I cannot add much but I will say that, while I cannot explain what it means,
Quote from: Myself on February 21, 2010, 12:28:13 AM
Explanation? None, really. Just a feeling, probably biology.
, that seems to sum up my feelings pretty well. It's easier for me to just consider that there is no meaning to it nor definition of what it means to be a woman. It just seems to be the way that it is and fixating on that is the surest way to get myself all confused. I feel things and have experiences that are not, from everything that I can find, male gendered (or male-sexed if you support the gendered-brain hypothesis.) I haven't been male a single day in my life so being a woman is simply who I am. There's nothing more or less to that.
You've already gotten most of the way there by starting to ask the big questions. The rest is mostly about acceptance of who you are inside and out (and making sure you know who that is without thinking about it too hard), just like everyone else has said already. The acceptance and letting go of all that we have been told by those who know very next to nothing on the subject (the great and powerful 'they') is the really really hard part.
If you're looking to know more, yeah, the GID therapist is the first stop. The non GID folk are difficult to talk to because they seem to completely lack the language and grokking (it's the only word that fits at all) of the whole range of TG/TS issues. After that, try some of the basics: Bornstein and Serano are good places to start. Reading them let me at least open up to the idea that I am what I am without meaning but a very real consequence for denying. I find that reading more and more will at least noodle me in the direction that I need to go simply because so many others have written volumes on just this very question.
For the completely opinionated answer: keep walking till you're free of the feeling that this is something that you need to understand completely. The others are good benchmarks for how successful you'll be be belaboring this question. You can keep pounding it over and over but eventually, it is, like many things about who we are as people, just something that typically has to be internalized and moved on from. From everything that I've seen from everyone that I've known, that honestly may be the only successful strategy to address the topic permanently.
If you find yourself thinking about this and have found an answer that you feel comfortable with, I find that you might want to try a strategy that works for OCD. OCD-like tendencies come out all over the place when your sub-conciousness/consciousness starts going haywire and challenging every definition of normative that you've ever seen or heard. This is just your baseline battling your conditioning. Thus, treat the problem like any other compulsion. Start by recognizing the compulsion and then make sure you tell yourself exactly what *YOU* believe. "I know that I am obsessing over this. I know that this isn't helpful. I believe that ..."
I find that little ritual makes those little times where I can't get over myself. Really, that's what I see my wallowing in dysphoria as being as I've already found my answer over an over but that damned consciousness (NOT the sub-concious) keeps peppering me with questions because that's all it knows how to do and, well, it's primary job is to keep you apprised of any danger and think about how to deal with that. TG/TS stuff tends to trigger it over and over (this is completely off the charts scientifically and is just academic conjecture at this point) mostly, I'd imagine because we have to perceive this part of us as something at least a little threatening when starting to work with because of the relative danger it puts in societally.
I will tell you this though. The mask that everyone has mentioned at one point was something that triggered anxiety attacks in me from a very early age (3). Accepting who I am and moving through it stopped the attacks in a single day (at 29). Getting it internalized took a little time and I still think about it from time to time but at this point, I simply see that as my conscious mind fighting hard over something the sub-conciousness knows cold. Practice at getting past it makes it easier. Every time is less and less hard.