Quote from: Angélique LaCava on October 17, 2016, 10:41:11 AM
Telling people is just my opinion. I have been living as female for 6 years and in those 6 years I lived with my parents and they pretty much programmed it in my head to tell guys before going on a date and if I didn't tell them they wouldn't allow me to go on a date with them. I don't find guys treating me any different than a woman after I tell them.
Fair enough. I have lived female 40 years and in a number of different scenarios. I have right at the start, revealed. I have withheld. I have withheld for several years and then revealed. I have tried this six ways to Sunday. I have never been the victim of violence resulting directly from sharing my medical history, although I have been the victim of violence as an adult from domestic battery, so I know what the stakes are.
I think it is important to choose partners carefully. If I suspected the person is capable of violence, I would have to ask myself "why am I dating them in the first place," and, yes, bad boys are fun, but what makes them bad is that they are unreliable and in the end dangerous, whether you are trans or cis. Nicole Brown of OJ fame was a cis, was she not? Revealing some great secret is not armor against abuse.
I am new here and have not read all the threads, but I have seen no posts about being a battered MTF wife while trans. Are there others on this forum, or am I the only one? And if the person decides to batter, they have all your stuff, and if you have told your S.O., all your medical history can be used to discredit you to the cops when someone calls the police. The attacker will turn it around and say that you provoked it --a
guy who had it coming--and you'd be surprised how many cops, at least years ago, would blow the incident off. You're all upset and sputtering and the attacker goes into cool mode. All smooth and relaxed. "Look what I have to deal with."
I wished
I'd been told what
I was getting into.