Quote from: gallinarosa on October 13, 2017, 08:46:44 AM
Sadie, just to play devil's advocate, many TG people spent their whole like walking and quacking like their assigned at birth gender, but we do not call them that. Many SO's, out of love for their spouses, "try on" lesbian the best they can and try to fake it til they make it. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. And even if deep down, they are pan or bi, if they never identified that way, it is quite a leap to get there. Yeah, 19 years is a long time for your GF to hold onto her hetero identity, but I daresay it is unusual in this crowd or anywhere to spend that long letting go of an identity.
Indeed.
To be sure, I enabled her seeing us as straight. While any time we would talk about relationship she would volunteer that she likes that I'm not a typical guy. However - and I take this as a usually feminine trait -- I'm very much a pleaser. I played the role of male-endowed sex partner and willingly gave her things that she wanted. I'm also a very practical person. As a penis-endowed lesbian, I used what I had to work with and don't regret it a bit. It was my evolving sexuality that largely drove me to transition. As I got closer to what I wanted (less penis / orgasm driven sex, multiple orgasms when they did happen etc) my dysphoria became progressively worse.
When I got to the point of realizing I had to transition and that she wasn't going to be happy about that, I went through a (thankfully brief) period of faking orgasm and pleasure and sometimes crying after sex that I'd barely been able to keep it together to 'finish' convincingly.
Identity came up with us the other day and I reminded her that she self identifies as sapeo-sexual and she agreed, that's why we're continuing to get on. I don't much mind the extent that I find her hetero-normative and honestly that's what I see when she's *thinking* about stuff. I've also seen her respond erotically women in completely spontaneous sexual situations.
most of which is beside the point here anyway
Quote from: gallinarosa
it is not really the right space for support for us. When people look for support, they usually either look for a bunch of people in the same boat so that you don't feel alone and you can commiserate (this place does not have a lot of SO's), or someone close to you who will always be there for you like a close friend or family member (we are all strangers), or a completely non-biased person who has no skin in the game like a therapist (everyone comes here carrying a lot of baggage which gives them some kind of agenda).
Still, I like it here. There are some great people here and good information.
Agreed, I've never visited an SO site, the second-hand reports have been about very angry spouses. Now that's fine, anger can be honored and probably shouldn't be denied however whether trans or SO folks come here bemoaning how terribly they have it, I honestly first think about first-world problems and second how little usually gets accomplished in US vs THEM conversations.
I completely get that change sucks however I also know that when my ex changed (wanting sex with another guy) and wanted out of marriage, blaming her for changing really never occurred to me. I'm honestly glad I hadn't figured out I was trans then, she managed to be hurtful enough back then. I told her I was hurt that she'd gone from 14 years of accusing me of infidelities that in fact never happened to wanting to cheat but that if that's what she needed, I could accept it. The irony was that that made her even angrier - the fact that I don't tend to be a jealous person to her meant I didn't love her.
whatever, I have to go now in any case. I do encoursge SOs on susans to hear and learn as you've said you have. I'm also under no illusions as to the fact of transitioning people presenting their spouses with stuff a partner ought not to. However I think it's easier to lose sight of the person when you think of them as a label, we're all just people, hopefully trying to be better versions of ourselves.