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Your transition: the best and worst of it

Started by Kreuzfidel, January 04, 2012, 12:46:02 AM

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Keaira

The Best: not having to pretend to be a man anymore. To all you guys here, you have my highest respect. It's tough being a guy.

The Worst: Yea, definitely the ignorance you deal with and the stigma that comes from transitioning on the job. I thought I could find something worse, but so far, I haven't.
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Mahsa Tezani

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Felix

Quote from: Mahsa the disco shark on January 06, 2012, 01:26:42 AM
GAY MEN DON'T KNOW I EXIST ANYMORE. LOL

Mahsa, this is sad. Gay men are only beginning to notice I exist, and it's the best thing ever, even if they do sometimes clock me or otherwise find out and then think I'm icky.

What's your best of it?
everybody's house is haunted
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Felix

everybody's house is haunted
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Nathan.

Best: There are so many things I want to put here. I'm comfortable with myself and happy.  I want to be alive, it's a simple thing but not something I felt often before coming out and being treated as male. My facial hair.

Worst: My dad disowning me after coming out, he sent me an xmas card this year with some nice words in so I think he's changed his mind now. The time transition takes, it felt for so long that my life was on hold. Spots, I have loads of them.
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Noah James

Best: Finally understanding why I always felt different; feeling comfortable with myself; losing most of that 'awkwardness' that has always been associated with me; passing 100% of the time; gaining guy friends that treat me as a guy; getting comments like "You're not pretty, you're handsome" from my friends; having the support of most of my family; beginning to actually look my age; being truly happy for once in my life.

Worst: Not being able to pass at school because everyone knows me as [obviously female name]; girl friends treating me like any other girl; being told by my grandmother that I'm too short to be a man; my little sister proclaiming that she'll never call me her brother and that I'll always be her sister; other comments from the female side of my family that make me feel like an idiot for even saying anything;  shark week depression worsening with each month.
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Kyle_S

Pre-t, but.....

Best: Coming out and shining as my true self. Being a source of strength for other transfolk, acceptance from friends :) And I am more confident and assertive

Worst: Anxiety about bathrooms (not passing 100% quite yet), Having to be assertive to people who disrespect my gender identity. May take a while longer than I thought to be able to move and start seeing a doctor for T.
'Though all men be made of one metal, yet they be not cast all in one mould'

- John Lyly Euphus, The Anatomy of Light (1579)
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jmaxley

Best:  Some of the great people I've met.

Worst:  Telling my family.  Also, some of the not-so-great people I've met.

Once I can actually move forward with transition, I'm sure I'll be able to add more.
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Nikolai_S

Best: My dysphoria is so low right now, I can't believe that after 4 years of intense, hellish dysphoria, it took one year for it to practically disappear - at least on an average day. That is the best of the best. But also - when I started passing 98% of the time. When I realised that even if the occasional person mistook me for a girl, I'd gotten to the point where I was okay with it and it didn't batter my self-esteem. Getting a passport with the right name and gender - and getting mail with my name on it, for that matter.  :D This last Christmas - because everything had the right name on it, everyone was getting pronouns right (except for the occasional slip-up by my grandma), and it was the first big family event that wasn't incredibly uncomfortable for me. Even my far-far-far-right wing fundamentalist Christian relatives, who I haven't even been in touch with for long, called me Nick and everything without hesitation.  o.o I think they might be glad I'm not a lesbian, because they seemed nicer than last time I saw them......

Worst: The first few months after coming out to my parents were horrible, mom was having a serious depressive episode... That it took me over 5 months after coming out to even start passing at all. The overlap between those that had me at the breaking point more than once. That was the worst. That was lower than I had been before I came out and started transitioning, because I at least could imagine myself passing if I tried, back then. Honourable mentions: muscular contraction and cramp during injection once, holy **** that hurt. Being really really afraid of what would happen if I ran into people I knew before transition, during transition, and being outed by them or simply gawked at - which was a real danger, considering how rural the area is. Still having some bathroom anxiety. Binder starting to take its toll. And most recent winner: having 5 out of 6 professors, all of whom I was on excellent terms with pre-transition, many of whom had offered (without being asked) to help me with references for my transfer to a 4-year college, mysteriously failing to so much as respond to my emails asking if they'd be willing to serve as a reference for my college apps, in which I coincidentally mentioned my name change, as it appears on my college record and is already filled out on the electronic Common App reference forms. At this point I'm wishing I had asked for the reference first and explained only after getting a response. I could deal with a "sorry, no." Completely ignoring me? More irritating. I'm still hoping there's a more reasonable explanation, but it's not looking good.  :(
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Nero

Quote from: Keaira on January 06, 2012, 01:15:24 AM
The Best: not having to pretend to be a man anymore. To all you guys here, you have my highest respect. It's tough being a guy.

Same to you. It's tough being a girl.  :)
Nero was the Forum Admin here at Susan's Place for several years up to the time of his death.
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Lee11

The best thing is having the outside finally match the inside....the worst is in relationships still finding it hard to be accepted as a 'guy'
I am a writer for several bodybuilding/ fitness and doctors websites and diet/supplement consultant.
I am also a personal assistant to a, Registered Dietician and Certified Diabetes Educator.

Through my work and experience I want to be able to help the transgender community
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Z7Z

Best: Emotional changes from testosterone. I feel SO much more like myself now. And facial hair! I freaking love it!!  ;D
Worst: Getting fired from my job. And during the early stages where people would look at my chest, then my face, then back at my chest, etc trying to figure out whether I'm a guy or a girl... I felt like telling them "I charge $10 for every second someone looks at me like that. Pay up, you owe me $50."
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Felix

everybody's house is haunted
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tvc15

Hey Felix. My post probably seemed really negative, but I'm not allowed to go back to the doc's because I've been having too much trouble paying my bills. I don't think I'll be able to renew my T prescription when it runs out, either. What I've got now will probably last me till mid-May, so I'm trying not to stress about it too much--maybe I'll be in a more stable financial position by then. But man, I still owe over $4.5k just from all the hospital visits and procedures leading up to getting my scrip. I asked multiple times if they would consider letting me pay less each month, or to reduce my overall bill, since I don't have insurance, but they wouldn't help me.

But there are plenty of positives. I feel "right" for the very first time in my life. I was one of those kids in high school that just sat in the background and never said a word. I couldn't see a future for myself, and never even bothered to try. The instant I found out medical transition was possible was one of the highest points in my life. Now that I've been on T for 6 months, I am, for the most part, very happy. I no longer have issues talking on the phone, or to strangers, or showing my face in public, or anything. I'm starting to take pride in my appearance. Basically... I just feel alive. I feel like a human being.

I've got a long road ahead of me, and I get down on myself as often as not. But I've already been at my worst. I could literally never hit that point again. I'm finally me. And I am looking forward to a future that I can finally envision and take steps toward attaining.


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Felix

Thank you tvc. I wasn't trying to downplay your troubles, I promise. I'm still paying in installments for a surgery I had 3 years ago, so I understand the difficulty of bashing up against the wall of medical expenses. I've lots of times just not gotten healthcare because it's cheaper not to.

I'm really glad you feel good on T. I do too. :)
everybody's house is haunted
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