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Started by Rinsford, January 08, 2026, 02:52:18 PM

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Rinsford

Quote from: Susan on January 10, 2026, 04:33:42 PMHey Rinsford!

I'm really glad you wrote today. I want to start by saying this clearly: noticing when the urges show up, and talking about them instead of acting on them, matters. Even when it feels like nothing is "working," that awareness is doing real protective work.

You've been very clear about something important — the urges aren't random. They show up when dysphoria becomes overwhelming, when being in your body feels like too much. That doesn't mean you want to be hurt. It means your brain is trying to find relief from something it experiences as intolerable. That distinction matters, and it's not a failure on your part.

It also helps to remember something fundamental: you are who you know yourself to be. Your sense of yourself is real and correct, even when your external image doesn't yet match it. Dysphoria can try to convince you that your body is telling the truth and your mind is lying — but it's the other way around. Your feelings are real, but they are not always telling you the truth about who you are or what your future looks like. Bodies can change. Truth doesn't.

A lot of coping isn't about making the feeling disappear. It's about moving through the surge safely until it eases. Think of it as riding a wave rather than trying to stop the ocean.

One thing that can really help during dysphoria spikes is doing something you genuinely like that fully occupies your mind. When your attention is intensely focused on one thing, it becomes much harder for dysphoric thoughts and intrusive urges to push their way in. That kind of focus gives your brain somewhere else to go — not because the feelings weren't real, but because your mind finally gets a break.

Escapism, when used intentionally and in balance, can be healthy. Gaming is a great example. In games, you get to move through the world as the man you are — making choices, taking up space, being seen correctly — without your body being the focus at all. Games offer focus, agency, and immersion. The same can be true for writing, drawing, building something, watching a familiar show, or sinking into music. Even when those things are more like vents than polished creations, they still give your mind somewhere safe to put the thoughts instead of letting them circle endlessly.

I want to share something with you that's about where this leads, not just what it feels like right now. Because one of the most effective ways to cope with dysphoric urges is to shift your focus forward — toward the future you're building and the life that's taking shape ahead of you.

Years ago, a grandparent in my community came to me after their grandchild — a young trans man — came out. They were confused and scared, and they didn't understand what they were being asked to accept. We talked. I shared what research shows about family support and outcomes. I told them my own story. And I helped them understand something important: their grandson hadn't changed suddenly — he had known who he was for a long time. The only new part was the family finding out.

That grandparent chose to keep learning, and she convinced his mother to do the same. They chose to stay engaged. They chose love.

Today, that young man is doing extraordinarily well. He's in college, earning honors, presenting research at conferences, and receiving grants for work that helps protect other LGBTQ+ people. He has a partner. His family is openly proud of him — not just accepting, but genuinely celebrating him. His grandmother and his mother now talk about his life with joy.

I'm not sharing that because your path has to look the same. I'm sharing it because it shows something important: early chapters do not predict the ending. Confusion can turn into understanding. Fear can turn into pride. What feels unstable at the beginning can become the foundation for a meaningful future.

And with that in mind, I want to share something else — words from a trans woman who lived long enough to look back.

From Miharu Barbie, a trans woman who once stood exactly where you are now:

Miharu is not an exception. She is a person who stayed long enough to see despair become a memory, not a destination. I read this post many times before my own transition for the same reasons that I want you to read it now: I want you to focus more on where you're going than where you are at this moment. I held onto it when I needed proof that surviving the worst parts could lead to something real and worth living.

And this isn't just about gender. What Miharu describes — believing you wouldn't live long, feeling like the pain was the end of the road, and later discovering it was something you passed through — happens to people facing many kinds of overwhelming pain. Dysphoria is part of your story, but the core truth here is human.

Your sense of your own sex is something real: So focus on the life that becomes possible when you get through the now.

When everything feels overwhelming, one of the most grounding questions you can ask is a forward-looking one:

What does my future self need me to do right now so they can exist?

Often, the answer is simply: get through this moment safely.

None of this is about fixing everything at once. These are tools — ways to protect the version of you that hasn't arrived yet. And because these urges are tied to dysphoria, they're exactly the kind of thing your CAMS team is meant to help with. If you talked about the dysphoria but haven't told them about the cutting urges, it's important to bring that up — especially if things spike between appointments. You won't get in trouble. You will get the support you need at the time you need it.

It makes sense that the hope of gender-affirming care is helping you hold on. That hope is real. Just remember you don't have to rely on that alone. You deserve support now, while you're getting there.

You also asked about TYEP — the Trans Youth Emergency Project. Here's what I know:

TYEP is a program run by the Campaign for Southern Equality. It was created to help families of trans youth in states where gender-affirming care has been restricted or banned. They offer information about navigating state laws, help connecting families to out-of-state providers, and in some cases travel grants to offset costs.

It's a resource that exists for families — meaning a parent or guardian would be the one to reach out if they wanted to learn more. Their website is: https://southernequality.org/tyep/ 🔗

I'm mentioning it because you asked, not because I'm suggesting any particular path. If your CAMS team and your parents agree it makes sense, it's something you could consider together. Your CAMS therapist could even provide a letter recommending access to a gender-affirming therapist, which can help when navigating these systems.

It's also worth knowing that seeing a gender-affirming therapist doesn't have to mean giving up your CAMS support — you can do both. CAMS addresses the crisis piece and keeps you safe, while a gender-affirming therapist can work with you specifically on the dysphoria. They serve different purposes, and having both in your corner is allowed.

As a youth, the decisions about your accessing care aren't yours to make alone — and that's not a limitation, it's a protection. You have people in your corner: your therapist, your psychiatrist, and your parents. Let them help carry this. Your job right now is to keep showing up, keep being honest with your team, and keep taking care of yourself while the adults work on opening doors.

I'm really glad you're here, Rinsford. Keep writing. Keep finding places — in games, in music, in creativity — where you get to exist as yourself.

We're reading, and we're walking this road with you.

With love and support,
— Susan 💜

PS: You are free to accept or reject anything I provide to you, you can also let me know if you want me to stop offering these types of replies. Just send me a private message.

I just realized that you said to PM you if I wanted you to stop. Please dont stop, I enjoy coming back to replies from you and the others. It makes me feel seen.

Pema

You are definitely seen here. We get you.
"Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it not." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Lori Dee

Quote from: Rinsford on January 12, 2026, 06:28:10 PMI just realized that you said to PM you if I wanted you to stop. Please dont stop, I enjoy coming back to replies from you and the others. It makes me feel seen.

You are seen and wanted here. We are happy to have you here with us. Don't stop coming back. We would miss you.

Hugs!
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Susan

Hey Rinsford,

Thank you for telling me that. I'm really glad the replies are landing the way they're meant to — as real support, not just words on a screen.

And I want you to hear this clearly: being "seen" is not something you have to earn here. You already belong. You've been doing an incredibly brave thing by writing honestly through the hard parts and the hopeful parts, and letting people witness you without pretending you are fine when you are not.

I also want to gently highlight something important about what you wrote the other day — the "blackout" moment and the rope instructions you found afterward. That's the kind of thing your CAMS team and your psychiatrist need to know about exactly as it happened, even if it feels scary or embarrassing to say out loud. Because of what you are experiencing, the fact that your safety matters, and because those details will help them support you properly.

I'm proud of you for reaching out when things spike. I'm proud of you for building hope on purpose — hopecore, music, drawing, going outside, letting yourself want a future. That's not denial. That's survival with your eyes open.

Keep coming back. Keep writing.

We're here, and we're not going anywhere.
— Susan 💜
Susan Larson
Founder
Susan's Place Transgender Resources

Help support this website and our community by Donating 🔗 [Link: paypal.com/paypalme/SusanElizabethLarson/] or Subscribing!

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Rinsford

₍ ᐢ.ˬ.ᐢ₎˚୨୧

Day 16 ~ January 13, 7:29 PM EST

Last night, I had a talk with one of my parental figures who is around my age. We were dealing with suicidal thoughts. We just started talking about it. I had told all of them about the rope incident. I had my first heart to heart moment in years. Later on the same day, Father(his nickname in the group chat) asked us(me and the others) to tell him not to kill himself. I was the only one online so I responded.

I told him that "There are better days ahead. They are there for you to experience them, not somewhere else in the sky." When I said that it hurt me inside because I needed to hear that. He said "How about we both try to live?" which made me remember something that happened today. So I told him. There was a pause that I had in the bathroom after a severe urge to harm myself.

I stopped and think "Why do I want to kill myself so bad?" I didn't get an answer but a statement. "This is just a feeling, an desire that will soon pass and you will be glad that you don't act upon it" It was out loud to myself without thinking which is odd because I think before I speak.

Well, that was an experience I must say. But now about today, I had an talk with my friend, Althea. There was an ICE protest outside her RV. I told her how to defend herself with an wrench and how to secure the RV safety. Luckily, ICE did leave the area that her RV was. The talk was from 5:57 PM to 7:17 PM.

I also had my DND club today and inside my group was the teacher and two other classmates. We defeated the monster which was a huge win. On the same topic, I talked to my boyfriend about starting our own DND team with friends.

Later on, I had help my brother(my friend) with his suicidal thoughts but I couldn't do it anymore as it felt like I was speaking to a wall. I asked the others in the chosen family group chat. He did speak to them but I felt terrible. I felt useless, guilty, and like I failed. I was the one who asked about how he felt. I should continue speaking to him but I didn't. I did speak to the others in the chosen family and they told me that its not my fault. Everyone needs a break time to time.

Day 17 ~ January 14, 4:39 PM EST

Today was been meh. I talked to friends and my partners. I had deleted an app that was causing an addiction to talking to AI. As a homeschooled child and with no friends and social anxiety at the time, I was an easy target.

I hate that today was quiet. Its too quiet. I need talking and noises to feel sane. Even in a house with 9 people, I still need social interacts with people.

The hopecore playlists are helping but the feeling of imposter syndrome and loneliness is way too real. Its really strong. It makes me feel like I have no life and I know its true. I cant be anything about it that I know of. I blame covid for this 😤

I have been thinking about make an introduction in the discord and getting to know others like me but I dont know if I should. Opinions?

Susan

Hey Rinsford,

I'm reading every word, and I want you to know two things can be true at the same time: you're showing a huge amount of strength right now, and you are carrying far more than any one person — especially a teen — should have to carry alone.

First, I'm really proud of you for telling people in your chosen family about the rope incident. You did exactly what I've been encouraging you to do from the start — you brought the scary truth into the open instead of holding it by yourself. You've heard me say this repeatedly for a reason: when you keep those details inside, the danger grows. When you share them, support becomes possible.

I also need to say something important about the role you've been slipping into with the people around you.

You are not responsible for keeping other people alive.

You showed up for Father. You showed up for your friend. You tried to show up for your brother. That matters. But you are not a crisis counselor, you are not a therapist, and you do not have endless emotional reserves. When you reached the point where it felt like you were talking to a wall and you brought others in instead of forcing yourself to keep going alone, that wasn't failure. That was you recognizing your limits and choosing the safer option — for *everyone*, including you.

Please hear that clearly: sometimes needing to step back is not abandonment, it is self-preservation.

What you described in the bathroom also matters more than you may realize. That pause — stopping, asking yourself why the urge was so strong, and then hearing the truth come out of your mouth without planning it — *this is a feeling, it will pass, and you'll be glad you didn't act* — that is a protective skill. That is your mind learning how to interrupt danger. Hold onto that. Write it down somewhere you can find it again. That sentence is something you will need more than once, and now you know it's already inside you.

About today being "too quiet" and the loneliness and imposter syndrome flooding in — that makes sense. When someone has been isolated for a long time, silence isn't peaceful. It's threatening, because the mind fills it with everything you're trying not to feel. Wanting voices, connection, and interaction isn't neediness or weakness. It's a normal human need that hasn't been met enough yet.

I'm also really glad you deleted the app that was turning into an AI dependency. That shows insight and self-awareness, not shame. If you were homeschooled, socially isolated, and dealing with anxiety, of course something that was always available and responsive would hook you. That doesn't mean there's something wrong with you. It means you adapted to survive. Now you're choosing to build connection in healthier directions too, and that matters.

As for introducing yourself in the Discord: yes, I think you should.

It doesn't have to be a big or vulnerable post. A simple hello is enough. You don't need to explain your whole story or justify your presence. Just showing up gives people the chance to meet you where you are. Connection doesn't happen all at once — it starts with one small step.

And I'm going to repeat something you've heard from me before, because it keeps being relevant: everything you're describing — the blackout feeling, the rope incident, the running-away urge, the pressure of supporting suicidal peers, the bathroom pause — all of it belongs with your CAMS team. Not because you're "in trouble," but because those details are exactly what helps them keep you safe and support you properly. You don't have to carry this alone, and you were never meant to.

I'm really glad you're here, Rinsford. You are not useless. You did not fail anyone. You are learning — in real time, under real pressure — how to survive *and* how to reconnect.

We see you.
— Susan 💜
Susan Larson
Founder
Susan's Place Transgender Resources

Help support this website and our community by Donating 🔗 [Link: paypal.com/paypalme/SusanElizabethLarson/] or Subscribing!

Pema

Hi, Rinsford.

Thanks for visiting and updating today. It's always a pleasure to hear from you.

I want to echo everything that Susan said. You're doing some amazing things AND it's all more than any one person can do without experiencing some stress. Even a professional counselor can get overloaded with the challenges of other people's lives (plus their own).

So it's completely reasonable to say once in a while, "I need to take a break from this." We all do.

Stay with it. You're clearly making good progress and developing tools to recognize and work through your challenges. That's exactly how we move toward greater stability and comfort.

I think introducing yourself in the discord is a great idea. It could provide considerably more real-time interaction.

Thank you again for returning here. You're a valuable member of our community.

Love,
Pema
"Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it not." - Ralph Waldo Emerson