Quote from: Assoluta on January 08, 2012, 08:02:24 PM
I had plenty of doubts within the first year and even some in the second year of my transition and no amount of thinking ever resolved the doubts, in fact, it probably made me more confused. My advice is to do whatever it is to get to the point of feeling at peace with yourself, without thinking the what ifs. I had to just go ahead and transition to find out if it was right, I couldn't know for 100% it was the right thing until I had transitioned for a significant period of time. I even once went back to presenting as male for a day to see how it would feel, and that put a lot of doubts out of my mind. So doing instead of thinking can sometimes move things forward more effectively.
This...this...I'm gonna hold onto this tidbit for the near future.
So my experience is a little different as I have learned and come to better understand myself (as I do not ID with the gender binary)...but I wanted to share it in hopes that it may help in some way with your struggles on doubt and second thoughts.
I have come close several times over the course of 3-4 years to attempt transition...however each and every time I ran into the same wall consistently: one of fear and doubt. Did it eliminate the problem of gender for me to bury it afterwards? Oh heck no. All it did was make me feel horrible. As I have tried numerous routes to become more comfortable with myself and understand who I am, it occurred to me: I was thinking on the totally wrong terms. In the past several months I have begun to shift my thinking towards a new realization: I have been trying to fit an exclusive gender to myself but have never been fully consistent inside. In fact, I found a term that best describes me, more so than genderqueer even does, pangender. I still....want to deal with this, because gender is still a very prevalent issue to me and it continues to influence and inhibit on my life. I have resolved that I MUST deal with it in order to finally move on. But, for me, what could I do? I have had, like you, recently more success personally living in the male gender role...but don't want to lose that, yet don't know how I can make things better for me with gender. Then something occurred to me in the past week....
I was thinking about this the wrong way entirely. Gender does not fully apply to me because I do not fully ID as either....so WHY ON EARTH have I been trying to think of it on a binary-level basis for so long?! It no longer made sense, and as soon as I thought of that, it became more clear what I had to do. It cut a good part of static out that I was trying to figure out with my connection to the world around me, and got straight to the heart of the matter. I still want to go onto hormones, I know that much, and with this realization, I saw past the binary that unlike most, cis or trans, is able to be comfortable with. (because they can ID as either male or female) It's literally a foreign thing to me....I can't fully comprehend it, and some days I wish I could, or I wish it were that easy. But it's not. That was not and never has been my reality, but I did not realize it until after years and years of struggling blindly. It's about what is going to me most comfortable for me, and to do that I have to do away with the binary completely (at least, on a personal level, because the world around me is still going to try and judge my gender) to make that happen.
Now, tying into what Assoluta said, the doubts are gonna be there....and like she said and I can definitely relate, sometimes the more you try to figure it out, the worse it becomes and the more confusing it can get in the process. It's a case-by-case basis and we will all have different experiences, but you have to be able to decipher for yourself how you truly feel about it. It's not easy, and can take a long time to do it (I've been trying to actively deal with this for 5 years now, and a lot of the time it seems like no end is in sight), but if you can speak to a gender therapist, they can equip you over time to rationalize and challenge thought processes that may be inhibiting you from seeing it. They can help you to devise healthy ways and strategies to analyze why you are feeling this way in the face of handling changes. Doubts can be normal, and I believe to be healthy as well, but when they became too the point that they controlled my life, that's when they get to be way too much. (and it's taken a long time for me to see that) I found too, that focusing my energy into things that are more positive is a good thing, as feeding that doubt would result in me feeling horrible 100% of the time.
This may have sounded long-winded and I apologize if it did (I just woke up 20 min ago from a nap...still sleepy), but I hope my experiences can give some kind of insight for you, or help in some way...at the very least to let you know that you are most certainly not alone in this.