After this was discussed in another thread I felt the responses regarding the length of time (and people's opinions of it) required for HRT was pretty interesting and could use further discussion. The other thread was not specifically about this, it just kind of went in that direction, so I figured starting a new one just for this purpose would be appropriate (also the other thread has been locked so no further discussion will happen there anyhow). If someone has already done this please point me in the direction of the new thread, there are so many different forums on here that I took a peek around but didn't notice anything specifically that was current.
We were basically discussing how there is a 3 month waiting period that you are required to see a therapist during to be able to get your note for HRT and rather or not that was enough time or too much time. Some people seemed to feel it was too long as they've known about their identity for so long that more waiting just seemed to be more painful and sometimes unnecessary. Other's seemed to think an even longer waiting period should be put into place.
My personal opinion is that 3 months is good and appropriate for someone who has already been out and accepted their identity. For people who may not be out I think a longer period (not more than 6 months) should be taken. The reasons for my feelings are based mostly on personal experience of course. My therapist was a very good one, she specializes in trans related therapy to begin with and is very active in our community where I live (in the trans community specifically not the general community) so she has a really good understanding of the issues and challenges we face everyday. She also sees mostly all trans clients with some exceptions so all in all the point is she knows what the heck she is talking about and she is a supportive person, I haven ever had to deal with a therapist who pushes against transitioning or things like that at all, I'm sure that may have changed my view point on the subject.
In my therapy we covered a lot of issues that I don't commonly see come up in these discussions. We talked about not just how I felt, we discussed how it would change my relationship with the people in my life, what kind of support network I had built up. We also talked about one thing I always hear come up but I always hear it in the opposite form. We talked about money. A lot of people bring up the idea that someone may not be able to afford therapy sessions for 3 months or longer, to that I simply say, how the heck are you going to reasonably afford to transition? We discussed how well I'd be able to keep up on my hormones, how I'd be able to pay for them without health insurance and with health insurance. Rather or not my insurance would cover it. How steady my job was, what doctors I'd see and how much that would cost me. Since she had so many other clients she had a reasonable expectation of the financial aspects of transitioning. In the long run this therapy helped me a lot.
I chose to see her for a year before I got my note for hormones, mostly just due the fact that I had other issues to deal with and I had financial issues as well. Honestly she would have written me a note from the very beginning, at the time I started seeing her I had lived openly as male for 7 years and was completely out to everyone in my life. My family was supportive and were ready to deal with any potential changes I chose to make. More than anything the money was the issue that kept me waiting for HRT, my other issues were things like being bipolar and needing medication for that plus therapy for particular traumatic events from my childhood. Those issues didn't resolve that I was trans and had nothing to do with my identity, she accepted that from the beginning and never treated me like I was there for therapy just for the purpose of transitioning. She knew that was a part of why I came but that my being transsexual was not my issue, therapy would just also meet that requirement for me and get it out of the way when the time came to being physical transition.
Anyhow, long story short, my point is that I appreciated the waiting time (if I had not had other issues the 3 months would have been fine with me) because it gave us the chance to talk about the reality of my situation in aspects I had never taken into consideration. The financial discussion helped my choices a lot and in the end were very necessary.
What kind of things did other people deal with in their 3 months of therapy before HRT and how did you feel it helped you as you began transitioning physically? Would you feel differently about the waiting period if you had a therapist like I had who was open and experienced with trans clients?