Quote from: Garoux on April 28, 2017, 01:33:27 AM
So I have a few questions:
Is there any way I can manage dysphoria without changing anything at all in terms of expression or appearance? Can I make it go away to any extent if I try hard enough? I know people always say you can't and that it gets worse as you get older and etc. but idk I am still asking anyway.
Is being genderfluid even real? Am I actually feeling this way? Am I forcing myself to feel this way somehow and if I just changed my mindset it would go away?
What are my options, what can I do to feel ok?
Is there anything wrong with staying in the closet forever and never really telling anybody except my girlfriend?
OP everything you describe in your full post is perfectly normal for standard transgender (ie: wanting to be the opposite sex and not genderfluid). I go through it myself.
In your quote above you ask is GF even real but the answer doesn't matter. Why? Because even from just one post from you I can t ell you're not GF. You're 100% M2F transgender. You have this yin and yang battle taking place and you feel one way and then the other and as a result uncertain of where and what you are
The truth is you feel this way out of one thing:
fear.
Fear of the unknown.
Fear of looking ridiculous.
Fear of standing out.
Fear of rejection from your family.
Fear of failing to pass.
Fear of not being able to do make up.
Fear of failing to sound like a woman.
Fear of being alone.
Fear of rejection in the job market.
Fear of being a failure (as a male).
Fear if failing your own beliefs (religious or otherwise).
Fear of the cost and pain of surgery.
Fear of ostracisation.
Fear of making the wrong decision.
All all these are perfectly reasonable. In fact it would be worrying if you didn't feel this way.
And you DO feel this way, even if you don't know it.
Of course you feel comfortable as a guy - why wouldn't you? It's all you've known your entire life. You do anything for your entire life and you're gonna be damn good at it. You also feel comfortable because the world accepts you as you are. No funny glances, no hostility because you offend their narrow-minded beliefs, no s->-bleeped-<-s because you're a boy in a dress, no smirking at your uneven makeup etc.
It's impossible not to feel comfortable as a guy. You have testosterone flooding through your body, you're accepted by your peers and you've been a guy for all your time on Earth. You have male physicality, male attributes, male thought processes and male skills (spatial awareness etc). And when you've had all this for every second of your life, with no one batting an eyelid, how can you not align with it? More than that, you are accepted as a male and nothing is more comforting as acceptance. We, as sentient beings, are designed to like others and be liked to form tribes with those 'like us' and 'who like us' We do it for two base reasons: survival and procreation. Without these two driving impulses we would not be nor would our species continue. To not desire acceptance and to be petrified of rejection is to defy your very humanity.
What you have is 100000000% true M2F ->-bleeped-<-. You are not GF. You merely place yourself there (out of fear) because you're not ready to accept you are who you are really are (a girl). You also place yourself there because it's a happy medium as it means you don't have to commit to going the whole hog: full-time, hormones, surgery. You also place.
Of course you want female pronouns and all the other changes - despite insisting otherwise. In your own words, you don't want these things because you don't want to inconvenience others and because you don't want to step outside of the societal norm. In other words, these are not your true desires, merely they are the manifestation of your fears They are boundaries put in place so you don't have to face up to your reality of putting yourself in a position of vulnerability, fragility, hostility and disparity.
Despite your best intentions to quell the voice inside, the girl is shouting loud and clear. That is the real you.
This is your survival instinct kicking in. She has to breathe. She has to be free. She has to live.
The very fact that she is trying to claw her way to the surface, for that gasp of fresh air and glimpse of sunlight, is proof that she is alive and is doing everything in her power to ensure her most basic instinct: survival.
And this is why - to answer your other question - you cannot manage dysphoria by ignoring it or suppressing it.
The survival instinct always wins in the end.
Always. It's just whether you accept it while you're young (and can make the most of it) or when you're older (and tinged with regret for not transitioning sooner).
Those that do suppress it live desperately unhappy lives and are often driven to depression and even worse.
Read this:
http://born.uk.com/tell-youre-trans/Then read this:
http://born.uk.com/regrets-vicki-sixx/