Hi Madelyn,
It's you, some 18 months after you wrote this introductory post on Susans. I was just going through some of your old messages and came upon this one. The first message you posted here.
You always wondered if you would be happy 'on the other side' of the gender spectrum. Now that I've come out publicly, and lived as a female full time for just a few days short of a year I thought maybe I'd share a few words with you about my experience to hopefully save you some fear and sorrow.
First off, to answer your most burning question; yes, you are happy on the other side of the gender spectrum. It will take you a lot of soul searching, and frankly, hours of mind games and sleepless nights for you to allow yourself to transition - but when you get through the first part of it you will find peace for the first time in your life. I mean, life is still stressful on this side - actually, maybe even a little more stressful when it comes to some of the external factors. But once you are here you will look back at yourself with a kind of compassion and pity actually for all you had to endure all those years. On this side of the fence you don't even think about your gender that much - and life seems blissfully normal.
Also, there will be losses. Your relationship with your wife will transition as you do. One from a platonic marriage into a kind of sisterhood. She will always love you, and she will remain beside you. When the two of you finally get to the point where you are ready to move out, she'll surprise you and ask you to stay. It won't be a marriage, but in a way you will grow closer, almost as sisters do - and the idea of being apart will be painful even though each of you wishes for something more in a partner. It will be messy, but beautifully so - and you will love and feel loved despite it all. Instead you will both choose to cherish what you do have between each other for as long as possible - and it will be beautiful.
You will lose friends, but only a few. Like everything in life you'll plan your coming out neurotically, but when you do come out you'll watch as friend after friend steps forward and says they will love and support you for who you are. There will be some who attempt a last ditch intervention - but with time even they will see how much happier and more content you are - how authentic you are. You will somehow find the strength to be compassionate and patient with them, and that will come back to you ten fold. You'll lose contact with a couple friends, but will gain many many more that you never knew you'd meet.
Embracing your authentic self and striving to live that way also will have consequences on others around you that you won't yet realize. In the same way that those in the community will be there for you the first time you go shopping in girl mode, or when you struggle to get used to HRT, you will be there for others. You too will help others, and even though you won't want to be public about being trans - you will find purpose in life that you didn't know was there.
You will pass most of the time, you will find a job. Transition will give you strength to lose weight as you feel more at home in your body.
In the end, you'll look back, as I do at you in this thread, and you'll be so grateful for your journey; even grateful that you're trans. Sure, you'll still wish a genie would appear and let you make three wishes (of which you'll only need one - to be born female), but in reality you'll be content with who you are.
So Madelyn, I give you courage. You know what you must do. Even though you only see a dark void of the unknown before you - know that on the other side I am waiting with gratitude that you finally found the courage to be your true self.
Love,
Yourself