Quote from: Jayne01 on November 22, 2015, 02:03:19 PM
Katie, I don't want to transition. I REALLY don't want to transition. I want to be a normal guy without the dysphoria clouding my mood every day. I'm trying to make it work and continue to fail. It seems so unfair to the people I know and love, especially my wife, for them to have to change their lives just so I can satisfy my needs. Everybody knows the male me and nothing else. To come out and say hey everyone guess what, I'm not really a guy, I'm actually a girl in the wrong body. It seems really selfish on my part to expect people to just accept me because I suddenly (in their eyes anyway) I decided I wanted to be a girl. It seems to me a better option would be for me to learn to accept myself just as I am. That is male body with a female identity. I don't have any right to hurt the ones I love for my own selfish needs. I mean if I identified as a dog, I wouldn't be getting K-9 hormones (if there is such a thing) to turn myself into a dog, so why should this be any different? Right? I'm not sure what point I'm trying to make here. I just finished working a night shift and my brain is a little gooey!
Jayne
I didn't want to transition either. Maybe because I put it off for so long and didn't ask for any help I was only able to get through most of my 20s putting it off. All I know is I've said the exact same words to myself countless times since I first gave up hope of being a girl at age 6.
They are YOUR loved ones and you aren't a cuckoo, or an alien or a dog transplanted into their lives. They love you as well, and with that comes the hope that you can be the best of yourself and happiest you can be with them.
The reason I transitioned is because I wanted the people I love to get to know all of me, the real me. Not the flattering side of me I pose in for face value relationships, the good and the bad. I can't live your life, nor do I want to devalue the choices of those not transitioning, but make sure your choices aren't based on assumptions. If you're a person of discerning taste, I'm guessing you typically don't surround yourself with and love jerks. Being trans doesn't rob the people you care about of the person they care about. You are still the same person, with the same history and the same experiences, you are just more open and hopefully happier and more accepting of yourself.
I'm not saying coming out is necessary for everyone, but being in the closet makes me claustrophobic and full of anxiety. You need to find ways of truly expressing yourself in safe places in order to let some of the wind out of the sails of your dysphoria. Maybe ask your therapist if you can present during your sessions and change into drab after?
Hugs,
- Katie
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk