Quote from: Starbuck on December 16, 2008, 12:29:04 AM... how HARD that is for someone who grew up as part of a close family ....
I grew up in a rural area and "family" was more than just blood. Family was aunts uncles, cousins, friends of the family, the parents of kids I grew up with, and more. "Home" wasn't just a house but was the whole community of people who knew each other.
My "problem" was evident early - like obvious by puberty - but my only real source of grief was my adopted mother who REFUSED to cut me any slack and constantly berated me for "inappropriate behaviour" - the berating was primarily emotional and verbal abuse. Nobody else much cared and so of accepted me as being "odd".
Now my adopted Mom NEVER lost an argument or a fight so, when she couldn't "beat it out of me", she gave up and by my mid-teens she just ignored it hoping it would go away. She wouldn't go in my bedroom (which was so obviously a girl's room), she never commented on the girl-things that showed up in the laundry (she would launder them and return them to my bed LOL!) or if I showed up at the breakfast table with the remains of Friday night's makeup and hairdo. She was a master ignorer! If she could have changed me, she would have because I didn't fit what
SHE wanted.
SRS suddenly became a possibility when I was 24. It had been an impossible dream up until then so when it was possible, there was no doubt in my mind that I HAD to go. I told my mother - she said no - I told her I had been suicidal for years - she said it would be better if I killed myself - I said I was going anyway, that I
HAD to go - she said if I walked out that door, I was never to come back, never to return to my hometown, and never to have contact with anyone from there. I walked out. I had no choice.
24 years of living was reduced to a suitcase and a bank draft but I could not allow HER to take MY future away from me - no matter what lay ahead, it was mine and I had to take ownership of it. I was giving up everything I had ever known, every friend I ever had, my sister, my 'support network', my security of always having a place to stay and friends around me, but none of that mattered if I was not ME.
The "me" that I found, by becoming who I truly was, was WAY beyond anything I had ever dreamed! I was more in every way, more than I expected. If I (before) had been able to see me (after) I would have been totally blown away!
Life went on, got a whole lot better - new friends, new places, new 'extended families', and best of all these were people who saw all of me, the true me, and loved me for who I was, not who they wanted me to be.
At age 40 (MANY years after transition) I had the opportunity to meet my birth mother. Of course I had to explain to her why she would be meeting a daughter so that was done by letter. You know what? She didn't miss a beat, she didn't hesitate for a second. We went on to have a lovely relationship and she never once mentioned my medical problem - her love transcended that and she was happy for my happiness.
Meanwhile, my adopted Mom who never accepted my "change" languished in her close-mindedness. She was a very superficial person and I know how much it must have pained her to NOT be able to brag about me as I became so successful in life. She couldn't brag because she wouldn't acknowledge the person I was. She died a few months ago as a lonely old woman with little joy in her life but she ended up there by her own stubbornness.
A few years ago my sister, with whom I had been close in my teens, contacted me and I found out that the reason she had never called before was that our mom said that
I was the one who wanted no contact with the family - she LIED to my sister! Well it didn't take us long to patch that up and we are now close again.
I also realized, when I found out what my adopted mother had been doing, that
she had no right to make demands for other people (that I not contact anyone from my past) and then LIE to people and say that
I was the one who didn't want contact! I DID contact a number of people I knew when I was growing up and about 1/3 of them have become 'casual penpals' - about what you would expect from friends you lost touch with decades ago.
So, my "bottom line" is that YOU have to make the decisions that effect your own life and you have to make them from your own heart. Those who truly love you will support you (even if they may be reluctant initially) and will always be there for you. If they can NOT support your decision,
they are NOT even your friend![/i]
It is better to walk alone than to crawl among people who will not lift you up.