Thank you. I detransitioned after about 13 years because of my self-conscious negative image of myself and what I fear more than death itself is ridicule. I took the easy, safe way out and bailed on my life as me. I thought for sure this time would be different. I thought to myself that I might be able to fake my way into GRS to the right people but still live the "safe" life everywhere else, that I could accept being labeled as and addressed as a man.
The more I heard that the more I cringed the more I could not hold back any longer. I'm still not fully socially transitioned yet (I'm dreading facing my extended family again (Ohhh, sure...THIS again!)), but I'm actively working on building my wardrobe again and working up my courage to face my neighbors, who are not exactly the most open-minded of people. I've just kind of said, "F- it!" and I'm presenting gender-neutral, even if I'm wearing men's jeans and boots and eyeglass frames and "unisex" t-shirts and sweatshirts. The rest will come in time, but what I do know is that for the last few weeks I've had a different outlook and people are pretty much only addressing me in female terms. Well, I gotta admit, people looked at me even weirder when I was presenting fully male with a deep-ish voice. Something didn't match for them.
I guess I needed this almost 3-year experiment to really cement what I really was and who I really was and what I was meant to be all my life.
Like you, I need to practice what I preach and I really need to believe it, but I am what I was always meant to be, even if it didn't happen the way I wanted it to happen (born natally-female).
A woman saw me standing at a self-checkout (our best friends?!?), frustrated that there was not anyone there to take care of the issue my register had with a purchase (red light flashing, no one anywhere in sight). She commented about her own frustrations. When she was done with her purchase she told me she would say something to another employee on her way out. When she led the other employee back, she said, "she needs someone to help her," and pointed to me.
This was also at a place that is not normally known for its open-minded clientele.
That began my healing today and everything has been getting steadily better, since.
Thank you for your comments.
I do apologize again for my reaction yesterday. It had just been a crappy couple of days. No excuse. But as one of my ex-doctors used to say, "we can't change the past, so we move on from here."