Quote from: Allie24 on October 10, 2017, 11:33:52 AM
Space got privatized? That's ridonkulous! Silly humans, thinking they can own the Void...
Well, space exploration anyway!
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For me that moment was definitely thrilling. I never had to get a note from my therapist to take hormones (I live Illinois... do the laws surrounding this vary state to state?.... assuming you are American, of course, please correct me if I am wrong) but when I saw the doctor and got my first prescription, boy was that an immense relief. Being as I was still in the throes of pubertal development, it was wonderful knowing that there was something of a stop button that could be pressed to cease its effects.
I don't know if all require a letter here (I am in the US too, Georgia), but I know that the few options I've looked into do. Also, I'm hoping it helps with insurance coverage to be "officially diagnosed".
Quote from: Doreen on October 10, 2017, 11:35:57 AM
Guess what I'm saying is be careful what you wish for, or dream
It just may come true, but sometimes reality might hurt more than a dream.
Oh, I'm expecting my hematologist to bring that side of the hammer down on me.

(I think I mixed metaphors there with sides of coins and bringing down hammers... bringing down the claw end of the hammer works I guess, but is a bit more gruesome than intended.

)
Quote from: Sarah_P on October 10, 2017, 11:57:18 AM
Making the doctor appointment for starting HRT was a big moment for me. I made the appointment while I was on my lunch break, then came back to work & jumped for joy with a girl friend I work with. I was so excited, I couldn't think of anything else all day! THIS WAS ACTUALLY GOING TO HAPPEN!!
Honestly, most every step along this path has been exciting! Those first few months there was an equal amount of anxiety, but now it's mostly excitement.
I'm definitely walking a tight rope (I should scale back the metaphors...) on excitement and anxiety, but excitement seems to be winning out. I'm not sure when I can logistically get an HRT prescription appointment (my GP tends to have scheduling issues, and with other medical stuff I have to go through him first), but as excited as I am right now I can't imagine how excited I'll be then. (On the anxiety front, still have to contend with coming out and a few financial worries, but if I can work up the courage for the one I believe the other will fall into place with family support.)
Quote from: Viktor on October 10, 2017, 02:15:12 PM
So I suppose the actual 'moment' would have been when the supervising doctor did finally sign me off after a year of therapy for HRT and gave the official "go ahead" as it were. Until then, I felt I could have been wasting my time. The first GP appointment, the first psychiatrist/therapy session etc. could all have been for nothing without that and I didn't allow myself to feel anything until I was given official sanctions. I was just going through motions. In terms of excitement, I didn't feel a whole lot of that. What I did feel after 24 hours on the hormone was a deep sense of relaxation which definitely was not a placebo effect.
I hate hearing that you had to go through that (and what other people have said with NHS as well), I don't think I would have been able to make it through that level of scrutiny without buckling and retreating into my anxiety. I told my therapist how much I appreciated her earlier, and I meant it, because without finding someone willing to see me in these circumstances (online) with that specialty I could picture this going radically differently.
Quote from: Bari Jo on October 10, 2017, 02:52:01 PM
I was diagnosed transsexual. It was so justification from an actual expert that my problems were an actual thing. I cried in my car and read it over and over, good cry.
I think maybe more than the hormones, this is really the crux of it for me as well. As we were going through the letter, I had the feeling that I was answering her questions "correctly" (not the best word here, not sure how else to phrase it), and not in a way that I was actively trying to say what I thought she needed to hear, but simply by being honest. Part of me going in was wondering if she'd stop typing at some point and just say "Nope, hold on, stop! You're not ready for this/You're not really transgender/etc." So when she just smiled, and said she'd have it ready soon I was overjoyed. That validation is incredible, and I definitely feel the need to be validated simply by my nature to begin with.