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I took estrogen for 5-1/2 years, but was still called "sir" by everyone

Started by blossom, March 06, 2016, 03:38:16 PM

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blossom

I took estradiol valerate as an injection in my muscle for 5-1/2 years. Unfortunately, even after all that time, everyone still referred to me as a male.  :'( I eventually just gave up and stopped estrogen in 2012. I had an orchiectomy earlier, so my body did not revert back to masculine and it kept most of the feminine features. Can someone help me understand how I should feel about this?

I see transition videos on YouTube of people taking HRT for just 5 months and then transitioning to living as a woman full-time (Passing very well I will add!) and I just feel really left out and need a shoulder to cry on.
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stephaniec

the problem is genetics that we all have to deal with. I sat across from an older woman ,probably a little younger than me , a couple of days ago in the Target Starbucks and my first thought was trans and for 15 minutes I'm saying to myself definitely trans no other way. She was with a friend and started to have a lengthy conversation that I could hear and I realized no way she was trans.
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Laura_7


There are a few things that can help passing better:
-growing hair out so it covers brows and forehead.
For a quick fix there are clipin extensions available, you might look it up on youtube.

-mannerism and gait also play a part.
You might try to feel girly inside ... just feeling it. It should radiate outwards, showing a natural mannerism and gait.
Not overdoing things ... just feeling it and doing what comes naturally.

-walk
women kind of almost walk on a line, pushing hips forward.
Men just put one foot forwards, and also move shoulders forwards.

-voice
you might try to raise your voice a bit.
With some experience its like finding a newer and higher register.
reading books aloud might help.
It might not be necessary to do this for a longer time but consistently, over a few days, a few minutes every day.

-here are more hints concerning voice:
http://www.nyspeechandvoicelab.net/transgender/voice-feminization/

also women use more indirect language ... and having a bit a breathy voice might also help.

Some makeup might help ... or even simply having something nourishing on the face.
Some people use coconut oil or jojoba oil.

Otherwise simply some foundation might help:
http://www.soorganic.com/lavera-natural-liquid-foundation.html

Maybe together with some volumizing mascara ... and a lipstick in unobtrusive colours ...


*hugs*
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Laura_7

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Dena

Estrogen isn't always effective in feminizing facial features. It helps but the combination of hair, makeup, voice, presentation and sometime facial surgery is required to hit the 99% gendered correctly number. Others who start out with feminine faces can hit that number with only a few months of HRT.

I was off HRT for about 10 years and the fat has moved out of my face and other places leaving me somewhat less feminine appearing. As the result of this site, I returned to HRT two weeks ago in order to regain what I lost. I would suggest you consider returning to HRT, possibly oral at about half the transition dose in order to prevent further shifting of fat and regain what you may have lost.

Another factor to consider is a CIS woman develops up to 10 years so you might have quite before achieving all that was possible.
Rebirth Date 1982 - PMs are welcome - Use [email]dena@susans.org[/email] or Discord if your unable to PM - Skype is available - My Transition
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Ms Grace

Regrettably HRT isn't the only thing you need to be passable, it will only feminise you so far and for the vast majority it by itself won't get you "over the line". You've told us you were on HRT but not how you presented yourself, what you wore, your general appearance and the way you talked and interacted. All those things, like it or not, can make a massive difference. There are plenty of good suggestions above worth considering.
Grace
----------------------------------------------
Transition 1.0 (Julie): HRT 1989-91
Self-denial: 1991-2013
Transition 2.0 (Grace): HRT June 24 2013
Full-time: March 24, 2014 :D
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Rachel

You really should have a sex hormone in your system for bone health.

I have been on HRT for 2-3/4 years and have very soft features. Many woman say so as well as two FFS doctors. However due to T my mandible and forehead need reduction. Then hair needs a temp piece followed by correction. 
HRT  5-28-2013
FT   11-13-2015
FFS   9-16-2016 -Spiegel
GCS 11-15-2016 - McGinn
Hair Grafts 3-20-2017 - Cooley
Voice therapy start 3-2017 - Reene Blaker
Labiaplasty 5-15-2017 - McGinn
BA 7-12-2017 - McGinn
Hair grafts 9-25-2017 Dr.Cooley
Sataloff Cricothyroid subluxation and trachea shave12-11-2017
Dr. McGinn labiaplasty, hood repair, scar removal, graph repair and bottom of  vagina finished. urethra repositioned. 4-4-2018
Dr. Sataloff Glottoplasty 5-14-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal in office procedure 10-22-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal revision 2 4-3-2019 Bottom of vagina closed off, fat injected into the labia and urethra repositioned.
Dr. Thomas in 2020 FEMLAR
  • skype:Rachel?call
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KayXo

Quote from: Rachel Lynn on March 06, 2016, 06:56:38 PM
You really should have a sex hormone in your system for bone health.

And for other reasons, psychological well-being, cardiovascular health, memory, to prevent fast ageing, feminine appearance, etc.

In my 11 yrs +, I have seen many women pass with just HRT (+ facial removal) if the regimen is adequate which sometimes it is not due to the incompetency of doctors. In some, FFS (facial feminization surgery) is also needed. In others, due to voice, it makes things more complicated. Sadly, surgery for this only modifies pitch and not resonance which is much more important to passing as female.

I am not a medical doctor, nor a scientist - opinions expressed by me on the subject of HRT are merely based on my own review of some of the scientific literature over the last decade or so, on anecdotal evidence from women in various discussion forums that I have come across, and my personal experience

On HRT since early 2004
Post-op since late 2005
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Lara1969

Without FFS,  VFS and BA I would never pass.  HRT did not much changes.  Not to speak about beard removal.
Now I had all these surgeries and I pass 100%. In my personal view FFS is very important followed by vfs (always together with speech therapy).  People are looking in your face finding masculine features,  often caused by your bones which cannot be changed from HRT.  These features often add up with a low voice, more masculine behavior and the body shape and in the end you are looking 70% masculine.  And the face maybe is adding 50% and your voice 25% overall  to your masculinity.  All other thinks together maybe add up to the missing 25%. A man in a skirt is still recognized as a man,  a man without beard and with breasts is still recognized as a man....

My suggestion is contact facial team and ask for a simulation before and after FFS.  Maybe you will be surprised.  And test your voice on the phone with making cold calls without mentioning your first name and gender. 
Happy girl from queer capital Berlin
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Laura_7

Quote from: Lara1969 on March 07, 2016, 03:48:24 PM
In my personal view FFS is very important

Well a hairstyle covering brows and forehead might help some people already..
and some said the cartilage of their nose changed with hrt...

so a surgery might not be necessary in all cases ...
people are different...

There are websites where a virtual result might be available:
https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,110589.0.html


hugs
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KayXo

Quote from: Lara1969 on March 07, 2016, 03:48:24 PM
Without FFS,  VFS and BA I would never pass.  HRT did not much changes.

Perhaps your HRT was inadequate, your doctors too conservative. Or you didn't wait long enough for effects. Or you started out with very masculine features. Or a combination.

QuotePeople are looking in your face finding masculine features,  often caused by your bones which cannot be changed from HRT.

Indeed, bones cannot be changed BUT estrogen increases subcutaneous fat which significantly changes how your face and overall body looks, making it look softer, curvier (increased thighs, buttocks) and less angular (i.e. face). I went from passing 100% as male to passing 100% as female in less than a year. Facial hair removal helped but subcutaneous fat increase also helped a lot. I have had no FFS at all and know many who haven't and pass incognito.

QuoteThese features often add up with a low voice

Some ignore the importance of resonance (not modified by surgery) and the technique to change so one's voice sounds female. I had no voice surgery and I pass 100% of the time on the phone. I mastered the technique and now, it's become second nature. In person, when I passed as female, even with my normal male voice, I passed! It's true I didn't have a very low male voice either (tenor) but still, goes to show you how if you look female, voice becomes less important.

I am not a medical doctor, nor a scientist - opinions expressed by me on the subject of HRT are merely based on my own review of some of the scientific literature over the last decade or so, on anecdotal evidence from women in various discussion forums that I have come across, and my personal experience

On HRT since early 2004
Post-op since late 2005
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blossom

KayXo, how did you get your voice to pass 100% of the time? Please tell me :(
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Laura_7

Quote from: blossom on March 11, 2016, 03:40:26 PM
how did you get your voice to pass 100% of the time? Please tell me :(

You could:
read a book every day in a higher voice.
Not much higher just higher.

It takes a few weeks and you feel you are in a higher register permanently.
You can work from there.

Having a more breathy voice also helps.
Exhaling while talking ... talking slowly ... and with a lot of ups and downs, going up and down with intonation within words and sentences.

If you know your way with computers you might use the software overtone analyzer to check results from time to time...
try to train to avoid vibrations below 180 hz.

and recording the voice from time to time and listening helps... trying out a few things, like a breathy voice ... and listening to the recorded results.


*hugs*
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Jessie Ann

Transitioning is not easy.  There are so many parts that you need to work on in order to get it right.  Hair, make-up and clothes are, whether we like it or not, a big part of it.  Mannerisms are very important in how we are viewed.  As already stated, the way you walk is important.  The way you talk is also very important.  It does take time for all of these things to mesh together to make us female in the eyes of others. 

You said you were on HRT for 5 1/2 years.  During that time what else did you do to feminize yourself?  Did you work with a gender therapist?  Did you meet with any other trans women to discuss what was and wasn't working for them?  Did you seek out help from friends to give you advice on how you were coming across to them?

This site is filled with very helpful tips and information on how you can become the you that is trapped inside waiting to burst forth.  I know it helped me become the woman that everyone can now see.  If you work at it, it will come.  Good luck girl!   
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KayXo

Quote from: blossom on March 11, 2016, 03:40:26 PM
KayXo, how did you get your voice to pass 100% of the time? Please tell me :(

I only use muscles above adams apple (those that contract when I swallow) when I speak, not those under so that it does not vibrate under adam's apple or in chest. Another approach is to touch your adam's apple with your finger, and never allow it to drop back down to finger when speaking. You're making your voicebox smaller this way. Practice and eventually, it will become second nature. Nothing else is done, absolutely nothing. It's that simple!

Quote from: Jessie Ann on March 11, 2016, 04:48:22 PM
Transitioning is not easy.  There are so many parts that you need to work on in order to get it right.  Hair, make-up and clothes are, whether we like it or not, a big part of it.  Mannerisms are very important in how we are viewed.  As already stated, the way you walk is important.  The way you talk is also very important.  It does take time for all of these things to mesh together to make us female in the eyes of others.

The point of transitioning was to be ME, not to conform to a stereotype and fall back again into something that is not me. Do the things that I love, feel comfortable in my skin, etc. Live for ME, no one else.Live effortlessly. I have already compromised my integrity in one area, voice, where I changed the resonance of it, to pass better. But as far as mannerisms, how I talk, how I dress, do my hair or makeup, I choose to do whatever the hell I feel most happy and comfortable with. And the heck with the world... I admire those women that continue speaking with their normal voices despite what others might think, now these women have integrity!

My 2 cents...
I am not a medical doctor, nor a scientist - opinions expressed by me on the subject of HRT are merely based on my own review of some of the scientific literature over the last decade or so, on anecdotal evidence from women in various discussion forums that I have come across, and my personal experience

On HRT since early 2004
Post-op since late 2005
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Jessie Ann

Kay - It's great that you are comfortable with who you are and how you present yourself to the world.  Everyone's transition is different and there is no right or wrong way to transition.  I also transitioned to live as me.  For me to be comfortable with myself I did need to change the way I looked, spoke and presented myself in public.  Not because it was some form of compromise, it was because I needed to do it to feel complete.  Frankly, I am hurt that you seem to think that those of us who choose to work on our voices and other areas so that we can feel comfortable are somehow compromising our integrity. 

I was responding to a person who was asking about why she was being misgendered.  In other threads she was asking about FFS and VFS.  She is specifically asking about how to pass as female in the eyes of others.  She isn't asking about how she can be comfortable with things as they are now for her.

I transitioned for ME.  I feel 1,000% better about my life, my future, my body and my soul.  My friends and family see it too and they comment on it.  The wonderful thing about living your authentic life is you get to choose how you live it!  Yes I did work at some things, others came things came incredibly naturally.  For me now, I can live as me without all that much thought at all.  I can unquestionably go anywhere and I am seen as a woman which is what I needed out of my transition.  Now I get to live the rest of my life as just one of the girls.   I am a trans woman and I am proud of that fact.       

Quote from: KayXo on March 11, 2016, 06:23:58 PM

The point of transitioning was to be ME, not to conform to a stereotype and fall back again into something that is not me. Do the things that I love, feel comfortable in my skin, etc. Live for ME, no one else.Live effortlessly. I have already compromised my integrity in one area, voice, where I changed the resonance of it, to pass better. But as far as mannerisms, how I talk, how I dress, do my hair or makeup, I choose to do whatever the hell I feel most happy and comfortable with. And the heck with the world... I admire those women that continue speaking with their normal voices despite what others might think, now these women have integrity!

My 2 cents...
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KayXo

Quote from: Jessie Ann on March 11, 2016, 08:13:39 PM
Not because it was some form of compromise, it was because I needed to do it to feel complete.  Frankly, I am hurt that you seem to think that those of us who choose to work on our voices and other areas so that we can feel comfortable are somehow compromising our integrity.

My goal is not to hurt you or anyone. I just think that when we try to do things that don't come natural, we stray away from ourselves and in the end, the one person that truly suffers from this is ourselves. We fear that if we let ourselves go, and just be, we will be ostracized because our voice will not sound female or the way we walk will not quite live up to female standards, etc. Trust me, I'm not there either and do many things to belong, to fit in but I realize this, in the end, may be hurting me more than benefiting me. It takes guts to truly be ourselves. And kudos to those who can...I still quite can't get there yet...

My intention is to bring us, me, you and everyone to a place where we can just be ourselves instead of a place where our goal is to pass, fit in, be loved or accepted by others. That's all. Don't take it badly, really. :)

QuoteI was responding to a person who was asking about why she was being misgendered.  In other threads she was asking about FFS and VFS.  She is specifically asking about how to pass as female in the eyes of others.  She isn't asking about how she can be comfortable with things as they are now for her.

I understand. You are helping her. And she may realize one day what I've come to realize. It's up to her to come to that realization, on her own. In the meantime, all we can do is guide her.

   
I am not a medical doctor, nor a scientist - opinions expressed by me on the subject of HRT are merely based on my own review of some of the scientific literature over the last decade or so, on anecdotal evidence from women in various discussion forums that I have come across, and my personal experience

On HRT since early 2004
Post-op since late 2005
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Jessie Ann

I have no idea why you think that I or other people who are working on their voice and presentation would not be offended by this.  In effect you are saying we are gutless.  There are many people who, for themselves, want to look act or sound a certain way.  Just because something may not come naturally to an individual at first does not mean that they should just accept it and not try to improve.  Applying makeup may not come naturally to an individual.  Many cis and trans women like wearing makeup because it can dramatically change their appearance.  It makes some individuals feel good about themselves.  Developing that skill, for some, does not take away from there sense of self, it helps complete their feeling of self. The same can be said for how they view their voice, their mannerisms and their body.  I can tell you that my mannerisms, my voice and my presentation are all a natural part of me now.  I am very comfortable with being me now, much more than I ever was in my other life when I was him....In effect, I have honed some skills that have allowed me to be myself.

Quote from: KayXo on March 11, 2016, 08:54:55 PM
My goal is not to hurt you or anyone. I just think that when we try to do things that don't come natural, we stray away from ourselves and in the end, the one person that truly suffers from this is ourselves......  It takes guts to truly be ourselves. And kudos to those who can........

I can't speak for anyone else but my goal is to be my true self.  The self that I have wanted to be all my life.  That self is not the person I was.  It is the person I have been growing into the last year.  I transitioned full time after being on HRT for only 3 months.  I was content with that time frame even though I did not "pass" and my presentation and voice were not what I would have liked.  I was, and am, a work in progress.  The only person I am trying to please is myself.  The fact that I have become incredibly happy, confident and secure in my personhood allows others to be able to more readily accept me.  I am not doing what I am doing to get their acceptance, it just happens to be a happy byproduct of a successful transition.

Quote from: KayXo on March 11, 2016, 08:54:55 PM
My intention is to bring us, me, you and everyone to a place where we can just be ourselves instead of a place where our goal is to pass, fit in, be loved or accepted by others. That's all. Don't take it badly, really. :)

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Cindy

 :police:
I see no reason for bickering.

I do not want to see such behaviour continue.

Cindy
Forum Admin
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kelly_aus

Quote from: KayXo on March 11, 2016, 08:54:55 PM
My intention is to bring us, me, you and everyone to a place where we can just be ourselves instead of a place where our goal is to pass, fit in, be loved or accepted by others. That's all. Don't take it badly, really. :)

I get what you mean here, Kay. I realised that my transition was more about me being myself than any great need to "look and act" like a woman. I use essentially the same voice I have always used. Hormones have not left me looking particularly feminine - at least by recognised standards. That said, I live as a woman. People see me and treat me as a woman. It was somewhat of an epiphany for me, as before I thought I was doomed to never live my life as it should be.
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