Quote from: Everme on October 30, 2016, 05:13:17 PMWhen is the right time to tell people? At the moment the only people I have told has been my old friends when I drank in an alcohol fueled frenzy and my therapist. I have no doubt it will cause a rift in my entire know world, but I'm at a point where I figure it out or go completely mental. I feel the alcohol was mostly because I was unhappy and wanted to fit in. Clean and sober for over a year now 
Congratulations on your sobriety!
You've told your therapist, which is huge. And actually, all of transition is huge. Some people jump into it all at once. Others make a plan and follow their steps. We end up doing what we need to do.
Me, I was a planner. I knew what I wanted -- female gendering -- and so that's what I worked towards. I was in therapy, getting electrolysis, and working on my voice for six months before I started HRT. In that time, I came out to my partner (who stuck around for two years) and some close friends, but where I got my real relief was through a support group. Otherwise, I pretty much kept it to myself.
I waited on family until HRT was underway, and I didn't come out at work at all -- after facial surgery and SRS I simply quit and got a new job -- I absolutely would not jeopardize the income I needed to pay for everything I wanted. All told, it took me about two and a half years. Which is on the fast end of things. A lot of people take several more years. But I also know one woman who got through everything in one year flat -- she had the resources, she knew what she wanted, and she was completely unstoppable.
QuoteDo the thoughts of suicide stop quickly or is there a long process? I have thought of, never acted on, an ever present thought that I am not happy who I am and would be better off dead. (I know the suicide lines and have a support system set) Currently I am also on antidepressants and anxiety meds. Do they become not needed as well?
I personally had some dark days early in transition, mostly having to do with a faltering relationship, losing some friends, and my impatience and frustration with the whole process. Actually, I was on progesterone during that time, and when I came off that hormone I started feeling a whole lot better. Some people, on the other hand, find progesterone really evens out their moods. Everyone's different.
There was also one very bad night early in recovery from facial surgery, but that was due to inadequate pain management.
In general, though, I was much less depressed and anxious than I had been before, and every milestone made it better -- finding my voice, for example. The first electrolysis session that got me totally cleared. Starting injectible hormones. Seeing my body hair dissipate. Getting to an A-cup. And, of course, the results of my surgeries.
Today, I'm gendered female in all aspects of my life, and it is glorious. Every day is a bonus day.