Quote from: Jayne01 on September 03, 2015, 10:22:38 PM
I have another question that hopefully some of you may be able to help me with.
Why is it that there are times when I feel perfectly content with my male self? During those times I feel a lot of shame and anger at myself for having the feelings of dysphoria. I think to myself "I got this! I can beat this". But then something sets me off. I might see a woman in the street where I think "why can't I look like her?" or "I wish I could wear those clothes" and then I'm back to square one. I'm at the point where I don't trust myself to know whether what I'm feeling is genuine or not. How can I know if I'm transgender when I don't even know if I could trust myself?
Is this normal? Does anybody else go through this?
Perhaps not Normal but certain describes pretty much ALL of my life, even today. Shame is a very pervasive and invasive emotion that affects pretty much every aspect of your life. You are trained since birth that boys are one way and girls are another. When it comes to most aspects of human behavour, my wife puts it very simply, "We speak the language of our parents". This goes far beyond the tongue. Grow up in a crazy dysfunctional home and do you think you are perfectly normal? Alcohol? Drugs? Strict gender roles?
When I totally hit bottom six years ago and my life was once again being flushed down the toilet in a swirling vortex (CW), it was only then that I realized it was all over how I was NOT handling being trans. I spent a lifetime thinking I can beat it. Thinking I can supress such a major aspect of my true self. In the process I built up a totally untrue, Hollywood facade of a person I thought I needed to exude in order for no, absolutely no one, to perceive a chink in my armour for fear that my deepest darkest secret would be exposed for all the world to see.
It has taken me a good 5 years of hard work to loose much of that shame and a good portion of the guilt. What guilt that does survive is justifiable. I have done something wrong. I totally turned my marriage upside down forever changing my wife's image of our dotage. TBH, her health issues have altered that too, but that I knew I might be signing up for 30+ years ago. As for myself, she knew of my transitioning experiments and that I had decided I was "just a CD".
There is "A Test" and it is a simple one with answers as hazy as "The Magic Eight Ball". The result of this test is a simple binary Yes/No to ; "Are you Transgender". I have absolutely no doubt I am. Like you I prescribe to the theory of If you are asking, you is.
The BIG question, to which no one can answer, perhaps even yourself at this time, is; "Where along the spectrum of Cis-Female to Cis-Male do you reside?". This is the real answer to how you can Manage your particular flavor of dysphoria and to help balance all the competing needs, desires, and wants in your life.
For some, it's easy. Transition or die. I've been there a few times, but have not yet joined the club. Finding a support group changed my life. Therapy, plenty of introspection and self-help books doing a lot of the hard work on me has allowed me mostly maintain my goal of figuring out how to get both John and Joanne to coexist in harmony. Just as I could no longer beat down Joanne, beating "him" down sure did not seem like a good course of action either.
Today I primarily present male, still keeping my marriage together, still gainfully employed and having fun at it. Most days I have balance. There are still too many days I don't. Days that I think "I can beat this NOW" to days of "End the PAIN" and my pen moves closer to that membership form for the Transition or Die club