Quote from: Devlyn Marie on March 08, 2015, 11:55:10 AM
My thoughts are "I wonder why I don't see wanting the changes as being unhappy?"
If the changes are taking you in a direction that makes you more comfortable with yourself then why should you be unhappy about making them? If they make you more comfortable then they are to be desired, not reviled.
From my own perspective, the changes have settled me tremendously. I did not loathe my body although I was increasingly unhappy with my general appearance and I never really slept properly at night because my mind would obsessively spin around thinking about how I was wrongly formed, but I got through life until I had to change. The choices were gone and I had to do it. So I did it. When I got to the shrink he took about 10 minutes to tell me I had GD in spades because only someone with GD would do what I had done. I had been "RLE" for 14 months before I saw the shrink. "Normal Blokes" just do not do that. The fact that I was prepared to make these drastic changes to my life was diagnosis enough. One other point he added was that asking if you had GD was practically a diagnosis in itself. People, in general, simply never question their gender.
I tried being a crossdresser and failed. It took me about 10 minutes mixing with crossdressers to figure that I was very different from them. I had no desire to hide. I was not shy about being me. I had no worries about presenting publicly and I
hated, absolutely
loathed breast forms and hip/bum pads because they were so false. Not genuine. Not me. I had no shame about being female because that was me, that was who I was deep inside.
I would have preferred to be a crossdresser. To have the ability to chose when to deal with dysphoria by dressing, to not have to tell everyone, to not lose friends and family.... oh yes, CDing would have been a much, much better option for me. But it was not to be. It was never the clothes that were wrong, it was me that had to change and so I have done that.
Quote from: Devlyn Marie on March 08, 2015, 11:55:10 AM
You've given me some food for thought. You make very convincing points.
Why not go see a counsellor? Spend a little bit of money and go for one session and goes as Devlyn, make the appointment as Devlyn and make your first question "Do I have Gender Dysphoria?" and see where it goes.