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Coming out to myself

Started by Rachel 82, August 12, 2017, 12:05:24 AM

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Rachel 82

I guess TG folks all have a season like this in our lives - I guess this is my time. Time to come to grips with the fact that I am transgendered. Time to speak the words out loud: I am trans. I am a transgendered person. I wish I was born female.

I'm new here. Just introduced myself the other night: https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,226875.0.html

It's been an emotional week. My wife and 2-year old daughter have been out of town for the past week, and will be gone for another week. This has given me quiet time that I'm not used to having - a moment to really stop and look in the mirror (literally and figuratively). I've been staying up late, watching videos like this, drinking an intoxicating cocktail of terror and joy:
    :'(

This is liberating but terrifying. A big part of me wants to fling myself forward into the great unknown, but I have a family to think about. My wife is incredible, but still two steps behind me in figuring this stuff out. I need to remind myself to slow it down. The cognitive dissonance is deafening.

Thanks for letting me vent!
-Rachel
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Kendra

Hi Rachel,

I certainly don't have all the answers (I am still discovering many things about myself) but one thing that really helped is when I realized none of this has to be binary.  Takes some of the pressure off.  Just as the gender binary itself is far too literal - people are far more than just a chromosome marker - the definition and degrees of being transgender doesn't have to be a yes/no thing.  If I want to change something fast or more gradually I'll figure out a way or at least try to. 

Compromise isn't a bad word if it's done for the right reason.  Life isn't perfection.  Some of the most beautiful art and classical music deliberately mixes things up with a bit of dissonance.   
Assigned male at birth 1963.  Decided I wanted to be a girl in 1971.  Laser 2014-16, electrolysis 2015-17, HRT 7/2017, GCS 1/2018, VFS 3/2018, FFS 5/2018, Labiaplasty & BA 7/2018. 
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Raell

Kendra is correct; people are on a gender spectrum and not everyone experiencing dysphoria needs to transition to a binary gender.
Not everyone fits in conventional "girl" or "boy" boxes, and increasingly, people see themselves as nonbinary.

I'm a non-transitioning nonbinary partial transmale who lives as an androgyne, leaning toward the male side.

In my case, acknowledging my male side, giving him a name (Raell), and allowing him to express, allowing myself to move more to a masculine anydrogynous presentation has given me enough relief from dysphoria for now.
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Rachel 82

Thank you both for the kind words!

I need to slow down a little bit. I think the root of my problem is that I want a label for myself, but there just isn't one. Not yet. I'm imagining myself trying to explain my situation to friends and family, but without easy labels, it may be hard for me to help them understand what's going on. All in due time. There's no hurry to tell the whole world. I obviously have more work to do, first!

Thanks again,
-Rachel
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JoanneB

Too much Quality Time alone with yourself.... Oh I know it all too well when I needed to move some 350 miles from home and into rural WV for work leaving my wife back home to bark at strangers passing in front of the house. And work wasn't work. It was a job a mind numbed robot could have done and not the sort of thing a fix-it hero engineer was needed for, much less allowed to be in the world of government prime contractors and group-think. But it was a job when none were to be had and paid well.

So pretty much all of my old-reliable defenses for the GD were gone. What I call the 3D's; Diversions, Distractions, and some Denial. Add to that a lot of my basic self-identity stripped away as I became assimilated into the world of the Borg where resistance is futile.

My wife knew from about Day 1 about my Gender Issues and past history of transition experiments, only to settle in as "Just a CD". I like to say CD++ since that was the default position for this 6ft tall big everything, balding since 14 person enveloped by the cloud of "Some guy in a dress".  When after months of reflection, some reading, finding a super TG Support group, I knew by the time the 3rd meeting was over it was almost too late to tell her what was going on. Dropping the T-Bomb on this 30+ year relationship was a bit of a shock for her followed by the rage as her hot button issue of 'Betrayal' was not just pressed on, but stomped on.

Thanks to LOTS of the usually difficult open and honest talks we managed to get past the crises. After 2 utter failed transition 'experiments' a third one sure wasn't on my to-do list at all. The over all goal for me was to restrike some sort of balance in my life. My gender identity is an important aspect of my life which I tried hard to bury or otherwise manage for decades. There were also a lot of other important aspects to what and who I am. Some far more important. No way am I willing to put 80% of me and who I am at risk for 20%.

For me a full social and medical transition is a "Want" and not a "Need". I've seen those who need to come to their first group meeting. The GD consumes their life. For me it was mostly background noise just simmering away with some periods of the pot boiling over.

One thing you touched on that I found tended to intensify the GD was binary thinking. I know I am not a cis male. I also know I am far happier today thanks to HRT and heeling myself from the inside. Balance for me also requires minimal risk so a full social transition is out. It's a want and not a need (for today at least). If I consume myself with thoughts of the ultimate End-Game for an MTF it's... well as an F, right?  The stuff many a sleepless and tear-filled night is made of.

Rather, I adopted the label of Non-Binary, which is the reality of the world I am choosing to live in, Today. The label implies I don't always have to present this way or that, which today I don't always present one way or another. My therapist said labels aren't important, you are simply you. I guess I am not as "evolved" as she thinks I am. I found some comfort in having that label to cling to vs the dream.

It's been 8 years since I dropped the T-Bomb. Many of the questions my wife had asked and all I could say is I don't know or Not sure, still remain unanswered. We both are well aware of  where my true joy lies. My wife has seen my dark periods now that I am back home and unable to live part-time as female. Her thoughts about a future have also changed over time. Her love is stronger for me then it has been in a long time as I "Transition" from that lifeless soulless thing I became and into a for real person. The exterior updates like the breasts far from thrill her. Relationships inherently involve compromises. The US being prioritized over an individuals. Otherwise you are no more then room-mates.
.          (Pile Driver)  
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                    ^
(ROCK) ---> ME <--- (HARD PLACE)
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Rachel 82

Quote from: JoanneB on August 13, 2017, 10:34:21 AM
Too much Quality Time alone with yourself....
One thing you touched on that I found tended to intensify the GD was binary thinking.

Hi, Joanne.
Thanks for sharing all that! I'm sorry I didn't realize until now that you replied to this thread.

You make a good point. Binary Thinking in this context seems like it should be on this list:
http://sourcesofinsight.com/10-distorted-thinking-patterns/

I guess you could file it under #1: All or nothing thinking.
Something I (and my wife) should really keep in mind while we try to figure out where all this is headed.

Thanks again,
-Rachel

[ edited: signed with boy name accidentally  :laugh: ]
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Charlie Nicki

Coming out to ourselves is probably the hardest part and it's a never ending process. Like you, I know I am trans...what is my type of trans though? still not sure.

Congrats on starting this journey. And good luck! :)
Latina :) I speak Spanish, English and a bit of Portuguese.
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