Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Thinking on stopping, fear of rejection, lost relationship

Started by Charlie Nicki, August 25, 2017, 04:21:41 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Charlie Nicki

My boyfriend recently broke up with me due to my transition. I've been on T blockers for almost 3 months and on estrogen for a month and a half. I thought I was ready to face rejection and being alone but I've found out I'm not. I'm having a big identity crisis at the moment...I'm feeling afraid of letting go of who I was and now can't even look at past pictures of myself before starting because I looked so good as a man and it hurts to see that I destroyed that. I'm still presenting as male but look somewhat different.

I'm just at the beginning and can't deal with rejection, can't deal with feeling like a weirdo. I didn't feel like that until the breakup, it made me see things from another perspective.

I feel like stopping because I want the pain to stop. I don't even know if I can get my relationship back by stopping but right now it feels like it's about more than that... it's not only my relationship, it's getting back the feeling of being normal and feeling lovable.

Please help. Any thoughts?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
  •  

Cindy

Firstly a big Hug.

It isn't easy and it isn't fair and....

In my experience there is no going back. What do you go back too? Will you boyfriend suddenly forget? What happens when your dysphoria kicks in again.. and it will.

This is the time to lean on and use your therapist. That is why we have them.

  •  

Lyndsey

Hi Charlie Nicki

I wish there was something that I could say to help. Transition is very hard on our selves and all of your friends and family. It has been years for me and I'm very happy that I transitioned. I myself moved 100 miles away from where I use to live and have started my life over. I have met so many new friends here and have found a new love that loves me for who I am.
The friends that you had before that are true friends and family will still be for you and with you. The other family and friend's can complete there life without me and were really not you friends and family.
My Heart is with you and always remember it is you that has to take care of yourself and when you are happy everyone around you will be happier and love being with you more.

Hugs
Lyndsey


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Lyndsey Marie Burke- Started my journey February 2011 Full time on May 5th 2014 HRT June 6th 2014 Name change and on all records and court documents June 20th 2014 SCS October 20th 2015 with Doctor Marci Bowers in Burlingame California I'm a very Happy women and finally living what I should have been living my whole life. Expect the unexpected. I feel Blessed. Love, Live, Be Happy. Be safe.
  •  

SailorMars1994

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 25, 2017, 04:21:41 AM
My boyfriend recently broke up with me due to my transition. I've been on T blockers for almost 3 months and on estrogen for a month and a half. I thought I was ready to face rejection and being alone but I've found out I'm not. I'm having a big identity crisis at the moment...I'm feeling afraid of letting go of who I was and now can't even look at past pictures of myself before starting because I looked so good as a man and it hurts to see that I destroyed that. I'm still presenting as male but look somewhat different.

I'm just at the beginning and can't deal with rejection, can't deal with feeling like a weirdo. I didn't feel like that until the breakup, it made me see things from another perspective.

I feel like stopping because I want the pain to stop. I don't even know if I can get my relationship back by stopping but right now it feels like it's about more than that... it's not only my relationship, it's getting back the feeling of being normal and feeling lovable.

Please help. Any thoughts?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Not to talk you out of ay feelings you many have but would stopping transition really be any better? I am going to say a few things and sorry if they hurt but it is for the best to prevent mega damages. Going back to male would have some plus for example, you wont need to take hrt forever and face less violence. However, chances of you getting your man back are  next to none as he already knows the true you and even if you do go back the people you know in life already know about this trans journey so there old opinions will not come back. I would suggest talking to your therpaist and embracing that you are no longer a gay man but a striaght woman. I feel for ya hun, but you did transition for a reason and that was becuase the male life isnt for you. I will support what ever decision you make but think this out throw compeltley <3
AMAB Born: March 1994
Gender became on radar: 2007
Admitted to self : 2010
Came out: May 12 2014
Estrogen: October 16 2015
<3
  •  

Jessica

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 25, 2017, 04:21:41 AM
My boyfriend recently broke up with me due to my transition. I've been on T blockers for almost 3 months and on estrogen for a month and a half. I thought I was ready to face rejection and being alone but I've found out I'm not. I'm having a big identity crisis at the moment...I'm feeling afraid of letting go of who I was and now can't even look at past pictures of myself before starting because I looked so good as a man and it hurts to see that I destroyed that. I'm still presenting as male but look somewhat different.

I'm just at the beginning and can't deal with rejection, can't deal with feeling like a weirdo. I didn't feel like that until the breakup, it made me see things from another perspective.

I feel like stopping because I want the pain to stop. I don't even know if I can get my relationship back by stopping but right now it feels like it's about more than that... it's not only my relationship, it's getting back the feeling of being normal and feeling lovable.

Please help. Any thoughts?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Hi Daniela, this endeavor is a huge change for all of us, for different and same reasons.  Some have issues that have been resolved some have not.  I wrote you a PM and wish you the best in your life.
Hugs, Jessica

"If you go out looking for friends, you are going to find they are very scarce.  If you go out to be a friend, you'll find them everywhere."


  •  

Julia1996

I'm sorry you are feeling that way. In my opinion stopping your transition won't help anything. You transitioned for a reason.  You needed to. Not to be hurtful, but I totally doubt stopping will get your boyfriend back. Even if you stopped and looked like you did before, your boyfriend is now aware of your trans feelings and even if you go back to looking the way he likes he will be thinking that there is no reason you might not transition again in the future. No matter how much you love someone you can't live a life as something you're not just for them.

I suggest you put away the pictures of your old self for a while. What good is being cute as a male if that's not what you are or want to be?  Personally I would rather be what my boyfriend calls a "bush pig" (a very ugly woman) than a really hot guy any day. I'm not saying you're ugly or anything but you are starting transition. That's a awkward time for all of us. It's easy to think about how much easier things would be if you went back. And they probably would.  You might even be able to supress your feelings but they will totally come back. Then you would be transitioning in mid life and have to live with the years of your life you  wasted trying to be someone you're not.

I'm really sorry you're hurting so much and it's natural to want to go to a safe place when we get hurt but you need to remember that things won't be this crappy forever. They do get better.
Big hugs
Julia
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
  •  

Nina

Suppressing ones true self over the long term does more harm than good. And, when one suppresses those feelings, we do it out of fear of losing something or someone.
Transitioning means doing it for yourself.
2007/8 - name change, tracheal shave, electrolysis, therapy
2008 - full time
2014 - GCS Dr. Brassard; remarried
2018 (January)  - hubby and I moved off-grid
2019 - plan originally was to hike PCT in 2020, but now attempting Appalachian Trail - start date April 3.
  •  

Janes Groove

I hope you have a good support group you are going to.  As they say: "Misery LOVES company."
What you are going thru is a birth.  And birth is painful.  There is no getting around that. Ask any woman who has experienced it. 

Oh. And BTW.  Looking at pictures of your old self? HUGE MISTAKE.
I avoid those like the plague.
  •  

Charlie Nicki

Just to clarify, I'm sure that even if went back, my boyfriend wouldn't return...And that isn't the reason why I'm considering this. It's just that this situation has showed me the possibility that rejection is real, and that it hurts, and that I'm having a hard time handling it. I was basically inside a bubble because these past 4 months coming out to everyone were pretty seamless, everyone was supportive so I felt strong and powerful, felt I was ready for it. But now that one my biggest supporters left I face reality and things aren't as easy and will not be as easy as I imagined. I fear losing my life and being depressed forever.

Quote from: Janes Groove on August 25, 2017, 11:03:31 AMOh. And BTW.  Looking at pictures of your old self? HUGE MISTAKE.
I avoid those like the plague.

So does that happen for everyone? Seeing old pictures makes you nostalgic and somewhat missing who you were? That's how I feel at the moment, cuz despite the dysphoria I was able to be somewhat stable and had it all. I don't hate the guy I see in the pictures, I have so much love for him and all that I accomplished looking like that.
Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
  •  

karenk1959

If misery loves company, I don't feel normal either. I look at cis-gender people and think that they don't have to go through life obsessing about being in the wrong body. I hate looking in the mirror seeing a man dressed up like a woman. I am depressed and anxious about not transitioning and much more fearful about being all alone after transitioning as my marriage falls apart and I lose my community and friends, likely driving me into a deep depression and causing me to question the meaning of it all. I see TG as an affliction that I don't want. It sucks. It makes me miserable, depressed and anxious.

If this all sounds normal to anyone, I don't know what abnormal is!
  •  

karenk1959

PS
My wife was going to leave me when I started to feminize until I realized that if I didn't at least I would have my wife in my life who makes me happy and feel good about myself. Don't give up yet on your relationship with your boyfriend yet. Think about what is your best alternative. Gender dysphoria absolutely sucks and always will, but not everyone transitions.
  •  

Janes Groove

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 25, 2017, 11:19:02 AM
So does that happen for everyone? Seeing old pictures makes you nostalgic and somewhat missing who you were? That's how I feel at the moment, cuz despite the dysphoria I was able to be somewhat stable and had it all. I don't hate the guy I see in the pictures, I have so much love for him and all that I accomplished looking like that.

To be honest I guess I never felt like that after I transitioned.  Looking at pictures of my old self just reminds me of all the years I lost that I could have been living as a woman.  I also see a sadness and an aloneness and an unfinished, unfitted, ill-fitting, out-of-place-ness.  Just writing this I am recalling images of old photographs that are deeply upsetting to me.  I can never get rid of the photographs that live in my head, but I can certainly keep the old ones in a drawer.
  •  

Nina

Imho, if you fear rejection, transition may not be for you...or maybe at a slower pace. Transition does not occur over night.

I learned a phrase long, long time ago from a sales presentation. This guy talked about rejection, and the fear you need to get over. His phrase that he always said before making a pitch: Rejection turns me on.

Lol
2007/8 - name change, tracheal shave, electrolysis, therapy
2008 - full time
2014 - GCS Dr. Brassard; remarried
2018 (January)  - hubby and I moved off-grid
2019 - plan originally was to hike PCT in 2020, but now attempting Appalachian Trail - start date April 3.
  •  

Gertrude

What do you think the real you looks like? Who/what is that?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
  •  

Charlie Nicki

Quote from: Gertrude on August 25, 2017, 05:55:03 PM
What do you think the real you looks like? Who/what is that?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

The real me? I don't know. At this moment  I'm too afraid and depressed to make such a change... Being born with this problem in my head is one of the worst things to happen to me, I wish I was normal.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
  •  

JoanneB

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 26, 2017, 09:00:22 AM
The real me? I don't know. At this moment  I'm too afraid and depressed to make such a change... Being born with this problem in my head is one of the worst things to happen to me, I wish I was normal.
I've been working for the past 8 years to learn who the "Real" me is. It took a good year or so of hard work, a fantastic support group and some therapy to barely get a handle on that.

Fear and Rejection kept me from even trying for decades. We grow up wanting to please others, to gain the acceptance of our parents, family, and friends. Being trans we tend to be hyper-aware of what other's want or expect of us. Heaven forbid they see the monster lurking underneath.

I too face the reality of rejection from my wife. A woman who knew of my gender issues some 30 years now. The same woman who after I dropped the T-Bomb on a few years ago said time and time and time again "I did not marry a woman". I am reasonably sure if I do a full social transition she would leave. Perhaps not if I really really needed to, vs the generally most days want to. And she isn't the only thing I'd be putting at risk if do a full social transition.

Rejection is the reality of transitioning. When it comes, it sucks. Big Time. I have an ex-wife that cut and run after learning about me. I have an ex fiancee that was cool about it, until wedding date pressure mounted and finally broke because I wasn't a "Real Man".

The fact for me is, I NEEDED to do something about me being trans. Avoiding it every which way I could just wasn't working anymore. It was taking taking on the Trans-Beast, for real, or..... that Jersey barrier at 90 MPH guaranteed to vaporize the car I was driving, along with me.
.          (Pile Driver)  
                    |
                    |
                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
  •  

Gertrude

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 26, 2017, 09:00:22 AM
The real me? I don't know. At this moment  I'm too afraid and depressed to make such a change... Being born with this problem in my head is one of the worst things to happen to me, I wish I was normal.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I'm there with you, but you'll probably find, at some point, that the pain of inauthenticity is too much and who you are will become clearer. The other morning I got dressed as a woman like I was going to work. My wife asked if I was stressed. I told her that as Trudie, then and there, I feel like a human being. As the male façade, I feel like a fake, phony fraud. Wanting to be normal is pathologizing being trans because of shame.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
  •  

Charlie Nicki

Quote from: Gertrude on August 26, 2017, 11:09:55 AM
I'm there with you, but you'll probably find, at some point, that the pain of inauthenticity is too much and who you are will become clearer. The other morning I got dressed as a woman like I was going to work. My wife asked if I was stressed. I told her that as Trudie, then and there, I feel like a human being. As the male façade, I feel like a fake, phony fraud. Wanting to be normal is pathologizing being trans because of shame.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

I know "normal" is the wrong word but I see it as a problem right now, that's why I said it. I'm in a bad moment where nothing seems right, going back to just being a man seems difficult now and moving forward seems difficult as well. I just have to choose which difficulty is less terrible for me. I'm in an emotional roller coaster and one minute I'm thinking I should stop my treatment and then the next minute I'm not sure if that's the best idea. I've thought about killing myself multiple times but the only thing stopping me is knowing I can't do this to my mother, she would be devastated, she doesn't deserve this.

Heck, I don't deserve this. I don't know why I have this in my head, I want it to go away.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
  •  

Janes Groove

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 27, 2017, 06:32:00 AM
I'm in a bad moment where nothing seems right, going back to just being a man seems difficult now and moving forward seems difficult as well.

Losing someone who you gave your heart to in a breakup is a terrible thing and it takes a piece of  yourself.  It's going to take time and therapy and most of all hope.  I really am sorry you're feeling this way but I've definitely been there and the truth is it sucks worse that just about anything.
  •  

Gertrude

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on August 27, 2017, 06:32:00 AM
I know "normal" is the wrong word but I see it as a problem right now, that's why I said it. I'm in a bad moment where nothing seems right, going back to just being a man seems difficult now and moving forward seems difficult as well. I just have to choose which difficulty is less terrible for me. I'm in an emotional roller coaster and one minute I'm thinking I should stop my treatment and then the next minute I'm not sure if that's the best idea. I've thought about killing myself multiple times but the only thing stopping me is knowing I can't do this to my mother, she would be devastated, she doesn't deserve this.

Heck, I don't deserve this. I don't know why I have this in my head, I want it to go away.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I've thought about self- termination with a 1911, but what stops me is the idea that they win. All the ignorant, mouth breathing, piles of excrement win. Why should I prove them right? If my life can be one instance against abusive social and even political authority, I win. We win.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
  •