who meant something to me, but didn't blast a wall post or anything out there. This is what I sent to facebook friends:
Dear Friends and Family,
If you are receiving this message, it's because you have a large enough place in my past or present that I feel you deserve an explanation. 

Effective 11/25/13, I will be changing my Facebook page name to Dexter (last name) and my gender to "male".  This is not a decision I have come to lightly or in haste. 

I have struggled my whole life with my identity and who I am inside.     

For that reason, over many years of reflection and thought, I have decided to medically transition to being male. 

I know some of you may not approve of this or understand why this is necessary.  And while I won't ask you to change any opinions you have or express approval, I do hope that we can remain friends and you will respect my decision. 

I will not be posting a message on my wall about this change.  For me, it is a nonissue.  If (hopefully less close) people choose to unfriend me, I will respect their wishes.  I don't want to stand on a soapbox.  I don't want to make a big deal of anything. I'm not trying to force any agenda or point of view on anyone.  I simply want to be respected and loved for the person I have always been but never had the courage to own up to. 

Thank you for your time.  If you have any honest questions, I would be more than happy to respond to them, but please take it out of this group message so not to burden everyone with a million alerts. 

Thank you,
Dex

I wanted to show that I was set in my decision but that I didn't expect people to express approval. However, my response was overwhelmingly positive. I got tons of support. I haven't tallied friends before and after but I haven't lost any that I cared about or noticed :).

I had thought about starting a new fb account, but I don't want to completely lose my past either. I have considered that I may limit access to my pre-transition posts at some point simply because I want to be seen as the man I am now, but we will see. Because I've remained at my job and my wife works with me, I haven't met very many people who don't know me from before yet. It's something I toss around but I haven't totally decided yet.
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Sydney_NYC

Quote from: ImagineKate on January 21, 2015, 11:52:25 AM
That's kind of not possible for me. My wife doesn't want me to tell our inlaws, because we don't talk to them anyway but I have a few of them on there to share pictures of the kids and the like (I know, it's a little weird). So I'll be pretty much leaving behind my social media presence. It's kind of sad because I met so many nice people on my current fb account.

I've been meaning to get rid of it anyway. I have a lot of people on there who just hate anything not straight and cis, and not good old christian boy sorta stuff. They're not really friends, just people I know.

My in-laws I did tell prior to my FB post. They were not religious, but socially conservative. They were initially more concerned that I was turning their daughter to a lesbian than anything. My wife who is pansexual had not come out to her parent, so my transitioning kind of forced her to. Once that fear was neutralized, that have been nothing but supportive.


Quote from: alexbb on January 21, 2015, 03:02:51 PM
"My wife doesn't want me to tell our inlaws, because we don't talk to them anyway "

Not doing things because of some relatives you dont even like is I think a bad move. Fk em!!!

I agree with Alexbb, they are eventually gong to find out anyway. Once they see positive comments on coming out, they would not want to say anything negative and maybe rethink their position on it.
Sydney





Born - 1970
Came Out To Self/Wife - Sept-21-2013
Started therapy - Oct-15-2013
Laser and Electrolysis - Oct-24-2013
HRT - Dec-12-2013
Full time - Mar-15-2014
Name change  - June-23-2014
GCS - Nov-2-2017 (Dr Rachel Bluebond-Langner)


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ImagineKate

Quote from: alexbb on January 21, 2015, 03:02:51 PM
"My wife doesn't want me to tell our inlaws, because we don't talk to them anyway "

Not doing things because of some relatives you dont even like is I think a bad move. Fk em!!!

Yeah easier said than done.

I prefer to respect my wife's wishes in this regard.

Maybe when I'm good and ready, but not anytime soon.
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ChiGirl

Dex, that was great.  I think an inspiration and model for coming out to friends and family.  In other words, I may steal some of that. [emoji6]
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Dex

Thanks ChiGirl! I agonized over wording and delivery for probably 3 months before I finally decided to send it as is. I tend to be a little over analytical though so that's my own doing lol. I'm glad you found it helpful and feel free to take any part of it.
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FTMax

Quote from: androgynouspainter26 on January 19, 2015, 08:03:38 PM
I didn't do anything overt; I just changed my name and profile picture.

This was my approach. I've always looked very masculine, so for the update was just name and pronouns. I did my pronouns first, then my name and made my gender visible. No one made any comments and I didn't lose any friends (though I had preemptively gone through and removed a ton of people I didn't want to talk to anymore). I have gotten messages from a few old acquaintances asking if I was transitioning or what was up with the new name, but they've all been incredibly friendly and understanding.
T: 12/5/2014 | Top: 4/21/2015 | Hysto: 2/6/2016 | Meta: 3/21/2017

I don't come here anymore, so if you need to get in touch send an email: maxdoeswork AT protonmail.com
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JenniR04

Thanks everyone for the great variety of responses and ways you've handled your own coming out's on social media.

I don't think there is one definitive answer that resonates best with me. I like the multi-stage approach with changing identifiers over a period of time (length of time to be determined for me). Although, deep down, something is telling me just jump in with both feet and go and not worry or even care what anyone else thinks. It's a quandary for now.

Quote from: ImagineKate on January 21, 2015, 11:52:25 AM
They're not really friends, just people I know.
This really applies to me and thanks to Imagine Kate for the wording I had been looking for. I have a lot of these type of people on my Facebook .... people who I grew up with from grade school thru high school and some into my college years, but now they are just people I know as a name from my past. I haven't had any direct or even indirect contact with them for so many years other than occasionally readings of a post about this or that in their lives. Not people I would care about for their opinions or approval/disapproval of my transition. So, as others have said, I think I'll also be going thru my Facebook friends list and cleaning-out those people no longer needed prior to posting a coming out statement or changing any identifiers.

I consider many of you here on Susan's better friends than most of past friends thru Facebook. Thank you for your kind words and being there in times of need!
"Being with no one is better than being with the wrong one. Sometimes, those who fly solo have the strongest wings!"
Hugs, Jenni R.



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Wynternight

I've been telling close friends but will eventually make a post on FB. I'm planning on keeping my same page as I have almost five years invested in it. Some great ideas here that I may shamelessly borrow.  ;D
Stooping down, dipping my wings, I came into the darkly-splendid abodes. There, in that formless abyss was I made a partaker of the Mysteries Averse. LIBER CORDIS CINCTI SERPENTE-11;4

HRT- 31 August, 2014
FT - 7 Sep, 2016
VFS- 19 October, 2016
FFS/BA - 28 Feb, 2018
SRS - 31 Oct 2018
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