Hi Girls and Boys:
It has been awhile since I last posted so I wanted to reconnect and to give an update on how life has been going.
Since coming out to my SO I have been on a wild rollar coaster ride.  There have been good days and not so good days, but on balance things are going better than I thought they would.
My wife is really trying to understand, accept, and to find a way to make our relationship work - that is all I can ask.  She is still here and we are still talking.
I am still in therapy, have started laser treatment to remove facial hair, and have simi-dressed at home, all with my wifes approval.  She still is not wanting to see me all made up (wig, make-up, etc) but has said in time this can happen.  In fact she went with me to my first laser session for moral support.
I must say this has been quite a ride.  It has been less than a year since I finally (after a lifetime of denial) accepted myself as TG and only a few months since coming out to my wife.  In that rather short time I feel like I have lived a lifetime.
I have spent many hours thinking about and wondering how I have come to this point in my life.  Like many of the stories I have read here, I have always known I was a woman and now my wife readily admits that for her, she has come to understand that I am a woman, but she doesn't want to lose her "man".  Somewhere in there is a compromise where we can both have enough of what we need to be able to live, but still not lose the relationship we have that is special.  I love my wife more than ever for really trying to come to acceptance and understanding.  Given how much ignorance and intorance there is in the world, I feel blessed for the moment.
Last week I was feeling really depressed and didn't know how I could go on.  I was considering all kinds of acts that are not emotionally or mentally healthy.  But then I think how can I let what other people believe override how I feel and what I believe.
Anyhoo, as my father always used to say, this is my story and I'm sticking to it.  I truely value the support that everyone here at Susan's provides and I don't think I would be where I am today on my path to living as Molly if it weren't for all of you.  I have said this before, but it bears repeating, I don't think I would be sane, or maybe even alive today, if it weren't for all of you - thank you.
Molly