Quote from: Lady Sarah on June 07, 2017, 10:21:28 PMWhat happens if she has prostate problems? What happens if someone she knows tells him? What happens if he figures it out? If he is a trans-phobe, her life might be in jeopardy.
Just the very act of disclosure can be jeopardizing... and then the story can spread like wildfire. It doesn't make sense to me to be the one to light the match.
If you're being gendered correctly (100% of the time), and "loose lips" have been effectively compartmentalized or excised from your life, and you're completely confident in your own personal truth of being on the binary (as opposed to somewhere outside or in-between) it's very unlikely that anyone new in your life is going to clock you.
In the meantime, a relationship can develop that isn't predicated on a medical history. It takes time to get to know people. Time to discover if this is even something worth pursuing on its own merits. There's a lot of incompatible people out there. I've dated guys only to realize I wouldn't want to date them again -- whether it's because of politics, or religion, or philosophy, or aesthetics, or that he's just not someone I enjoy having a conversation with. Or that he's a bigot. Sometimes it takes several dates to make such discoveries.
And, conversely, if y'all fall in love, and disclosure happens (by either party), there's a much better chance IMO the relationship won't falter. A dear friend of mine got outed six months into a love affair -- she never left the city of her birth -- but the world didn't fall apart. She gave him 1 week to talk about it, and then it was not to be discussed ever again. He was impressed by the strength of her convictions! They married within a couple years. Still together nearly 15 years later.
I refuse to live my life out of fear. Instead, I will follow my bliss.