i've got a lot of "first" coming out stories, depending on how you look at it. there were different sets of people, different time periods, and vastly different feelings, levels of understanding, and frames of mind surrounding them.
the FIRST time, at least the earliest i can recall, i was around 13 or 14 and didn't know "trans" existed. i was chatting with my cousin and told her i thought i wanted to be a boy. it was just one of those awkward self-discovery conversations teenagers have; we didn't really take anything too seriously or know how it worked, and we didn't really stop and think about the implications of the future. it was just "oh, well i hear there's a surgery for that and when you grow up you can just get it done" and then we moved on...
((the rest that follows might be "off-topic" if you only want the literal first; otherwise, life story ahead but i feel like it's important to have for the sake of comparison to show how it's changed over years))
a few years later, i mentioned to my boyfriend at the time that i didn't fully identify as a girl. as before, it wasn't taken all that seriously because neither of us fully understood the implications of such a statement/feeling, and nothing was really done.
a few more years later, i still hadn't been able to ignore those feelings and had learned more about what "trans" actually was. not enough to really understand it, but enough that, over time, i had to accept that it was what it was and i couldn't keep ignoring it. so i started looking online for support and information and brought it up again, this time more seriously. i don't remember that moment, but i do know that for a while nothing was still being done until we (my partner and i) were at a meeting with a counselor who i was initially talking to about something else, and it got brought up there. and after years of him resisting and me ignoring, that conversation finally pushed my partner (and me) to accept that these feelings would mean actual changes. and that is when we broke up. there was a sort of grey fog of sadness around me for a while, like i was mourning something intangible. then there was the realization i would also have to share this with my best friend and my family.
i told my friend over the phone. i don't really remember that conversation, but i'm sure it was awkward, though my friend at least wasn't upset or bothered by it.
then i wrote my dad a letter. i don't remember that, either. i just know that aside from not really understanding and confusing it with being gay and trying to resist because he knew me as his "little girl", my dad was about as good about the whole thing as i could expect him to be. he has never been cruel to me about it and has at least tried to listen and make sense of things, and he's gotten more accepting over time.
the next "coming out" i did was to my mom and grandma; my friend came with me during a visit at my grandma's house and we had a really uncomfortable sit-down in the living room. i was so nervous and afraid that at first i couldn't even speak and my friend was the one to break the "news". then i started explaining, or rather, attempting to defend myself from the barrage of verbal attacks and accusations that followed. it went even worse than i had expected it to, and ended with me giving a long, tearful speech about my feelings only to be met with an even longer period of total silence. then they turned and started chatting with each other about other things as though i hadn't said a word. they got to let their anger and confusion out on me while ignoring anything i said, and refusing to acknowledge my own feelings or experiences. my friend and i finally just got up and left the room, stunned and feeling like we'd wasted our time. for a while after that, my mom and grandma would occasionally try to tell me things to convince me that i was wrong and didn't know what i was talking about and that they knew better, etc etc... and when they realized i wasn't going to give in, they just quit talking about it until i was forced to move back "home" with them after the breakup, where my mom tried to lure me back by making it seem like she would try to start accepting my pronouns, etc. (on top of other offers, like helping me find work and an apartment, all of which were lies).
things were so bad after i came back that i was suicidal and completely at my wit's end after a couple of years dealing with a combination of isolation and awful treatment. i didn't know up from down, but i tried to keep moving forward and making some kind of life for myself, however slowly, starting from scratch with no support and no resources except the internet. fortunately, i found a primary care doctor within walking distance of the house, and eventually--when i couldn't stand it any longer--i wrote him a note saying that i was transgender and felt it was important for him to know that. i didn't know if he would have any helpful information for me, but much to my relief and surprise, he did. he set me up with another doctor who offered HRT not far from where i was, and after a few more weeks of waiting, i finally started taking T.
now i still have more "coming out" to do and i'm scared. i will have to tell my managers/coworkers somehow, and i don't have the first clue how to approach it or what will happen when i do. i'm going to go in expecting to get the boot at the first chance they get, because even if they can't use gender as a reason to fire me, the minute they want to let someone go i don't doubt this could bump me up to the front of the line. i'm not totally sure that didn't happen at my last job, where even pre-T i had as masculine an expression as i could manage and came out to one of the managers in private when questioned about it. i was told a few months later that all temps (they are temp-to-hire for the first 6 months) get let go at the beginning of the year and was laid off on new year's eve. i didn't see anyone else being let go, though, and was not told about this "policy" until then--despite her acting like it was something i should have already known. maybe i was just unlucky with the timing; big corporations do it to everyone when/where they can, but i can't shake the feeling that i didn't do myself any favors by coming out, especially after hearing similar and worse stories about trans people at the same company in other locations. so regardless of what happened at my last job (this is the same company, but a different location and position), i'm not confident about coming out to the managers. and after some conversations i've overheard in the breakroom and just general comments i've heard from coworkers, i'm not confident about their response, either. i'll be fine to just keep my head down and do my job as long as i can, but i'm not looking forward to it.