Quote from: tatiana on December 16, 2010, 09:34:10 AM
I'm guessing you're saying that the gender issue of being in the wrong body will remain regardless. This is why I was so avoidant of everyone because I didn't want to be fake to everyone and pretend to be something I'm not. Would reasonable explain why so many of us have SAD. It's frustrating nonetheless.
To a extent.
But think about this. Are you depressed because you're unable to socialise or because you think you should?
Not everyone is super social, life and soul of any party. Many people are more reserved. Perhaps studius.
The point is, when we make so much effort to confrom to on norm, being male for example, we often end up trying to live up to an ideal that we assumed was the normal male.
I spent a short period trying very hard to live up to being male, truely male. I watch my brother picking up girls like they were snacks at a party. I watched people, especially my brother, drinking beer, laughing along with everyone and generally being a man's man. (Hope you get the image. My brother is very male).
But that isn't me.
Like you, I haven't transisoned. But try to think about how you would deal with things if you had a normal femal body. Not especially beautiful, few women are. Just a normal woman. Nothing particularly to prove.
Then, try to understand how you will deal with things.
It's a serious mistake to assume the anxiety is preveting you from fulfilling a norm. It is preventing you from getting to know who you are.
There is nothing wrong or disturbed about knowing a lot of people and only having a very small circle of close friends.