Quote from: annette on December 03, 2010, 01:32:51 AM
But how can someone be too supportive ?
hugs
annette
I think my response really belongs to a different forum here but...
I don't think anyone can be "too supportive"; either they are (Mrs. Erocse) or they are not (countless tales).
To phrase this as delicately as I can, Chelle was bi-curious or a bit more when we met and started dating but I was not let in on that secret until we had been together for a while. When I first came out to her, she was perplexed but after she first met Maureen, the name I was using at the time, she expressed little overt encouragement but never seemed to have a "problem" with my crossdressing either. I had unknowingly triggered her hidden feelings and she was unsure how to deal with them – or talk to me about them.
Sometime after our first few times together, she asked if I would consider adopting the name Susan after a common friend of ours; Chelle and Susan had been friends since 8th grade, I was to learn much later that they were also each others' first lovers. Though that part of their relationship did not last when Chelle discovered boys, their friendship weathered the storm.
Fast forward. She has met me, a guy who also wears skirt and a high heel or two. To her, I was (or almost could be) the best of both worlds - a guy when she needed him and a lady when she needed her. It was she who took me shopping for my first pair of breast forms (foam) and a proper bra to go with them; they were pure delight to me but she found their feeling to be lacking. It wasn't long before we had saved enough for my first pair of silicone forms for both of us to enjoy.
Susan