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Missing your old self?

Started by Sly, June 07, 2011, 09:24:20 PM

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Sly

I've been thinking about this and am wondering if anyone else feels this way.  I'm pretty detached from who I was pre transition, she wasn't me at all and I have no desire to be her again, but in a way I miss her.  I think back on that time and it's kind of like she's an old friend who isn't around anymore, or like I'm a writer who spent years developing a character, but her story just kind of ended with no real conclusion.  I guess I can see where parents of trans people are coming from when they say they feel like their son or daughter has died.  I don't regret coming out or transitioning at all, but I kind of wish I could have just separated myself from her, and let her continue on as her own person.  Does this make any sense and does anyone else here feel this way?

Sharky

I don't feel like I'm becoming someone else. I view transitioning as making my body and gender match. My identity isn't chaining, just my looks, and therefore how others perceive me. When parents say something like that I see that they don't understand that I am simply visibly becoming myself, I am the same person that I always was. The way you call your pre transition self her, speak like they are a different person, and what not makes it sound like a split personality or something.
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Sly

I see what you mean.  I don't mean that I'm becoming a different person by transitioning, but before I was playing a role and trying very hard to be a person that in reality I wasn't.  That's why I feel like a writer and 'she' was my character; if you write or act as a fictional character long enough, they do begin to feel real.  Pre transition I kind of felt like I was inside a shell, or a costume of some sort.  Does that make more sense?

cynthialee

I can not miss that man.

He constantly risked my life with drug abuse and getting involved in nefarious doings. He gave me HIV/AIDS. He was misserable and constaly mad at the world. He was surly and often downright vicious with the world.
He was willing to live a misserable existance rather than let me live and it wasn't until he could no longer maintain the ilussion of his existance was I free of him.

No I do not miss the man I was in the least.
So it is said that if you know your enemies and know yourself, you can win a hundred battles without a single loss.
If you only know yourself, but not your opponent, you may win or may lose.
If you know neither yourself nor your enemy, you will always endanger yourself.
Sun Tsu 'The art of War'
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Sephirah

The only thing I miss... are the connections to a family, most of whom died or left without trace before they could find out the person they created within their minds, was an illusion.
Natura nihil frustra facit.

"You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection." ~ Buddha.

If you're dealing with self esteem issues, maybe click here. There may be something you find useful. :)
Above all... remember: you are beautiful, you are valuable, and you have a shining spark of magnificence within you. Don't let anyone take that from you. Embrace who you are. <3
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Lee

Actually last night I was thinking that it would be really nice to essentially split into two people, female and male.  As you put it, it does feel like I'm killing off a character, and it would be nice to leave a happy, complete version of that person in the role that she previously played.  However, this is more me worrying about the people around me than fondness for the person I tried to be.
Oh I'm a lucky man to count on both hands the ones I love

A blah blog
http://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/board,365.0.html
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Muffins

I miss the life that certain friends helped me have but it wouldn't be impossible for me to achieve the same things with new people, it just sucks having to wait for myself to morph enough so that people don't judge me. OR at least for me to feel like I'm happy within myself enough to not feel paranoid of how people view me..... during this period of 'change'.
Maybe I'm just waiting for the future where I feel that I've become my new self enough for my old self to no longer be apparent.. I don't want to have to explain what I am to people if I can just wait a few months/years to reach a point where I don't need to.
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Mia

No, I am happy to have left that miserable scared douchebag behind.
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xxUltraModLadyxx

i can really say i don't miss one bit of who i was before transition. it was a very hard time for me. it was alot of depression, emptiness, hopelessness. i feel like it's only recently i've been born.
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Sly

Quote from: Lee on June 08, 2011, 01:39:53 AM
However, this is more me worrying about the people around me than fondness for the person I tried to be.
You know, I've thought about it a little more since making this topic and I think this is pretty much what I'm feeling.  Most of my family and friends are pretty accepting, but I think I have some internalized transphobia going on.  I'm very happy to be transitioning but at the same time feel guilty for "killing" my old self...

Julie Marie

Participating in life and being an accepted member of society was a lot easier before.  There are times when I just get tired of all the preparation work I do prior to going out into the world.  Even answering the phone requires preparation and sometimes I don't do too well.

In that respect, yeah, I miss the old self.  He wasn't a bad guy at all.  His only problem was being a he.  And if I had to run out to the store, answer the door, answer the phone - I just did it without thinking about how I sound or how I look.  I also liked how easy it was to get ready for the day; shower, a quick blow dry, get dressed and DONE!  No fussing with long hair.  No makeup.  No trying to figure out which top goes with which bottom.  Shoe selection was simple.  And no purse, just put the necessities in your pockets and it's there all day, right at your fingertips.

Ah... the good ole days!
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
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JulyaOrina

I had a forlorn moment yesterday.  I set up my first appointment for laser hair removal, and it hit home that my kids would never see my facial hair again.  All of them have loved it as they have grown, and it was my youngest's first point of recognition after he was born.  We would play, "where's my fuzzy-face"...  My wife has said multiple times that she loves it and will miss it, and I have also been kind of fond of it as well; it starts turning maroon after about half an inch of growth, is fun to style, but  I digress...  Intrinsically I have built up my propped-up persona with man walls, and functioned well within them.   I have made a good guy with what  I have to work with.  But, I am not a full and happy person that way.  I am very reactionary with frustration and agitation; especially in situations outside of my pre-designated responses. Half (or more) of my personality has been compartmentalized without recourse.  I know that allowing myself to become the full me will benefit those around me.  I have already seen how much more engaged to my life I am, having come-out to whom I have; and having the freedom to present my full self is the catalyst in that.  I do not regret leaving the hollow, shelled, and repressive existence behind.  I do lament the fact that I will deprive those I love, of a romanticized future that I have spent years building and trying to fulfill.  It is that pressure on the shell that made it crack.  Letting go of the postulation is hard though, for it is what has protected me from feeling sadness, ridicule, vulnerability, elation, contentment, or anything really.  I have marginalized myself being who I thought others expected me to be, and filling the role that I felt was expected of me; to my own determent.  I cannot help but to feel selfish in this path, for it is the first real thing that I am doing without any pretense of some sort.  I cannot escape the desire to be all things to all people, but  I can build my comfort in doing what is right for myself to be the best me I can be for those around me now, and in the future.  And, besides I have to deal with myself for the rest of my life, so I deserve to be as comfortable and connected with myself as possible.  In a nutshell yes, I will miss parts of the facade, but the new embodiment with a foundation in truth will have plenty of benefit to those involved that there will be more gained than lost.
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Amazon D

Quote from: cynthialee on June 07, 2011, 10:34:10 PM
I can not miss that man.

He constantly risked my life with drug abuse and getting involved in nefarious doings. He gave me HIV/AIDS. He was misserable and constaly mad at the world. He was surly and often downright vicious with the world.
He was willing to live a misserable existance rather than let me live and it wasn't until he could no longer maintain the ilussion of his existance was I free of him.

No I do not miss the man I was in the least.

Sounds like my poor miserable life.. well i did do 'some good things' like building 6 green homes + 6 green apartments and running recovery homes for over 35 recovering addicts (at a time) for 13 yrs but besides that, the rest was awash in a person torn up with too strong a sex drive that made me feel like a letch everytime a woman got near. Ironically i transitioned and looked pretty good and then i had men letching after me (gaggg) = karma got me = now i am just a simple androgenous soul doing good things and not feeling bad and no longer feeling like i have any bad karma to pay back  :angel:
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

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JungianZoe

Though I don't really think of myself as two different people, I've found it beneficial to dissociate from my self-destructive thoughts and actions by attributing them to "the boy."  He wasn't a bad soul, really.  He was funny and well-liked.  I just know that his internal world was a mental hell that didn't reflect reality.  He tried to kill me more than 20 times out of severe self-loathing, despite being surrounded by many people who loved him.

That's the part I've left behind now that the girl who remained hidden beneath the surface has been allowed to blossom.  The harmful actions have ceased, but the distorted self-image hasn't.  I'm working hard now to make that go away too.  I admit it's a struggle that consumes much of my day and my energy, and I'm betting on it getting easier over time, but this is an exercise in patience and understanding the likes of which I've never engaged in before.  I'm delving deeper into myself than ever before because now I'm allowed to.  I'm allowed to feel love and joy, and in so doing, can express it more freely to others.  The boy had that ability, but not the strength to undertake the mental cleansing in which I'm now engaged.

So no... insofar as how battered and defeated I was, I don't miss my old self.  But I'm happy the best parts of that self have come with me.
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pretty pauline

How could I possible miss my old self, from what I can remember I was a depressing, short tempered, horrible unhappy young troublesome teenager who was going to grow into a differcult angry young man, it was going to be differcult for me and those around me.
Instead I grew into a very attractive and pretty young woman, my transition benefit me and those around me, I remember my Mother saying I was more ''bubbly and lively spirited'' as a girl.
I now have a Husband, I think I make a successful housewife, Id be a failure as a husband.
Quote from: Julie Marie on June 08, 2011, 08:39:39 AM

I also liked how easy it was to get ready for the day; shower, a quick blow dry, get dressed and DONE!  No fussing with long hair.  No makeup.  No trying to figure out which top goes with which bottom.  Shoe selection was simple.  And no purse, just put the necessities in your pockets and it's there all day, right at your fingertips.

That quote just reminds me, it is expensive being a woman, yes I do fuss over my hair, skin care, nails and makeup, it does take me endless time getting ready, but my Husband appreciates my efforts, treats me like a lady and spoils me like a girl, because Im a woman, my old self is history.
Pauline
If your going thru hell, just keep going.
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pebbles

I consider myself a continuous person, who just had their anatomy and neurones jiggled about abit. I refer to myself only as a discontinious entity when others do it. (to try and empathize with them and not dismiss their pain)

Pre-transition part of me wanted to do somthing like that ie copy my brain into a alternate sex clone then commit suicide. So that part of me would have survived and gone on happy. As the major reason I couldn't kill myself all those times before was because I didn't want to hurt my family.

Knowing that my emotional state had fallen so far prior I think it would have been brutally cruel to ask anyone to experience that.
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Luna!

In a way, I am my old self, or at least like I was when I was much younger.

I remember when I was a little kid, I was fairly genderless. Sometimes I'd do something in a 'feminine' or 'masculine' way, but those were basically playing pretend; I'd take turns wearing the 'girl' hat and the 'boy' hat.

This didn't stick around, as people generally don't like children acting in the manner of the 'opposite' gender (as I'm sure we can all relate to). People started saying "You're a boy, so do this thing", and "you're a boy, so don't do this thing", and I learned they only really liked me with the boy hat on. So it became stuck, and the boy hat took on a life of its own.

Rebelling against it led me to think for a while that the girl hat was the better option, but it started to run into similar problems. It was basically trading one prison cell for another. I eventually figured out that I can't really be defined as one or the other; they were both just facades.

When I stopped trying to define myself in relation to these two facades, they lost their power, and I reverted to something like my younger self. I still have them; they are useful and fun to play with from time to time, but they're just hats. They don't really define me anymore.

I have to say though, I do not miss the times I was forced to play pretend.
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sneakersjay

Yeah, I hear what you are saying.  I see pictures and sometimes wish she could have been happy.  But I am soo glad I am who I am now.

I have changed a LOT since transitioning.  Yes, I am still me, but my priorities have changed.  And I can see that had I been born male in the first place my life would have been a lot different, some good and some bad.  I don't have regrets, but I can see where things would have been different.

I don't miss being her; she put on a good front and tried hard but inside was not happy.  I am happy.  My life isn't perfect and sometimes I feel stuck.  But I have no regrets.

I think those of you who transition young have a much better chance of realizing what potential you have in life as YOURSELF from the beginning, rather than muddling around for decades trying to prove you are the gender you are not, making career and life partner choices you might not have made had you not been trying so valiantly to force yourself into society's role for you. 

Jay


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Espenoah

I'm pretty apathetic about my old self, mainly because they're the exact same person I am now, except sadder and more shy. I don't feel like I have anything to mourn because I'm not losing my female side, but finally accepting it as a part of me. I'm changing my body, not my soul, and my body I'm more than happy to lose.
"If a bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet destroy every closet door." -Harvey Milk
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Amazon D

Quote from: Espenoah on June 09, 2011, 01:50:22 PM
I'm pretty apathetic about my old self, mainly because they're the exact same person I am now, except sadder and more shy. I don't feel like I have anything to mourn because I'm not losing my female side, but finally accepting it as a part of me. I'm changing my body, not my soul, and my body I'm more than happy to lose.

And thats what is so great when you transition early.. yeaaa for early transitions
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

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