Quote from: Paige on December 18, 2018, 03:27:23 PM
Hi Nina,
I so wish I could do this. Did you have a hard time doing this at first?
Hi Paige
I don't know why, but I never had a challenge transitioning. Early on in my transition, I had often heard from those who had transitioned that I needed to follow their roadmap for transition. I've never believed in following others. I did lots of research online about lots of topics and came to my own conclusions.
My therapist said, and I still believe, hormones don't make you a woman. So I believed early on not to expect miracles from HRT. What I believed from therapist, is she said living full time as Nina, gaining experience is what would help me.
As each passing day, I learned to look at people in the eye, not look at the ground, and smile a lot. The more I did this, the happier I was when met with a smile. I never felt ashamed of who I was. Sure, I always felt people were judging me, but hey, take a walk through WalMart or grocery store...people are in sweatpants, no makeup, etc.
My therapist, as well as others said I needed to get my voice right. I went to half a dozen sessions with a voice therapist. I found the work hard, it felt fake, and I quit.
Year two of transition was my breakthrough. No longer did I see my former self in the mirror. I saw Nina. I reminded myself daily I was Nina...and that this is is the face and body I've been blessed with. I discounted any benefit at my age (45 years then) of facial or vocal surgery.
I joined
Meetup.com to meet people in my city. Whether it was camping, hiking, euchre get togethers, movies....whatever...no one cared about my voice. No one criticized me. No one misgendered me. I felt like I was fitting in all the more.
Now 10 years later, I know no longer dress up to be "girly." I dress how I want, not how others need to see me. I don't pretend with my voice. I haven't worn makeup since last year.
Just got back from Spain after a two week vacation. It was a big test for me as I've never flown as Nina. Whether at the airport,on the plane to Spain, the time in Spain...no one noticed. No one said anything. I got "ma'am" and "miss" everywhere.
So after 10 years, my conclusion is if you believe in yourself, surgeries are not necessary other than GCS if that's important. When I transitioned 10 years ago, I never envisioned I would have had GCS, but as time went on, it became much more important to me.
Attitude, confidence, and not giving a ->-bleeped-<- what others think is why I'm thriving.