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How did you manage Social Media as you transitioned?

Started by Kelly H, October 01, 2017, 07:43:31 AM

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Kelly H

Over the past few months I have come out to most of my family and close friends.  The reactions have been varied as some might expect. On November 13th I'm coming out at work.  I work for a very large company and my position requires interaction with multiple departments.  To say I'm anxious is an understatement.

What I'm very curious about is how some of you handled your transition revelations on your social media accounts?  I know some people can be cruel and others supportive.  What was your strategy, would you do anything different?

Did you use your existing profile or create a new identity?

I don't spend a lot of time on social. As you can see, I haven't posted much here. I realize for some, it is a huge part of their lives and daily interactions.

Thank you in advance to all who are willing to share your social media experiences.

Kelly


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



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summer710

Share what you want to share; don't share what you don't what to share.
Be selective in the comments you make (and read) or the tags you're in.

I personally dropped FB a few years ago and moved on to Insta.  Since Insta is primarily pix (with occasional titles [or selective #'s]) my existence and revelation as a trans-w is more cryptic and self-filtering.  Those within the LGBT community and/or allies will immediately recognize via the photos and bio; only close friends will actually spend effort to read through the posts and realize what's going on in my life.  Friends who are less close will either #1 - figure it out or have their suspicions and drop contact, or #2 will only be at the perimeter of the friendship zone and won't spend too much time contemplating what the storyboard signifies.  The breadcrumbs are there - it just up to people to follow them, if they want.  I didn't link my FB to Insta.

If social media was never a big part of your life prior to transition, there's no reason you have to make it a big part of your life in transition.  And remember - the internet (and social media) never forgets.  At the very least - my social media is strictly for "social media"; it is completely separate from anything even remotely work related.
You have suffered enough and warred with yourself - It's time that you won.
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Megan.

Against FB policy I ran two profiles for some time,  it takes some effort to keep them apart,  I did accidentally post a picture of my new nail polish on my old male profile,  but retracted it quickly so only one person saw it,  oops!
I privately came out to friends and family,  but on the day the communication went out at work about me (the week before full-time),  I sent a message (not a post)  to all my friends on my old male profile telling them what was happening,  and to send a friend invite to my new authentic profile if they wanted to still be friends, almost all did [emoji4]. I still have my old FB profile,  but it is just a reference,  I do not post to it,  only my new real profile. X

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sarah1972

I pretty much switched my professional networks (LinkedIn, XING) shortly after I came out at work.
I started with XING where I have a smaller amount of contacts. A lot of folks I had not heard from for years sent encouraging messages.
LinkedIn I changed but had notifications to my contacts turned of, so I did not get any messages. I can tell by the viewership that some people who do not know yet are confused. What has changed is that I all the sudden get a lot of "women in technology meet up" invitations - social networking events for women in the tech industry.

Facebook is still the old profile, mostly since my wife asked me to hold off. I plan to actually change my current profile since it contains a lot of memories I want to keep. I do have a Sarah profile but do not use it.

Twitter is changed but with 11 followers it does not matter much...

Good luck with your coming out!!

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Gertrude

Two different accounts


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Kelly H

Quote from: summer710 on October 01, 2017, 08:56:55 AM
Share what you want to share; don't share what you don't what to share.
Be selective in the comments you make (and read) or the tags you're in.

I personally dropped FB a few years ago and moved on to Insta.  Since Insta is primarily pix (with occasional titles [or selective #'s]) my existence and revelation as a trans-w is more cryptic and self-filtering.  Those within the LGBT community and/or allies will immediately recognize via the photos and bio; only close friends will actually spend effort to read through the posts and realize what's going on in my life.  Friends who are less close will either #1 - figure it out or have their suspicions and drop contact, or #2 will only be at the perimeter of the friendship zone and won't spend too much time contemplating what the storyboard signifies.  The breadcrumbs are there - it just up to people to follow them, if they want.  I didn't link my FB to Insta.

Thank you Summer
I'm not that familiar with Insta and haven't been engaged with the LGBT Community online.  Your insight is helpful.  Thank you


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •  

Kelly H

Quote from: meganjames2 on October 01, 2017, 09:48:37 AM
Against FB policy I ran two profiles for some time,  it takes some effort to keep them apart,  I did accidentally post a picture of my new nail polish on my old male profile,  but retracted it quickly so only one person saw it,  oops!
I privately came out to friends and family,  but on the day the communication went out at work about me (the week before full-time),  I sent a message (not a post)  to all my friends on my old male profile telling them what was happening,  and to send a friend invite to my new authentic profile if they wanted to still be friends, almost all did [emoji4]. I still have my old FB profile,  but it is just a reference,  I do not post to it,  only my new real profile. X

meganjames 2

Thank you very much.  I don't have the time or patience to manage two profiles.  You are the better woman to have the discipline to pull that off. 


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •  

Megan.

It was more of a practical necessity at the time; I lived two lives for about 18 months [emoji4]

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Kelly H

Quote from: sarah1972 on October 01, 2017, 12:12:17 PM
I pretty much switched my professional networks (LinkedIn, XING) shortly after I came out at work.
I started with XING where I have a smaller amount of contacts. A lot of folks I had not heard from for years sent encouraging messages.
LinkedIn I changed but had notifications to my contacts turned of, so I did not get any messages. I can tell by the viewership that some people who do not know yet are confused. What has changed is that I all the sudden get a lot of "women in technology meet up" invitations - social networking events for women in the tech industry.

Facebook is still the old profile, mostly since my wife asked me to hold off. I plan to actually change my current profile since it contains a lot of memories I want to keep. I do have a Sarah profile but do not use it.

Twitter is changed but with 11 followers it does not matter much...

Good luck with your coming out!!

Thanks Sarah
My thought was to update picture on LinkedIn and  leave it at that.  Folks I work with will know already.  Those that don't may ask... Did you make an announcement on XING? You mentioned you received positive messages...

Thanks again


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •  

Kelly H

Quote from: Gertrude on October 01, 2017, 12:28:41 PM
Two different accounts


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Gertrude,

I ran an ISP for 5 years. You'd think I was more adept at managing social accounts.   Not the case.. I have friends who have staff to post for them.. I'm not in that league..LOL

Appreciate your input!

Kelly


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •  

Kendra

I quit Facebook.  Too much drama, not enough upside.  I also don't miss other artifacts of the past including cable television and a land-line phone. 
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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sarah1972

I changed XING over a few days. XING offers the possibility to update your contacts on any change, like "Sarah has a new profile picture" or "Sarah changed her email address". Since I changed my name last, it was all under my old name.

I did not put out an official announcement.

LinkedIn offers the same but I did uncheck the box. People can figure out on their own.

Quote from: Kelly H on October 01, 2017, 04:25:04 PM
Thanks Sarah
My thought was to update picture on LinkedIn and  leave it at that.  Folks I work with will know already.  Those that don't may ask... Did you make an announcement on XING? You mentioned you received positive messages...

Thanks again

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KathyLauren

I created a separate FB account for my trans-related stuff.  My only friends on that account were people from the support group.  Everything else remained on my regular FB account.

When it came time to go public, I put a coming out post on my regular account.  Shortly after, I renamed it to my new name.  I told my friends on the trans account about my new account and asked them to friend it if they wanted to stay in touch on FB.  Then, after a brief overlap to give people time to react, I shut down the special-purpose one.

Keeping two accounts was tricky.  Initially, it wasn't hard to make sure there were no points of contact between them.  But as I came out to more people, it got harder.  Fortunately, my transition happened fairly fast, because I could not have kept them separate for long.
2015-07-04 Awakening; 2015-11-15 Out to self; 2016-06-22 Out to wife; 2016-10-27 First time presenting in public; 2017-01-20 Started HRT!!; 2017-04-20 Out publicly; 2017-07-10 Legal name change; 2019-02-15 Approval for GRS; 2019-08-02 Official gender change; 2020-03-11 GRS; 2020-09-17 New birth certificate
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Rowena_Ellenweorc

For me, its really quite simple as I already have two kind of separate identities. My Facebook and Instagram are my real world identities, so there is very little about being trans or LGBT there (though I am in a couple groups but no one pays attention to what groups you're in LOL). And then my other social media accounts are my online identity.  These are the ones where I openly post that I am transgender/non-binary.  As I've only come out to a finite amount of people in the real world, my facebook and instagram don't really have much there, although now FB has gender and pronoun options, so I did change my gender to other and pronouns to 'they/their' but no one really has noticed outside of the few people on my list from the LGBT groups I'm in.

Noooooow.... there is a bit of a disclaimer. My online identity accounts all relate to my username, so if  you know my online identity, my open identity accounts are easy to find (and I do link some of them on my FB profile) SOOOOO some real world people may end up finding out without my knowledge, but those are only the people who care enough to view my other profiles.  And I know for a fact there aren't many of those. None of my family for example looks at my deviantart (thank heavens for that or they'd be flabbergasted... *gasp* She writes GAY STORIES! OH NO! [Use she pronouns, because that's what my family would use])
~Ren

Born May 1989 - Assigned Female
October 2016 - Came out to self/online
Feb/March 2017 - Officially came out to husband
April 2017 - Realized I'm Non-Binary
June 2017 - Started Therapy
August 2017 - Came out to parents
October 2017 - modified FB profile
November 26, 2017 - Came out https://www.facebook.com/notes/karen-ren-losee/please-read/10155966104353223/ on FB

"Walking beside the guilty and the innocent
How will you raise your hand when they call your name?"
- Bon Jovi "We weren't Born to follow"

I am done crying over not being feminine.
I am done griping about being too masculine.
I will be me.
And that's a non-binary being.
I am... ME!

....

This... is MY story
The story of a girl trapped in a guy's body.
A boy trapped in a girl's body.
No.  Its the story of a... human being.
- From one of my poems
  •  

Gertrude

Quote from: Kelly H on October 01, 2017, 04:10:20 PM
Quote from: meganjames2 on October 01, 2017, 09:48:37 AM
Against FB policy I ran two profiles for some time,  it takes some effort to keep them apart,  I did accidentally post a picture of my new nail polish on my old male profile,  but retracted it quickly so only one person saw it,  oops!
I privately came out to friends and family,  but on the day the communication went out at work about me (the week before full-time),  I sent a message (not a post)  to all my friends on my old male profile telling them what was happening,  and to send a friend invite to my new authentic profile if they wanted to still be friends, almost all did [emoji4]. I still have my old FB profile,  but it is just a reference,  I do not post to it,  only my new real profile. X

meganjames 2

Thank you very much.  I don't have the time or patience to manage two profiles.  You are the better woman to have the discipline to pull that off.
It's a practical matter as I am not out yet, at least not more than a handful of people.


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usedtobejustin

I am now very early in the process, so recently opened a second FB account with a new online identity. I am not ready yet for cruel responses >:-) . I just hope I can keep them separate and not upload cross pictures and posts LOL. As my process progress and I come out to more of my friends and family I hope to gradually switch to one authentic account. But there is still mileage to go!
Modify message
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LizK

Quote from: usedtobejustin on October 02, 2017, 03:49:58 AM
I am now very early in the process, so recently opened a second FB account with a new online identity. I am not ready yet for cruel responses >:-) . I just hope I can keep them separate and not upload cross pictures and posts LOL. As my process progress and I come out to more of my friends and family I hope to gradually switch to one authentic account. But there is still mileage to go!
Modify message

Dear UsedtobeJustin

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Transition Begun 25 September 2015
HRT since 17 May 2016,
Fulltime from 8 March 2017,
GCS 4 December 2018
Voice Surgery 01 February 2019
  •  

Kelly H

You're a blast - I can tell!

Rowena_Ellenweorc love your poem too - or at least the portion you shared. We all have a story and those of us willing to share it find comfort in the telling.  At least that's my experience.

Managing 2 accounts is far too tedious for me.  You seem to have plenty of energy though so rock on!

Kelly


Quote from: Rowena_Ellenweorc on October 01, 2017, 07:28:17 PM
For me, its really quite simple as I already have two kind of separate identities. My Facebook and Instagram are my real world identities, so there is very little about being trans or LGBT there (though I am in a couple groups but no one pays attention to what groups you're in LOL). And then my other social media accounts are my online identity.  These are the ones where I openly post that I am transgender/non-binary.  As I've only come out to a finite amount of people in the real world, my facebook and instagram don't really have much there, although now FB has gender and pronoun options, so I did change my gender to other and pronouns to 'they/their' but no one really has noticed outside of the few people on my list from the LGBT groups I'm in.

Noooooow.... there is a bit of a disclaimer. My online identity accounts all relate to my username, so if  you know my online identity, my open identity accounts are easy to find (and I do link some of them on my FB profile) SOOOOO some real world people may end up finding out without my knowledge, but those are only the people who care enough to view my other profiles.  And I know for a fact there aren't many of those. None of my family for example looks at my deviantart (thank heavens for that or they'd be flabbergasted... *gasp* She writes GAY STORIES! OH NO! [Use she pronouns, because that's what my family would use])


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •  

warlockmaker

I am proud to be the 3td gender female and openly announced it on my fb. Just changed my name. My new names uses the same initials so my signature is the same. I am in Private Equity and the finance industry is very supportive for LGBT. No problems.
When we first start our journey the perception and moral values all dramatically change in wonderment. As we evolve further it all becomes normal again but the journey has changed us forever.

SRS January 21st,  2558 (Buddhist calander), 2015
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Kelly H

To all who have responded...  Thank you very much.  I love to hear about your experiences and thoughts on this topic.

My wife is not crazy about my transition so this has been a challenging journey for us both.  I don't want to hide any longer and she doesn't want to suffer the embarrassment of being in public with me. How I handle social media becomes more than what I want or how it impacts me.

My children and grandchildren are actually huge supporters so they have been a ray of sunshine through all of this.

Thanks again to everyone willing to share your experience.

Kelly XOXO


...still One of a Kind
             Designed by God



  •