Quote from: HourGlass2B on December 17, 2015, 01:24:47 PM
Hello, exceptionally well written post! Well here's my opinion, of course taken with a grain of salt if you will! I believe your girlfriend had some form of validity in saying that you wanted to believe what your friends and family were telling you was true as opposed to what she said. However while either of you could be entirely or half right, I believe (keyword "I") that we (those of us that were assigned a "traditional" gender but found out later in life that gender didn't quite fit right) mentally construct a safe place for ourselves, many times unbeknownst to us. This safe place may include the thoughts and hopes of our loved ones acceptance in the form of telling us what we want to hear regardless if the comment or sentiment was genuine or not. This is why I said you or your girlfriend may be half right or fully right. I personally have been in uncertain states of limbo, when I wasn't sure what to classify myself as. But the fact is there are countless states in between traditional male and female. She may not have meant to offend you, however it would seem that she certainly shook and not stirred your martini. I've learned to classify myself as a m2f non-binary, male and female presenting, "woman-loving" multividual. Yes something of an unusual mix of uncertainties indeed, However I have found that I am not alone and that there are many others that think exactly as I do and there are people that share the same, exact same issues as you, probably minus the peculiar nuances that are unique to your life but you get the point. However I say if it is not immoral, illegal, or does not harm you or anyone else then do what makes you happy in your mind, your heart, and in your soul. God bless you on your journey, and may you find peace and the answers you seek along the way.
Thank you for your words of support. (And for the compliment; I'm a writer, so it's always nice to hear good things about something I post.)
As far as my situation, the way I see it, there are three basic possibilities:
1) This is some kind of screwed-up phase that I'm in, for whatever reason, and eventually I'll go back to the way I felt before
2) I'm somewhere in the middle/on the third branch of the gender spectrum, and this is the manifestation of years of not doing much to express it - feeling unacknowledged, in a sense.
and 3) I'm transgender.
Going by instinct and raw feeling, I notice that the 'middle' option makes me uncomfortable. It doesn't appeal to me, it doesn't
feel right, even if it's a less drastic realization, even if it seems to 'make more sense' as a progression from my prior self. (I felt like something other than a boy for years before this, it's just that the eruption of dysphoria has made it that much more powerful and real.) But going back to the thought experiment of the magic buttons, let's say we're each presented with three buttons: the first erases your dysphoria, leaving your physical self exactly the same, essentially making you the cisgender form of your assigned sex, while the second transforms you into the opposite gender, erasing your dysphoria and making you a perfectly 'normal' cisgender member of the opposite sex. If we add a third button, where pressing it will allow you to transform into whatever mix of gender traits/sexual characteristics you might fancy - the 'third option' button, essentially - then whatever button gives you the most immediate feeling of longing or appeal ought to tell you something about your identity.
For me, it's definitely the the second one. Given the choice to rid myself of dysphoria in any of these three ways, instinct and emotion pull me towards "cis girl". Which, as people have pointed out to me since I started talking about this online, may be exactly
why I might seem biased toward that outcome, you know?
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