Quote from: xBlackRose97x on June 26, 2016, 12:22:10 AM
I'm having an issue with not feeling...authentic? sometimes I don't feel like i count as a woman because I am not a very emotional person. I don't usually have the dysphoria or depression that goes along with being trans. i mean, i know everyone has a different experience, but I cant help but feel like i dont count as female because i dont feel the dysphoria or depression very often. Honestly, most of the time I feel absolutely nothing. I feel like im not female, nor male. nothing in between. I dont even feel like Im ME. I have heard that some trans people have the emotionless issue and that HRT helps with that. Does anyone else experience this though? the total emotionlessness and feeling like nothing? its so hard to describe, I'm sorry for saying the same things over and over lol. I sometimes tell myself that I'm male, and then that I'm female just to see what feels true, but i end up just feeling confused and like there is no right answer. The dysphoria kicks in mostly when i have to shop for mens clothing, and when i tried on womens clothing, that was the first time I felt any positive emotion in a very long time. i Know who I am, I just cant get past these episodes of...well everything ive already said.
First of all, feeling nothing all the time and not feeling like you are yourself are primary symptoms of depression. I know you may not want to hear that, but you don't have to be having detailed suicide plans and see a black tunnel every time you open your eyes to be depressed. I haven't even looked at other comments but hopefully at least half of the 12 other replies are telling you this as well.
Losing all your emotions is ALSO a sign of serious depression. Been there, done that! At the time I blamed it on the ASD ... nope, just depressed (and seriously out of touch with my body, my emotions, and myself).
It's okay to be detached from your emotions and your sense of self--this is a psychological defense you came up with to survive up until this point. Pat yourself on the back. You lived. You're having these thoughts now about clothing because you're ready. It's okay to have a clothing preference. It's okay to like shopping for women's clothes and not men's. Over time, you'll figure out more and more of what you do like and connect to you again, but it is a journey--don't rush it.
I'm not even 6 months into medical transition and I'm starting to feel calmer and like "me" again. Being brutally honest, crossdressing alone NEVER gave me relief from the dysphoria and depression. It's probably because my endogenous hormones were messing with my head every day. Also, having breasts got me down constantly in a way I wasn't even aware of because it had become such an everyday thing. I've experienced massive relief from hormone replacement therapy and corrective surgery. (I'm also on anti depressants but I was on them for a full year prior to starting medical transition ... I think the chemical therapy helped give me the confidence to start the transition.)
Not feeling like an authentic person is something I struggled with heavily in my early 20s. Ironically, I blamed it on my recently identified ASD and not on my trans status, which I was aware of. I think it's in part because trans status was explained to me like it was an identity or trait, like being gay (an identity I embraced at the time). Nobody ever told me what dysphoria was like, or that it made you depressed. Nobody ever told me there were serious health consequences to NOT transitioning. It was presented like a lifestyle choice.
Hey, not treating your high blood pressure is a lifestyle choice. Being diabetic and letting your blood sugar spike is a lifestyle choice. Being trans and avoiding any kind of medical treatment is a lifestyle choice too. Here's another irony: the anti depressant I'm on costs the healthcare plan $1000/mo. My hormones cost less than $30/mo. Needles, $2/mo. What a fiscally responsible plan! Let the trans condition and depression go untreated for years, pickle your brain in the wrong hormones, and end up too anxious/depressed to function. Seriously, my psych sent me to a psychiatrist to get drugs after two years of therapy because the best therapy there was wasn't making a dent. Maybe because it was hormonal after all--??
I hope if you do one thing you will start seeing someone for your depression. If you do decide to go forward with depression or exploring your identity (transition is not towards a fixed outcome--there are so many possibilities for you and you alone) you are going to need an ally anyway. Dealing with these issues is stressful and could cause you to crash to a lower place, so get a support network in place. A caring, experienced therapist ought to be part of that.