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Did you not realize you were TS for a long time?

Started by Lucy Ross, July 28, 2017, 11:36:57 PM

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Shellie Hart

Quote from: Dani2118 on August 19, 2017, 11:06:31 PM
But I have noticed something over these many years, people subconsciously treat me like a woman[it's usually not good], and have any of you been treated subconsciously like women?    So, we 'can' know very early that we're girls but not all of us will. For some it's just an itch in your mind that you just scratch and ignore until you finally have the great revelation 'Oh that's what's wrong with me'

I have written about this before! I can recall many times when, because of my girly appearance and build, I would be instructed by a boy/man nearby to 'step aside' when something 'manly' needed to be done like moving a piece of furniture or lifting something. I was never taken seriously whenever the subject matter concerned anything masculine. I was expected to remain quiet, or if I did make the mistake of giving my opinion (or just simply speaking up) I would notice the smirks and attitudes. I tried for many years to fit into the culture but I just couldn't. I hated my feminine body for years in spite of wishing to be a girl. Now after 16 months HRT I just don't give a damn....
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Julia1996

Quote from: Shellie Hart on August 21, 2017, 11:38:12 AM
I have written about this before! I can recall many times when, because of my girly appearance and build, I would be instructed by a boy/man nearby to 'step aside' when something 'manly' needed to be done like moving a piece of furniture or lifting something. I was never taken seriously whenever the subject matter concerned anything masculine. I was expected to remain quiet, or if I did make the mistake of giving my opinion (or just simply speaking up) I would notice the smirks and attitudes. I tried for many years to fit into the culture but I just couldn't. I hated my feminine body for years in spite of wishing to be a girl. Now after 16 months HRT I just don't give a damn....
I have never been treated like a guy. It certainly didn't bother me but I always noticed it before I transitioned.  It happens to a greater extent now, but guys have always talked down to me about anything that's considered masculine. As if I was just to stupid and empty headed to understand without a very slow, detailed explanation.  Even my dad and brother did that and sometimes still do. Being really small for a boy and feminine guys seemed to have an attitude like, " I know you're a boy, but you're not really. You aren't worthy of being called a boy."  Actually that was probably helpful to me and I didn't realize it. I had guys at school say all kinds of stuff to me, knock my books out of my arms, throw food at me, etc. But I was never hit or beat up. I found out from my brother that a lot of guys won't hit or beat up someone who's much smaller than they are and basically considered helpless. Supposedly it violates the "guy code" or something.
Guys are just weird. They act as if it's some big privilege to be a guy and other guys have to prove they are "worthy" to be included in the "group". It's actually like really sad. I knew some small kind of nerdy guys in school. They desperately wanted to be included with the "cool" guys but were never allowed to.
Julia
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Lucy Ross

I've never had any uber male friends.  When I'd run into one I'd just groan, hope and pray they don't start in about the big game, etc.   ???  The whole sparring contest thing is so dumb.  Well, a really close friend of mine is actually macho big time, but we have a common bond in music that makes it all irrelevant.  He's really talented and funny too, a true individual.  Completely disinterested in mainstream male stuff as well. 

1982-1985 Teenage Crossdresser!
2015-2017 Middle Aged Crossdresser!  Or...?
April 2017 Electrolysis Time  :icon_yikes:
July 12th, 2017 Started HRT  :icon_chick:
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Charlie Nicki

Quote from: FinallyMichelle on August 17, 2017, 09:21:40 AM
I was terrified of giving in. As much as I needed it, I couldn't. And no, it was not comfortable in any way, it was hell. To the point were I had stopped praying to be a girl, that I would be a girl in my next life or any of that. I was begging for it to be over. No more lives, no do overs just let it end forever. Life was for people, real people, not for me. I was never comfortable being a male, but I was terrified of the consequences if I wasn't.

I can relate to all of this so much right now.



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Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
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Charlie Nicki

Quote from: Dani2118 on August 19, 2017, 11:06:31 PMBut I have noticed something over these many years, people subconsciously treat me like a woman[it's usually not good], and have any of you been treated subconsciously like women?

Wow. I have felt that from my uncles and aunts, one uncle specifically. Like they're usually more affectionate to me than they are to their other male nephews. Always thought that was just in my head until now.


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

I started relatively younger compared to a lot of you, just this year a few days shy of 24. But I often feel like I was robbed of actually experiencing a childhood and a teenhood I could enjoy. I was a very shy kid, depressed and suicidal. As far as I knew at those ages, transgender was a term for drag queens, I would even make fun of trans women with my cousins thinking it was the most bizarre thing. I didn't know anything. It's sickening how society ingrains gender binary into our heads at such a young age. Even with all of that, quietly in the back of my mind I always felt different and always played with the girls and left the boys alone. It was just a mess. One day we will get to a point where gender identity will be accepted for it's fluidity as easy as knowing the answer to 1 + 1.
HRT - 5.19.17
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Lexira

Wow, so many stories!

I have no idea where I fit because I feel like I fit in both camps. It's weird. I don't know how weird, but probably really really weird. I have no idea why but I've been having this desire to tell my story somewhere for years, but I'm too afraid to do it. Once I start the whole thing will probably come out and that's going to end up being novel length. It's too complicated and embarrassingly insane and I can't see why anyone would want to read that *bleep* anyway.

The short version is that the first time I encountered my genitals in a personal way an accidental convergence of imagination and ignorance led me to sincerely believe that this thing between my legs i had always assumed would just fall off eventually was in fact some kind of massive evil worm that had laid eggs in me that would one day hatch out millions of worms to eat me from the inside out. I spent like a month in mortal terror of my dick. Then repressed the hell out of it to survive.

I was a pretty normal kid in terms of gender, I think. I liked legos and airplanes and origami, and playing house as well. My oldest friend swears I used to try to play dress-up her and my sister and get them to put make-up on me all the time but I don't remember that at all, which is pretty odd for me.

I knew I was trans at the age of eight, the moment I first saw my aunt. It was not welcome news. My father is particularly homo/transphobic and we were involved in a very conservative religious cult of some sort as well, so things got weird fast. Weirder than you probably think, actually (there were extenuating factors). So realizing I was the same meant I was going to become an "abomination unto the lord" and go to hell. It felt like doom or fate, I don't know, but I locked myself in the bathroom that day and began to pray like I never had before. For whatever reason the thing that worried me the most about going to hell was the idea that in my path towards becoming an abomination I would be dragging down a lot of other innocent people into hell with me. The only thing I could think to do was kill myself, but I didn't want to die and I didn't want to go to hell. But right then if I'd had a sign that said I'd be forgiven for it I was convinced I'd do it without hesitation. But I never got a sign, and so I figured maybe I could avoid it by totally ignoring that other face I kept seeing in the mirror and living a super godly life.

I managed to repress the idea, and remain in denial even as i began cross dressing after I moved out on my own, but I think I had very severe GD and it came out in another way that tortured me every day of my life and got much stronger every time I had to do anything masculine. But I was totally unable to really do anything feminine because of the situation, so I lived in this kind of depressive hell, particularly once puberty started and I couldn't recognize myself at all. I didn't want to be a girl in the slightest because I felt I needed a certain amount of power to survive.

Definitely not, except, you know, always. Except it was always about body and it never even occurred to me that it had anything at all to do with gender or sex even as i'd be pining away, wishing I were like one girl or other. But to me everyone was just another people.

I remember the first time someone pointed out my bulge, and how bad I wanted to hide under a rock. I was too large to tuck, so long shirts were the thing. I went from homeschool to highschool and everyone seemed to think I was gay. It made zero sense to me, but it just never stopped. In retrospect I think it was my body language, because trying to act like a male always made me feel like a stone golem and I'd forget to do it at times.

Over and over I'd hear people talking about how they felt like men and it just made zero sense to me. I kept thinking that maybe when i grew a beard, or pubic hair, or whatever masculine milestone was next, THEN I'd feel like a man and get it. Meanwhile, the backstreet boys in my headphones. Meanwhile, puberty had brought with it an aversion to being touched that just kept growing until one day my mom hugged me from behind and it messed with me so bad I almost socked her on reflex. Nothing felt right, and the more I got the things I thought I wanted the more I felt like something was wrong. I thought I knew what that something was, and it was a lot more impossible than becoming a girl so I had to just stay alive.

Couldn't take it any more at 16. Decided to end it, but mom is kind of psychic and forces me to go with her to church on that day. I realize how much pain I'd cause them, and so i promised id never do it and then mostly dreamed of death for the next eight years. I got into drugs, nothing specific and never became addicted to anything except not feeling like me. I always held down a job or went to school until it was too much torture to stay and then i'd make some drastic change. I changed my major four times, my college once, moved something like 23 times in ten years, and had sixteen jobs. I only felt okay-ish during transition periods.

at 19 I gave up on religion. It wasn't working and too many people were contradicting each other with the same passages.

At 28, I learn for the first time that my body actually can respond to touch... if I'm touched like a female. I don't want this to be the answer, but I've always known it's true.

It took me three more years and developing some unknown and supposedly incurable chronic illness to finally realize that if I didn't at least try HRT I might not live long anyway. I was just losing the will to live. Not eating. Life just hurt too much.

So I start a week ago, and it improved life better than any medication I've tried in the first hour. I'm 31, totally broke, nowhere near as disabled, and finally feeling like I've got a reason to live. The future feels like it actually exists, and like there's time in between now and dying. I have absolutely no idea how I'm going to afford FFS, but I think I will, somehow. Doing my own electro.

So I'm kind of both early and late onset. The crippling sense that my body was WRONG just pummeled me every day, but I was so trapped by all this fear in so many opposing directions that I couldn't even let myself think about it.

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Shellie Hart

Quote from: Lexira on August 31, 2017, 07:50:09 AM
I knew I was trans at the age of eight, the moment I first saw my aunt. It was not welcome news. My father is particularly homo/transphobic and we were involved in a very conservative religious cult of some sort as well, so things got weird fast. Weirder than you probably think, actually (there were extenuating factors). So realizing I was the same meant I was going to become an "abomination unto the lord" and go to hell. It felt like doom or fate, I don't know, but I locked myself in the bathroom that day and began to pray like I never had before. For whatever reason the thing that worried me the most about going to hell was the idea that in my path towards becoming an abomination I would be dragging down a lot of other innocent people into hell with me. The only thing I could think to do was kill myself, but I didn't want to die and I didn't want to go to hell. But right then if I'd had a sign that said I'd be forgiven for it I was convinced I'd do it without hesitation. But I never got a sign, and so I figured maybe I could avoid it by totally ignoring that other face I kept seeing in the mirror and living a super godly life.

At 28, I learn for the first time that my body actually can respond to touch... if I'm touched like a female. I don't want this to be the answer, but I've always known it's true.

It took me three more years and developing some unknown and supposedly incurable chronic illness to finally realize that if I didn't at least try HRT I might not live long anyway. I was just losing the will to live. Not eating. Life just hurt too much.

So I'm kind of both early and late onset. The crippling sense that my body was WRONG just pummeled me every day, but I was so trapped by all this fear in so many opposing directions that I couldn't even let myself think about it.

A lot of this was/is me. I also grew up in an extreme cult where I was required to keep my hair very short and wear baggy clothes and the girls had to wear only dresses -- no "evil" pants. My father had no idea the damage he did when he kept accusing me of "wanting to be a girl" because of my personality and body shape (very long and womanly legs and small torso). I wanted to grow long hair but he refused. Hellish. Suicide was my companion for many years. Sometimes still is.

I tried to be a good fundamentalist Baptist for so long, but the insane hypocrisy I dealt with in the churches was too much. I had to get out. Today, many of them are "praying for me" because of my life changes. Going to hell? I don't see it. I am not a hypocrite like they are.

Strangely, in sex I was turned on by touch. I was taught that is the way women are turned on. Men are turned on by sight and touching the female form. I get it. But I was different.

So much more to say.....
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myraey

It is difficult to figure out. Some figure it out when they are very young. I am not that old but even the time you are figuring things out life just happens. If the circumstances were different I would also be different.

The question for me is if transition is the right way forward. That is not easy and comes with it's own difficulties. I have been trying to figure things out since I am 5. 
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Lexira

Quote from: Shellie Hart on August 31, 2017, 11:41:35 AM
A lot of this was/is me. I also grew up in an extreme cult where I was required to keep my hair very short and wear baggy clothes and the girls had to wear only dresses -- no "evil" pants. My father had no idea the damage he did when he kept accusing me of "wanting to be a girl" because of my personality and body shape (very long and womanly legs and small torso). I wanted to grow long hair but he refused. Hellish. Suicide was my companion for many years. Sometimes still is.

I tried to be a good fundamentalist Baptist for so long, but the insane hypocrisy I dealt with in the churches was too much. I had to get out. Today, many of them are "praying for me" because of my life changes. Going to hell? I don't see it. I am not a hypocrite like they are.

Strangely, in sex I was turned on by touch. I was taught that is the way women are turned on. Men are turned on by sight and touching the female form. I get it. But I was different.

So much more to say.....

Yeah, exactly.

Want to chat a bit about cult life via PM? It would be super sweet to compare experiences in a more in-depth kind of way without also derailing the thread.
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