My wife went through years of deterioration before dying. She became ever-more needy while at the same time gradually losing her mind. Her personality became ever more difficult. She was angry to be dying and took out her anger on the only person available – me. (Transitioning is far easier than that was.)
Before she got to the point where I couldn't leave her for even a few minutes, every few weeks I would ride my motorcycle out to the ghost town about half an hour from here and return, ostensibly to exercise the bike but really to blow some fresh air into my head.
I remember one trip out when I started wondering what would happen if I just kept going. It was
extremely tempting. I wasn't sure if I could manage it and probably wouldn't have disappeared even if I could have managed it, but I remember working through the possibility. And yes, I turned around and came back.
There are lots of reasons to disappear, not just GID. And there are plenty of ways to do it halfway, like move cross-country and only maintain contact through occasional letters. I know people who haven't seen their family in many years and are quite happy with that situation.
- Kate
Post Merge: August 26, 2009, 12:49:01 AM
My point (if I had one

) is that disappearing – completely or partially – can be a solution to an untenable situation. However, I think too often people see it as an easy way out and don't think through the problems it will create for them. Starting over in a new place with no supports carries its own risks and shouldn't be done lightly.
While disappearing has an appeal,
you will still be wherever you go – you will not have left your internal problems behind. If your desire to disappear is through guilt or shame or embarrassment, disappearing will be a mistake. If your desire to disappear and start over is because you are afraid to see a therapist or come out to your family, disappearing will be a mistake. (If you think your family will actually destroy you if you come out to them, that's different, of course. I mean if you think your family will be unhappy, won't talk to you, will make you feel bad, will throw you out of the house, will disown you, etc.) If disappearing is because transitioning is too hard, disappearing will be a mistake because
you will still have to transition wherever you are.
Transitioning isn't just a step through the looking glass – it is hard work that goes easier with the help of others. But most of the work goes on within you.
- Kate