Hello Lou-Emile,
According to what you described, I think I feel *exactly* how you feel.
We are at least three
Yaay!Long story short: I discovered to be a girl in a boy's body two years ago, when I became 32. Today I am 34, and I am struggling with my gender identity and identity in general, intensely, since two years.
I was born male, I started to feel uncomfortable with the people around me at the age 3, I could never know why. I always felt to "miss the point" when I was with my (male) mates, to the point that I felt always dumb, stupid and with a lot of distress from age 6 to... forever. I come from a middle-class family from the south of Italy, very calm people, workers, fighters. I had schools until I became 18, then I went to the University and took a Master in Computer Engineering. At age 27 I started a PhD, and during this period I come to terms with all the problems I was having. At age 30 I started to open to the idea I was (male) gay, but still I was not getting the point out of life. At 32 I read about transgender people, and I opened a door that gave me the "I understand now!" moment.
Important: during the period I discovered all this, I was under unbearable stress and pressure, from outside (environment, stressful people around me) and from inside (fears, shame, guilt). It was a real nightmare, and I knew something even like being gay would have throw everything I had - including all the people I knew - apart (which is almost true - my fears were right) At that moment, I was, on a side, happy to having finally understand why I felt like I felt during all this years, and on another side, I wished to erase all the "wrong" things I made until that moment, and that were giving me pain and putting me on the edge of being abandoned by everyone.
Since that moment, I felt a
disconnection from the "old, male me" and "the new, female me", and I had the need to (and I did, eventually) come back to my home place, and say to my family (I have a little sister too), my cousins and near friends and acquaintances: "Hey! I am I girl! I got it! Now I know why I did a lot of bad things, and errors, and stuff... I understand now, I am a girl! How could I not get it? Please, forgive me! Don't drop me,
I am not the one I was". But, on the other side, this was (and still is) discomfortable as hell. I tought people could not recognise me anymore. I rushed to finish my PhD, which I eventually did, in a psychological state near to permanent damage (I feared to have lost my mind forever, until some days ago...) in January 2016. Since February 2016 I came back at home for letting my family know about myself, before get lost into the world. I came back at my parents home, and started a psychotherapy (psychoanalysis with a guy expert in gender identity).
Weird, isn't it? Well, maybe not that much. The pressures and stresses were at unbearable levels. Bad moment, bad environment, bad situation.
The "disconnection" feeling is still with me, and I think that it is, maybe, similar to yours. I feel like I am a completely different person from the "male one" that I was until some years ago. And this is so strong... I try to calm down, but the "male part" is only pain and shame.
But in these very days I think I am getting the point of all this.I always felt so dependent from my family and "friends", that the idea of loosing them, loosing everyone, is something that I am not able to accept.
The fact is that I did some stupid things in the last 8 years that I have very low reputation in this moment. Moreover, I realised that I didn't want the PhD I was taking, and even work in the area of Informatics (at least, I had and have many doubts about it). All around me was falling apart...
And "being TG" is the ultimate thing, in my world. "What? You are EVEN gay/trans?! Get the hell out of here!"
So, I think that
in my case the disconnection is a kind of defence, a way to say to people "please don't judge me for what I did, please. "I am a girl, see? I should have done all the things girls do".
Yes... I could not see it for two years, and just now I am starting to seeing it. I think hw a TG person lives it all depends on which is his/her instruments to survive, and your sensibility. If you feel you have few, then... something like this (ie. disconnection) could happen.
Also, Shame. Shame grow so strong and deep inside of me, since I was a child. Shame makes very difficult to impossible the fact of accepting the fact I am stupid, as I choose a path in the life that in the end I don't like, and now I am EVEN gay/trans. The same here: "hey! I got it! I am a girl! You see? Don't consider me a stupid boy, but a girl".
And also:
"I AM NOT THE ONE YOU THOUGHT I WAS, PLEASE RECONSIDER YOUR (GENDER) MODELS APPLIED TO ME".This are only hypotheses, of course (and I think every therapist you will see, will talk to you in terms of hypotheses...).
About ME, I think that this makes sense: I always suffered a lot the
pressures from outside: parents, relatives, friends. I always tried to please everyone, and (and as) I always had the sensation that I could loose everyone doing bad things (I think that the definition of "bad things" confuses LGBT people). So 1) fear of being abandoned, and 2) shame (which is also linked to the fear of abandonment). Also, deep sense of guilt in doing things... it comes down to fear of abandonment.
So, that's it, I think. Which is, I think that in my case the fact I feel disconnected from my old me is that I cannot accept to be the "thing" that will let everyone abandon me, even if that will happen even if I show the others, with all the forces I have, that
"I AM NOT THE ONE YOU THOUGHT I WAS, PLEASE RECONSIDER YOUR (GENDER) MODELS APPLIED TO ME".Getting conscious about these things, let you be at 50% of the health path. The rest is... I still don't know, maybe live and let the time pass, let the things happen, and have 1 or 2 persons near you. A therapist is one of them. When everything falls apart, a therapist can be the only one that stand tall there. But I think that also an Internet connection and a Forum is good.
Of course, this is my guess about me. Things change very rapidly in my life in this moment, but... I feel positive about what I wrote.
What do you think?
I am here to talk if and when you need.
Kisses and hugs,
Ive