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

Do you ever miss the old you?

Started by Charlie Nicki, September 04, 2017, 09:47:17 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

V M

Yeah sometimes, The old me was young and strong, able to take command and handle most situations fairly quickly and easily without any fear

The new me is an aging abused animal, dealing with atrophy due to injuries incurred and has difficulty with trusting humans
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
  •  

MaxForever

I am just starting to transition haven't got on hormones yet. But I may miss the old me sometimes.
I am in an in between stage where I wonder what the new me will look like as a man.
I feel genderless right now. I am pretty sure others felt this way too. I will miss being able to wear certain things
but for the most part I am looking forward to being more comfortable in my own skin and new clothes and sorry if this is TMI I wont miss my breasts when I get rid of them. I feel bad for my family mostly my mom who will lose who I was.

Also wanted to add I get the angry part that others brought up in their past pictures. I looked at a lot of my old photos going "Was I ever happy?" I am now happier to have discovered this new persona of mine. Being called He and Him
and Max has made me almost 100 percent more happier than my old name and being called She.
  •  

Charlie Nicki

Quote from: MaxForever on September 08, 2017, 06:18:08 AM
I am just starting to transition haven't got on hormones yet. But I may miss the old me sometimes.
I am in an in between stage where I wonder what the new me will look like as a man.
I feel genderless right now. I am pretty sure others felt this way too. I will miss being able to wear certain things
but for the most part I am looking forward to being more comfortable in my own skin and new clothes and sorry if this is TMI I wont miss my breasts when I get rid of them. I feel bad for my family mostly my mom who will lose who I was.

Also wanted to add I get the angry part that others brought up in their past pictures. I looked at a lot of my old photos going "Was I ever happy?" I am now happier to have discovered this new persona of mine. Being called He and Him
and Max has made me almost 100 percent more happier than my old name and being called She.

Good for you Max!


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

Jessica

Quote from: Charlie Nicki on September 04, 2017, 09:47:17 AM
I've read people say they can't look at old pictures  because they hated who they were or because that person wasn't real. What about the opposite? Has anyone felt they can't look at old pictures because it makes them nostalgic? I'm just starting my process but whenever I see pictures from a few months ago before I started I get this nostalgia and this "awww" in my head thinking I looked so happy and good (even though I know I wasn't 100% happy). It's like seeing a relative that I loved very much, that helped me and protected me and isn't here anymore.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Hi Daniela 🙋🏼  Just remember you will always be looking different in pictures of you in the past whether you are on hrt or not.  You will always be you inside though. 
Hope your feeling better girlfriend 💁 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."


  •  

MaxForever

Thanks Charlie Nicki glad to have support here :)
  •  

SaerJoe

Fascinating string and discussion.  It is so poignant, yet so beautiful, when wonderful human beings tell their truth.  We live and learn so much--from each other in our shared experiences.

From my very first memories, the hardware-software mismatch was palpable and frustrating.  My elder sister, parents (and much of the extended family) saw the dysphoria and struggled with what the heck to do with me.  At 12 years old in 1975, my mother went to an MHMR and picked up a pamphlet to help her understand what was going on; to learn that DSM-III had just removed homosexuality from the list of mental disorders.  Even yet, transgender never entered the lexicon in our discussions.  So essentially, I was read the realities of my life of "gloom and doom" that my poor mother saw for me; a life of no children and being among "people like that."  She did the very best she could, while I grew to excel in sports, academics and everything I could master--to hopefully make my parents proud of me.  I was one of the lucky ones, I realize.  As long as I did well and stayed out of trouble, life was good.

As my year books over the years were filled with "to the guy in our class with a girl's name," I attracted more female paramours than male, which of course was always fine by me.  Half of the handful of guys who were attracted to me, interestingly, are gay today, and still friends.  Lots of psychology there, no?

My folks decided to leave WNY for the sunshine and "opportunity" of Texas when I was just 16; breaking off my first romance that I was involved in with a girl a year my senior.  The ache stung for years, and I still get a lump in my throat when I see her at my old NY class reunions.  She went on to a handful of broken relationships over the decades and married only a couple years ago.  She married a man with a son and we are friends on FB.

Do I miss my old self?  I think about it often as I go through this process.  Facebook is a reminder as in my heart, I've only just been given the opportunity to go through the puberty I only dreamed of, and I chose to keep my original profile, correcting only my name after I went through the legal process of correcting my identity docs, and posting a primer of the obvious--that explained the more "me" me (with an extra 25# of upper body strength obvious, and changing hairline).  I may be different in the aspect that I saw no incongruence in who I was to who I am now, but simply a coming in to my own.  My extended family understands it, although, like a few have noted, it has been difficult for many of my cousins who likely do miss the comforts---of the "old me," the overachieving workaholic who built and sold a company over 25 years, and champion of equality and working people everywhere.  They're only beginning to understand what drove me to the workaholism that was, and still is--the hallmark of my life.

I am incredibly proud of my parents (who gave me tough love, but never abandoned me) and even myself--similar to a couple comments here--for not becoming a total alcoholic or engaging in other self-destructive behavior, even though the frustrations many days seemed insurmountable.  My greatest frustration all those years before I began physical transition (2009) was simply that of making love with any one of the few beautiful women I've been lucky enough to have had in my life---when the sense of "phantom limb syndrome" drove me to tears.

In a perfect world, I would have stopped running and denying myself the opportunity to have corrected the situation earlier in life, as I'd have loved to have had a family of my own--and had the opportunity to have lived that proverbial "normal life" with the majority, in addition to the life I've been socialized in (essentially a straight guy socialized as a lesbian?!).  I chose to keep my head down, until at 50 and facing a new career....I had to ask myself how I could live the rest of my life....exhausted of trying to play female.  One constantly run from restrooms, and constantly hating the whole clothes thing.  I just couldn't take it anymore.

So, at 54, I'm 4 years since top surgery and on T, after which I managed to learn how to stand straight up for the first time in my life without the boobs to hide.  I'm now on the mission to find the most capable surgeon and am considering GCS to both complete the package and --hopefully put an end to the annoying process of packing.  Having solved the "phantom limb syndrome" will be an amazing joy I'm only starting to fully conjure in my mind, and while knowing the risks, downsides of such approach, I'm smashing ahead.  The grumpy little "girl" in all my childhood pictures...giving way to the fulfilled man I've always been and known in my heart.

I apologize for the lengthy post--and thank you for your indulgence.  As a writer, this process of sharing is cathartic, for sure.  I wish each and every one on this string all the health, happiness and fulfillment each of us has in our grasp.  Be yourself, be well, and stay beautiful, all.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
  •  

Charlie Nicki

Hey SaerJoe, that was a great read. Thanks for your input!


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

MaxForever

Quote from: SaerJoe on September 10, 2017, 03:11:12 PM


So, at 54, I'm 4 years since top surgery and on T, after which I managed to learn how to stand straight up for the first time in my life without the boobs to hide.  I'm now on the mission to find the most capable surgeon and am considering GCS to both complete the package and --hopefully put an end to the annoying process of packing.  Having solved the "phantom limb syndrome" will be an amazing joy I'm only starting to fully conjure in my mind, and while knowing the risks, downsides of such approach, I'm smashing ahead.  The grumpy little "girl" in all my childhood pictures...giving way to the fulfilled man I've always been and known in my heart.

I apologize for the lengthy post--and thank you for your indulgence.  As a writer, this process of sharing is cathartic, for sure.  I wish each and every one on this string all the health, happiness and fulfillment each of us has in our grasp.  Be yourself, be well, and stay beautiful, all.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

Thank you for sharing your story! Almost put me in tears. I know this is me and who I want to be in the future.
I  am lucky to have realized it at 32. I don't want breasts in the future. I know I am a man in my heart.
This made me realize my old self as a girl was really really unhappy as I am not the only one who always wanted
to hide my breasts I never really knew WHY a woman would want to hide their breasts. I was always uncomfortable with them until recently when I discovered being transgender it all clicked why I never wanted to show my body
in revealing clothes or tight clothes because I didn't like it. I looked at my old pictures and wondered if I was ever happy the way I was way back in highschool I didn't even like wearing my skirt for my uniform.
  •  

Chloe

Huh???  I miss the young me!!!
( same pic different aeon Bari Jo, switched avatar now we're even!!)
"But it's no use now," thought poor Alice, "to pretend be two people!
"Why, there's hardly enough of me left to make one respectable person!"
  •  

Alanna1990

He's dead and I hope He stays that way
  •  

pretty pauline

Only a small bit in certain situations, the old me was never afraid or anxious traveling home late at night, now as a woman I'm more aware of safety, some aspects of life is much harder for a woman.
The old me played a crucial part in me becoming the new me, but I'd never go back.
If your going thru hell, just keep going.
  •  

Dani2118

Until I was 14 I just hid my girl inside. When I learned about puberty that cute little thing down there turned into a horror. In the most ardent prayer of my life, I asked God to let me wake up with the right parts down there. He said no. 2 weeks later I was going to shoot myself in the head and have a direct talk with Him. He said no to that too. So I learned to live with it until I fell in love with my best friend when I was 19. You come to know what Transgender really means when your 'male' but you know better, and you want to marry your male best friend and be his wife. I should have transitioned then, but instead push it into the soul pit. To understand why you have to know I spent my teen years in a small town in Florida. The only Gay people I saw in 10 years was 2 women holding hands on a deserted beach. My family moved back to Tennessee and I came back with them. My 'man shell' was a thin white wash, but thickened up thru the years. I didn't drink or do drugs, but I did try to work myself to death and almost succeeded. Finally now I get to transition and it feels wonderful! I get to be me! Do I miss the old me? No. But I don't hate him, he was alright and I even came to like him. I just wish I could have lived the life I know now that I could have. This is for the young and questioning, find out, take the leap, It'll be worth it! Don't look back and see what might have been, look back at a life well lived.
I finally get to be me, and I don't want today to be my last! That's a very nice feeling.  ;D ;D ;D
  •