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Pugs4life - New here: my husband just came out to me as transgender

Started by Pugs4life, November 03, 2025, 08:24:05 AM

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Northern Star Girl

#320
    @Pugs4life
Dear Amy:
I really like how you always analyze and reveal your understanding of
what Susan and others have shared with you in your posted comment replies and in
private communications.

One very salient point I want to share with you regarding your stated comment in
your posting:
 

Quote[quote from Pugs4Life]
        "So, the person I actually fell in love with was Cynthia all along? 
        Not the man I thought I fell in love with?  Am I understanding that correctly?" 

Absolutely, you did indeed fall in love with Cynthia as the person (man) before her
transition journey and presently becoming a woman...
            True love for a person is very much deeper as you are concluding.

Stay on your path as you exploring your feelings, and be certain to attempt to understand the
feelings that Cynthia has.  Keep the communication lines open with her as you both travel your
life journey together.

Thank you for your continued sharing of your thoughts...
...I am always eager to follow yours and Cynthia's postings... and if you desire for more private
stuff you can always send me a Forum Private message or via my Email: alaskandanielle@yahoo.com

          ❤️
Many HUGS for you and for Cynthia,
Danielle
[Northern Star Girl]
  Forum Administrator

                      cc:  @Susan

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I started HRT March 2015 and
I've been Full-Time since December 2016.
I love living in a small town in Alaska
I am 46 years old

        Email:  --->  alaskandanielle@
                             yahoo.com

Susan

Dear Amy,

I want to go back to one line of mine, because I think you may have misunderstood what I was trying to say, and I'd rather catch it now.

When I said Cynthia has been doing the work the whole time, I didn't mean she was the only one. I think that line landed on a quiet fear already whispering in your heart — that maybe the nine years were hers and not yours. That she was the real one, and you were loving a stand-in.

That's not it. Long before Cynthia came out, you were both already doing the work — loving each other, choosing each other, building a life together one ordinary day at a time. The morning coffee, the hand on the shoulder, the thousand small ways two people keep showing up for each other.

Cynthia carried who she was under conditions that gave her no words, no permission, no path — and she did all of that anyway, every single day, with a huge part of herself trying to breathe underwater. And you loved her through every bit of it, without even knowing what she was holding.

That doesn't make you someone who got fooled. It makes you faithful. You were faithful to the right person the whole time. You just hadn't learned her name yet.

So it was never "Cynthia, not the man." It was the two of you, both showing up, both doing the work, before either of you had the word for who you'd found.

But I need to say something now that I don't want to let slip past in the momentum of Cynthia's story.

You are going through a transition too. Not the same one — but just as real, just as disorienting, and just as deserving of time and gentleness. Cynthia is finding her way into being herself, and you are finding your way into a marriage that's becoming something new: not worse than what you signed up for, just different from the map you were handed. You're grieving and recalibrating and loving all at once — and nobody handed you a map for that part either.

Your needs in this are not secondary. They're real, and they matter.

Which brings me to the thing you said in the middle, the one I don't want to skate past: "I don't know how to get used to the changes in the body from what I am used to."

I'm not going to reframe that away. The body you've shared a bed with for nine years is changing, and you don't yet know how your attraction will move as it does. That's not a flaw in your love, and it's not a test you're failing. It's an honest unknown — and you're allowed to say it out loud, because your experience of this is happening in your body too. You can grieve the loss of the familiar while you come to terms with what's ahead; both can be true at once. And nobody — not me, not Cynthia, not you — can tell you today how it's going to go.

What I can tell you is that attraction doesn't flip on command, and it doesn't perform on schedule. It moves slowly, unevenly, and it tends to follow the whole person rather than lead the way. You don't have to have it solved by next month or next year. You just have to keep showing up honestly — which you're already doing, by being willing to say the hard sentence out loud instead of pretending it isn't there.

Here's what I most want you to hear, Amy. You came into this thread worried about Cynthia — her feelings, her journey, whether you could be what she needs. That love is real, and it's beautiful. But you are in this too. It is not your job to hold Cynthia up — she can do that on her own. Your job is to be a full person, in a marriage that's changing around you, finding your footing on ground that keeps shifting. That takes real courage.

And here's the thing I keep coming back to: you've got time. There's no rush, no clock on any of this. The love that carried you both this far doesn't run out — it just keeps becoming whatever the two of you need it to be next. So don't rush yourself. Two people who keep choosing each other, both walking it at the pace it actually takes — that's the whole thing.

With love, saying what needs to be said.
— Susan💜

🔗
Susan Larson
Founder
Susan's Place Transgender Resources

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Gina P

Amy,

I probably said this in an earlier post so forgive me if I'm repeating myself.

My wife and I went through a very rough time and we still are making adjustments. In the early days she would have nothing to do with my transition. She wasn't crazy about being out in public with me. My solution was to just give her time to digest all this. I think her biggest fear was how she would be perceived, being with someone like me. Once she got over that, our relationship improved.

I am still basically the same person, just vs2.0. I still mow the yard, change the oil in the cars, and fix anything that needs fixing. The new me also does the dishes and helps out around the house. Cares more about her feelings, and not afraid to express what I am feeling. Yes we are not sexual active anymore but that seams like such a small thing. We shop together and she helps me with my wardrobe choices. Sometimes we share clothes and struggle over closet space.

There is a lot of learning and reprograming that you can be a part of. Most women learn how to be a woman when they are very young. We must learn it now. How to style our hair, make up, jewelry choices, what colors go with what. Not to mention how to walk and sit like a lady. How to talk in a more feminine way.  The list goes on and on.

I wish you both the best but also wish that you don't make each miserable just trying to stay together. The choice is yours and the door is always there, but much love is already invested in your relationship and there must be something you both like about each other or you would not be writing here trying to understand it more.

Best wishes.
GinaP
🔗 [Link: wackypackagesforum.com]

Pugs4life

Dear Danielle,

Thank you so much for writing to me.  It is always so nice to hear from you.  :)

I really try to take in everything Susan and others share with me.  I appreciate the help so very much. 

Thank you for sharing with me that I did indeed fall in love with Cynthia.  I am trying to understand that Cynthia and the man she was prior to her transition journey are the same person.  I think I am still trying to figure that out in my head. 

I will make sure that I try to understand the feelings Cynthia has.  We will keep the lines of communication open between us. 

Thank you again for your post and allowing me to message you should I need to.  I really appreciate that Danielle. 

With love,
Amy

Northern Star Girl

@Pugs4life    cc: @CynthiaR

Dear Amy:
Your openness to the replies and comments that you receive from your caring readers
and avid followers should be very helpful in this unfamiliar territory that you are
finding yourself in.   Always feel free to ask questions.

Please know that I am always rooting for your success and happiness
in your life journey with Cynthia.

HUGS, Danielle [Northern Star Girl]
  Forum Administrator

              Direct Email: alaskandanielle@yahoo.com
****Help support this website by:
Subscribing !
http://www.susans.org/forums/index.php?action=profile;area=subscriptions 
         Donating !   https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/SusanElizabethLarson 🔗

❤️❤️❤️  Check out my Personal Blog Threads  ❤️❤️❤️
          Danielle's Continuing Life Adventures
           Started: January 02, 2024

                    A New Chapter: Alaskan Danielle's Chronicles 
                      Started: December 30, 2018

          I am the Hunted Prey: Danielle's Chronicles
            Started: April 08, 2018

                    Aspiringperson is now Alaskan Danielle    
                      Started: March 09, 2018


I started HRT March 2015 and
I've been Full-Time since December 2016.
I love living in a small town in Alaska
I am 46 years old

        Email:  --->  alaskandanielle@
                             yahoo.com

Pugs4life

Dear Susan,

I think you are right.  I think I did misunderstand when you said Cynthia has been doing the work the whole time. It does feel like I was loving a stand-in.  Thank you so much for helping me understand that better.

I think I am still trying to understand that Cynthia and the man she was before her transition are the same person. Is it that the man she was was her just carrying herself under the only conditions she could at the time?  And so I did fall in love with Cynthia?  I just didn't know who she was yet?  I think I am still confused about it never being "Cynthia, not the man".  The man and Cynthia are the one in the same?  I am sorry that this still confuses me.  I really am trying to understand it. 

I never thought about the fact that I am going through a transition as well as Cynthia.  I am trying to find my way into a marriage that is becoming something new and different from the map that I was handed.  I have to try to remember that it isn't worse than what I signed up for, just different.  That helps it land differently.  I am trying to find my way as I grieve, recalibrate, and love all at the same time.  You are so right Susan-I don't have a map for this part of it at all. 

Thank you for letting me know that my needs matter in this and they aren't secondary.  I really did need to hear that. 

Thank you,too, for saying that it is okay to say the unknown out loud that "I don't know how to get used to the changes in the body from what I am used to".  It is good to hear that this isn't a flaw and not something I am failing at. It is an honest unknown right now.  I have to remember that it is okay to grieve the loss of the familiar while coming to terms with what is coming ahead.  I needed to know that no one can tell me today how it is going to go. 

Attraction does move slowly and it helps to know that it tends to follow the whole person.  It is a relief to hear that I don't have to have it solved by next month or next year.  I think, in my head, it is something I need to figure out now.  I can keep showing up honestly. 

Thank you for the reminder that I am in this too. I will try to be a full person in this marriage that is constantly changing around me.  I will try to find my footing on the ground that keeps shifting.  It is scary at times, but I am willing to keep doing the work and keep showing up. 

I will remember that I have time.  That there is no rush and no clock on any of this.  Things just feel like they are charging forward faster than I am able to keep up with.  Things seem to be happening right now instead of down the road. I will try not to rush myself through this. 

It is so encouraging to hear you say that love doesn't run out-it just keeps becoming whatever we need it to be next.

Thank you for all of your help Susan and for being there.  It means more than you will ever know.

With love,
Amy



 

Pugs4life

@Gina P

Hi Gina,

Thank you so much for your post.  I really appreciate you sharing your experience with your wife with me.  It can be very rough at this stage of the journey.  It helps to  know that others have gone through something similar and had to make adjustments.  And are still making adjustments.  Giving your wife time to digest all of it was probably very helpful to her.  I know that I need to time to process all of this.  I share that fear that your wife had...how I will be perceived by others for being with a female.  How did your wife get over that?

It really helps to hear you say that you are the same person as you were.  You still do the same things you used to.  And you do new stuff too.  Do you know how your wife got past not being sexually active anymore?  It sounds like you guys gained so much from your transition.  That is great!

I didn't realize that there is alot of learning and reprogramming that I could be part of.  Thank you for pointing that out to me. 

I wish you and your wife the best as well.  I am committed to being in this marriage and walking this journey with my spouse.  You are right-much love is already invested in our relationship.  I am really trying to understand this all better Gina.  It is going to take time and patience I think.

With love,
Amy

Pugs4life

Dear Danielle,

You are certainly right-the replies and comments that I receive from everyone on here will be very helpful in this unfamiliar territory that I find myself in.  I am so grateful for all of the wonderful advice and support that I receive from everyone. 

Thank you so much for cheering us on on this journey we are on. It is so appreciated Danielle. 

With love,
Amy

KristaFairchild

Hi Amy,

I cherish your post because of your honesty and vulnerability, but also because it gives me an opportunity to look into the feelings of a spouse. I have a female spouse and she is going through the same sort of issues that you are. She's trying to remember that I am the same person that she married, and I am also aware that I'm not quite the same person that she married.  It doesn't help that we've had issues in our marriage. 

Regarding myself, I'm stunned that I still feel like the same person. I don't feel like the transition I'm going through is changing me at all, at least not at my core. And finding tremendous relief in being Krista, though. It's hardest to be my true feminine self when I'm at home. I'm terrified of losing my marriage or affecting my relationship with my adult children. My head says that the kids are fine with it, and every indication is exactly that, but I still fear. My kids are so precious to me.

And it's even harder with my wife, because I know she is not fully on board with me being Krista. She wonders what will happen to her attraction for me. She wonders if this is just my latest obsession, because I have had unhealthy obsessions in the past. I actually thought the same thing as recently as three years ago. 

However, every step forward brings me, relief and joy. I wore a skirt today for the fourth time at work and the first time at home. It felt absolutely wonderful. In fact, my transition has helped with many other issues that I have. I still have a therapist and a meeting that I go to, But I don't need either one as much as I used to now that I am Krista. I would not say this to my wife because I'm not 100% certain it's true, but my transition maybe what is keeping me healthy right now. My fear now is that if I try to de-transition that I might go back to those unhealthy behaviors. To be clear, this is all on me not on my wife. It's my job to do the work that keeps me healthy.

Meanwhile, my wife and I are in therapy together. I'm learning to be less fearful and share things with her earlier than I did before. My inclination is to make sure I'm certain of something before I share it with her. That's not all bad, because it would be unfortunate to share something like I want to start HRT if I ended up not starting HRT. That could add to her anxiety, so it made sense to make sure that I was certain. At the same time, one of her fears is that I live in this separate world from her as Krista. What I need to understand is that is how she feels, even though I don't feel like that's true. I'm sharing my thoughts and feelings and being open with my presentation now. 

I know that my wife loves me, and she has told me absolutely that people have to be their authentic selves. I know she's working hard in therapy around all of our issues. I am too. This is all we can do right now and I hope it's enough.

I'll share one last thing that could resonate with you. One of my best friends said to me about this that I needed to always choose my wife first. If she doesn't want me to transition, then I should not transition. I know he has made hard choices in his life to support his marriage. But I don't think I can let go of this path. This feels like the most authentic version of me ever. Wearing skirts feels like something I always wanted to do, but didn't know it. Being called Krista makes me float a little higher every time I hear it. I asked my friend if he could become female if that's what it took to keep his marriage alive and he got a very confused frustrated look on his face. Like he just didn't get that. I don't think he could choose to be a woman, and I don't think I can choose to be a man. 

I love your continuing effort to seek more information and feelings from people in the space. You must love Cynthia great deal to be willing to put for this kind of effort, because not everybody would. Your feelings and struggles are legitimate. So Cynthia's. I hope you two can find a way to navigate through them and come out positive on the other end, whatever that might look like.

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