Quote from: frankie88 on February 11, 2015, 11:43:36 PM
Hello All,
So i'm very new to all of this and am still very hesitant.
I have been seeing a gender therapist for a while and am mostly sure that i am transgendered.
A little about me... im currently 26 and in the engineering industry and also working on a graduate degree at the same time(so im very hesitant about the whole transition thing just based on work)
I grew up in a very repressive old school household, my mom is from Germany and has always been very over bearing.
However my whole life i have always felt out of place with my body.
Some of my earlier memories(maybe 4-5yrs old) were my brother and i finding my moms old bathing suits from when she was younger, we tried them on and he got bored after 2 minutes... i wore it most of the day because i honestly felt more comfortable in it, that was until my mom had to take it away.
It has progressed most of my life where i closeted "Cross Dressed" including being caught by my parents about 10 times.
Each time they tried to tell me how bad what i was doing etc.
Anywho, i think i'm finally about ready to admit to myself that i'm actually transgendered and that i would like to transition.
What finally pushed you over the edge and made you decide that you were transgendered and that you needed to transition?
It took quite a bit of therapy but then one day it dawned on me. I was living a life that was constructed to make everyone around me happy, but I was never happy. As long as I was the person they expected everything was great. The problem is I slowly turned into a hollowed hulk of a person. Then one day in 1999 I hit a point where I could no longer function. I was unable to work, my home life was turning into a disaster. I didn't want friends, family or social functions. I was withdrawing into myself.
I've often heard the phrase that a transition "is the last act of a desperate person". When the pain of doing nothing is greater than the pain of doing something then I knew what I had to do. When I finally worked up the courage to face my problem head on that's when I began to heal and I feel the weight coming off of me. Every time I took a step it was like walking into the sunlight a little more. When I finally went full time, I was free. Nothing in the world would talk me down from my new happy place. When I had my srs surgery I was changed yet again.
I went through the same things as you. I was crossdressing when I was a kid. Every halloween I wanted to be a girl for a day. When I became a teen I became bolder and bolder wanting to be out and have people know that I was a girl. I honestly didn't know why I was that way, and I could hear from my parents was that I was some kind of pervert. I was caught so many times it's not even funny.
But I want to point out, you need to know what you are getting yourself into. As long as you have a plan or at least some general guidelines of what you want and how you want to get there, and understand the personal and monetary costs of it, then you will be fine. It can be a life affirming change for the better or it could be a living hell. Juts understand that it's not therapists that control the situation, you do.