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Don't wait...

Started by nathan, June 05, 2010, 09:27:22 AM

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nathan

Since this board is open to members and guests alike, I just wanted to say to anyone who reads this: Do Not Wait.  If you have notions that you might be trans or have any kind of dissonance between your body and your identity, please seek out a counselor/therapist/doctor right now.  Waiting solves nothing, and you're only hurting yourself by letting the problem simmer.

Please, as someone who feels like she's already too late, do not wait for anything.  You will not be laughed at, you will not be hurt (at least by the medical community...).  Go do what you need to.  Please.


-natalie, who really feels like throwing away the rest of her HRT right now
 
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Wendy1974

Good advice Natalie but I would add that it is also never too late to start and don't let anyone, especially yourself, convince you otherwise. I have a friend who is in her late '70's who started HRT last year. She is an amazing woman. Does she wish she started earlier? Of course! For many good reasons she didn't start HRT earlier though and she is just grateful to have started at all. She really is an inspiration.

Hang in there Natalie! There are certainly a lot of downs being trans but don't let the downs blind you to the ups!  :icon_hug:
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JennaLee

natalie

I can relate to that.  I'll be 57 this year and have been on hrt for about 9 months.  I honestly don't think I could ever pass.  Although I struggle with the logic daily, I have never considered stopping hrt.  For me at least, the struggle is to accept myself.  Something I could not do when younger.  I have only told a few people.  My wife, doc, psychologist, and this weekend, my sister.  Much to my surprise, they have all accepted without hesitation.  I'm beginning to think the barrier I've been struggling with is in my own mind.

One of the tools I've used over the years to keep this part of myself hidden, is to convince myself how terrible it is and how badly others might treat me if they new.  I was wrong.

I came across this the other day and it struck a chord:
When you are 20 you worry about what others think of you.
When you are 40 you don't give a damn what others think of you.
When you are 60 you realize no one has been thinking about you!

I wish there was a formula for a happy life but there just isn't.  Not for transgendered or regular folk.  The flip side of this is that there is a wide margin for success.  You will always be accepted here and there is a large group of people out there going through the same thing.

cheers!
trust is a useful tool for dishonorable people
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Nero

To echo Wendy, you are not too late, hon. You just started, give the medicine time and space to work. You'll get there.
Nero was the Forum Admin here at Susan's Place for several years up to the time of his death.
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pamshaw

As one who waited I strongly agree. Get a good gender therapist and get on with it. If you really have GID it won't go away!

Pam
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Laura91

Quote from: natalie rene on June 05, 2010, 09:27:22 AM
Since this board is open to members and guests alike, I just wanted to say to anyone who reads this: Do Not Wait.  If you have notions that you might be trans or have any kind of dissonance between your body and your identity, please seek out a counselor/therapist/doctor right now.  Waiting solves nothing, and you're only hurting yourself by letting the problem simmer.

Please, as someone who feels like she's already too late, do not wait for anything.  You will not be laughed at, you will not be hurt (at least by the medical community...).  Go do what you need to.  Please.


-natalie, who really feels like throwing away the rest of her HRT right now


It is never too late to start transitioning. You will be fine. Don't throw away that HRT. :icon_yikes:
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nathan

Thanks everybody for their replies. <3

I don't know why I feel this way right now.  My doc doubled my spiro dosage when I started on estradiol, so maybe this kind of depression is a side effect of everything? I have a week-long vacation coming up on the 14th, so i'm going to use that time to really detox myself (I'm basically a functional alcoholic :() and relax.  I hope it helps.
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V M

I often wish I would have transitioned much earlier, I started HRT just last year at 48. I'm on my eighth month now

I also get depressed to the point were I fell like giving up, but something tells me to stay the coarse and keep plugging away at it

Besides, I would miss the wonderful friends that I have made

                          {{{HUGS}}}

- Virginia
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Nero

Not to mention the youthful effect HRT often has. look at Virgina!  :-*
Nero was the Forum Admin here at Susan's Place for several years up to the time of his death.
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lilacwoman

I've just had a big argument on another chatroom because one very young transitioner said that those of us who waited are not really transsexual...I say that it's lack of knowledge and family pressure that kept lots of older ones from transitioning...reply was we would have done it sooner if we were genuinely transsexual...I said fine so tell me why I made a very serious suicide attempt when I was 14?  and if i remember correctly i didn't hear the word 'transsexual' until i was about 25.
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Wendy1974

Quote from: lilacwoman on June 05, 2010, 03:21:30 PM
I've just had a big argument on another chatroom because one very young transitioner said that those of us who waited are not really transsexual

Unfortunately there are no shortage of judgemental morons out there Lilacwoman. A lot of kids have no idea what life was like before the internet, they can't even imagine it. Combine that with a disturbing lack of compassion which seems to be common and you get some very judgemental twerps. The best thing to do is to remember that they are talking out of their a$$ and just ignore them. You may as well argue with a stump for all the good it will do. The one thing that you can be sure of is that with attitudes like theirs life has a whole lot of hard lessons in store for them that they can't even imagine and one day, after they've eaten their share of crap sandwiches hopefully they'll be a little more open to the fact that there are other experiences than theirs.
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Rock_chick

Hey Natilie, definitely don't throw away the HRT, if the picture you had as your avatar is anything to go by you'll be absolutely stunning and super hot ;)

But I'll also echo what you said, don't wait, I'm just about to kick things up a gear and while the whole things is a little scary, the thought of waiting longer is even worse.
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Asfsd4214

I entirely agree with you.

Even if we suppose that HRT does NOT loose it's effectiveness over time (which IMHO is utter nonsense).

You only live for so long, any time that passes prior to transition is time you could have spent post transition that you have now lost and will never get back.

I started between very late 19's and very early 21's (depending on where you consider 'starting' to be), which is relatively early, and I still struggle with the idea that I lost my entire teenage years (which I did in more ways that just not transitioning that I won't go into).

I could never live with myself having knowingly chosen to wait. It's hard enough having waited out of ignorance as long as I did.

However, I do think that younger transitioners shouldn't judge older transitioners, because you will never know what circumstances lead to that situation.

And likewise, I only knowingly dealt with the thought of transition one time, I realized it was possible, and I went for it. But I don't judge people for being more indecisive. My choice was made a hell of a lot easier than some because of how much of an utter failure my attempt of living like a guy was leading to where I really didn't have much to loose. 
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justme19

Hmmm I really needed to see somthing like this, thanks very much!
I have waited for awhile now, im still quite young though, but I really want to come out, just to scaerd to. ;(
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MillieB

Quote from: justme19 on June 05, 2010, 07:42:52 PM
Hmmm I really needed to see somthing like this, thanks very much!
I have waited for awhile now, im still quite young though, but I really want to come out, just to scaerd to. ;(

I waited,and waited and waited,

When I finaly told my mum, and she knew the pain that I had been carrying round for all of these years, she was really upset that I didn't feel that I could tell her a couple of decades ago. Take a risk,your parents might struggle to understand at first,but often the first instinct will be to try and help you. I kind of look at things like this, it just wasn't to be for me to transition early, hopefully I will respond reasonably well to HRT,either way I knowthat I'll be happier than I would be not transitioning and I'm much better able to cope with lifes difficulties than I was at 18. But I do wish that I had taken a risk earlier.
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andream

I regret waiting too - although you can't change the past. I had the idea to transition at 16 without telling my family, and disappear, move to London, take hormones, and become a prostitute, because at the time I had the idiotic notion that the oldest profession was the only career path a trans woman could follow. If I'd done that then perhaps I would have transitioned earlier but then I probably would have crashed and burned, and I doubt if I would have been motivated to pursue postgrad education either. My point is that not everybody is equipped to 'not wait'. Sometimes waiting is prudent, especially if you are extremely emotionally immature like I was.
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Janet_Girl

I tried to transition 20 plus years ago.  I wish now I had stayed on track.

And if you throw out that HRT, I will personally come there and kick your butt.   ;D
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justmeinoz

I couldn't have transitioned here at 18, because IT DIDN'T EXIST!  Unfortunately a lot of us were in the same boat.
"Don't ask me, it was on fire when I lay down on it"
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caitlin_adams

I totally agree with this.

If/when I start transition I plan on designing an information session for schools that is in line with the curriculum set by my state's Education Department.

The idea being two-fold.

1. To encourage anyone who is suffering gender incongruence to seek help
2. To educate and help normalize gender incongruence / transgender people. There are many negative stereotypes out there that need to be broken down.

I really think that in the next 10 years there will be a very quick shift in the general public's attitude toward gender variance. Much like homosexuality has come a long way in the last twenty five years, gender incongruence is an idea who's time has come.

Quote from: natalie rene on June 05, 2010, 09:27:22 AM
Since this board is open to members and guests alike, I just wanted to say to anyone who reads this: Do Not Wait.  If you have notions that you might be trans or have any kind of dissonance between your body and your identity, please seek out a counselor/therapist/doctor right now.  Waiting solves nothing, and you're only hurting yourself by letting the problem simmer.

Please, as someone who feels like she's already too late, do not wait for anything.  You will not be laughed at, you will not be hurt (at least by the medical community...).  Go do what you need to.  Please.


-natalie, who really feels like throwing away the rest of her HRT right now

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Diane Elizabeth

      I waited.  Not knowing what/who I was.  I am now 57/58 and still looking.  Growing up we had no books or internet to show us the way.   Now as I try to deal with my emotions I find regrets for not knowing that I should have been a woman and for not getting the chance to be one.  Now my fear is not transitioning.  But how to do it.  I, like others fear the loss of family members.  But, right now the cost is so prohibitve that unless I win a lottery I will not transition.  Yes, I also have tried suicide as a teen and youn adult. 
Having you blanket in the wash is like finding your psychiatrist is gone for the weekend!         Linus "Peanuts"
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