Quote from: HappyMoni on May 28, 2018, 07:27:46 PM
Gwen,
I don't know you but have you considered it could be the other way round. Because you have issues with gender identity, maybe you give of vibes of being unapproachable. This was true for me. My confusion caused me to create distance between me and any other interested parties. I could be true and you not even be aware of it. Do you ever try to flirt? Are you makking efforts or just flying under the radar?
Moni
This is true for me, too.
I never dated in high school, and seldom dated after that. When I was in the military, I lived in fear that my colleagues would find out that I was still a virgin. To this day, I could count my sexual partners on the fingers of one hand, with fingers left over. Certainly, I was giving off a "something is wrong with this one" vibe that kept potential partners away.
It caused me to wonder what was wrong with me. And it is only in the last couple of years that it has become clear: it was because I was trans. Being trans-femme, I didn't have the hard-wired programming to be a male, and, having been raised as a boy, I never learned what it takes to be a female. So I ended up, socially, at least, being neither. To this day, I have no idea how to flirt, and I probably wouldn't recognize if someone was flirting with me.
I see on these pages that this is not an uncommon pattern for trans women. I think Moni is on to something: just the fact of being trans can inhibit "normal" socialization.
This is something that it would be useful to explore with your therapist.