Niamh it is good and amazing to read something so honest and heart-felt. (for context) I went full-time in 2005, a year after I had SRS. Had FFS and BAS in 2008, after going full-time.
You reminded me of something so important.
You also reminded me of when I was in your situation. I never cut my hair for anyone but I remember having felt like I was living for my parents, living for my coworkers, living for god, Society, whomever... Basically the truth was that I was living for Fear. Fear was hovering over me like a cloud and I was living beneath my Fear, having to live my life out of respect for all of my fears. And I remember getting up in my head and mentally elaborating on my fears, dwelling and focusing on them as a way to prevent me from making any kind of progress.
There was a time when I was living vicariously through AuthentiKate and I spent the rest of my time living an Internet existence. All my friends were on the Internet. When I considered dating it was basically an Internet thing that amounted to an Internet thing. Nothing really ever came of it. I have noticed lately that I have been getting sucked into the Internet thing again. I remember Kate Grimaldi told me in an email, long ago, "The rabbit hole doesn't exist on any website." She went on to explain that the rabbit hole is about doing and 'real'izing things because of experiences. Think about the word realize, making something real, real-izing it. That never happens through a computer monitor. The virtual world won't allow anything to become real. The Internet can be a information tool but for a lot of women who transition the Internet becomes their existence, their virtual (not-real) existence.
And I think a common thing trans women do (I know I have done it myself) is to try to validate their being women with a virtual existence. I have never photo shopped a picture and put it on the Internet in order to convince people that I look/am female but a surprisingly large amount of trans women who may not ever actually transition in real life do.
It may seem like people who tout their transitions on the Internet are special and amazing and perhaps they are. But the only thing that really matters about any of that is that it is inspiring to you. Inspiration is basically seeing something that causes something to be aroused in you. It is that something inside of you that this is all about. Even the tiniest little bit of effort towards fulfilling that something inside of you will be greater than any Internet experience whether it is being amazed by someone's pictures or videos.
Don't become an Internet addict, living vicariously or virtually. You can see how even people who have had SRS and made progress can become addicted to a virtual existence, trading one set of fears for another set of fears.
Someone made what is (to me) a tired old statement recently about having to be honest in regards to telling a partner that she is a transsexual. To the rest of the world telling someone you are transsexual equals telling them you aren't really a woman or a man. But the truth is most people don't even know what the truth is. Is the truth that I am really just a transsexual, not a real woman? Or does believing in something make it true? The fact is that believing in something will make it true. Look at the word believing. The word believing is made up of two words, by and living. Believing equals by living. If you take that thing inside of you and start living it instead of spending your time admiring other people who do... Then at the end of the day you will have something. You will make it happen by-living, believing... be-living.
I know about 'believing' because back before I started living for myself I was channeling all my energy into religion. I learned that most "believers" think that thinking something is true is the path to salvation. But the truth was (in regards to theology) that the path to salvation was by-living. What you thought was true, an idea or a thought in your mind meant absolutely f@cking nothing unless it changed how you lived your life. By living, believing is a sham unless it translates to by living.
Personally I don't confess to people I care about that I am just a man who wants to be a woman. I am loyal to them and to myself 'by-living'. If I believe in myself as being a woman I don't tell people that I am really just a man who transitioned. I know a lot of trans women use flowery words to communicate that they transitioned to someone, the problem is that in a non-imaginary world that tired old line always translates to, "I am a man who wants to be a woman."
When I talk about people trading one set of fears for another set of fears this is what I mean.
And if you know you are right about something, if you are a true by-liver and not a believer who is up in your head in an imaginary, pretend existence... Then it won't matter what other people think or know... Not if you are by-living and being true to yourself.
Why am I typing all this?
Because when I was in your situation my greatest fear was that I would never actually be able to be a woman after transition. I believed and was all up in my head thinking that no one would ever accept me as a woman. What I didn't realize was that acceptance begins with me. I had to accept that I was a woman. The process of transition helped me to realize, real-ize (make real) the reality that I was indeed a woman. Believing, by-living...
The most important thing in my life... The reason I was able to overcome my fears... The thing that kept me going during the most difficult times was Hope.
Without Hope I never would have made it this far.
I see people who pontificate on being "honest" as the destroyers of hope. I would like for people to rethink honesty. Most people just drink the kool-Aid, trading one set of fears for another.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_the_Kool-AidI want to set my people free. Be free.
Start living.
I wrote this post as an effort for you, now how about you make an effort for 'you'? BTW that is more than AuthentiKate ever did for me. Pretty sure AuthentiKate was just someone who was impressed with herself and wanted attention. Wanting attention is living for someone other than one's self. As always practicing traditional meditation is an invaluable tool.
http://www.mro.org/zmm/teachings/meditation.php