Quote from: Ann Onymous on August 26, 2011, 09:46:09 AM
More likey is that many others are of the same mindset I am- we don't carry the label of our medical condition. We got treatment and moved on with life, with the condition no longer present. It is no different than the fact that I don't describe myself to people with an initial introduction that includes discussion of an ACL issue...
Having previously had a transsexual condition is NOT an identity in the same manner as being a lesbian happens to be...
Just yesterday I told my friend (someone I've known for 18 years) that I'm ready to move on with my life. That I won't deny my history, but it's just that: history. At my next job, wherever that may be, I'm not coming out because I feel in my heart that I have nothing to come out with. When I look in the mirror, all I see is a woman. One who needs a certain surgery, but otherwise all woman.

Almost every trace of the old life is gone except for the people I love, who are invaluable to me. I've taken what I wanted from my former identity and the rest can go out with the trash.
My friend said, "It sounds like you're just Zoƫ now" and gave me a big hug. There's a reason he's been my friend for over half my life.

And he was right! I'm just me now. A unified person for the first time in my life. It's a beautiful feeling.
It was just last week that my friend's girlfriend (also one of my best friends) told me that, since I've come out to everyone I know, all the people I meet in the future will never know me to be any different than how I am now. I thought about it for a few minutes and it gave me a rather satisfied, glowy feeling.