Quote from: Lisa on November 26, 2010, 08:11:58 PM
Yeah, I was being honest with him about that one. Only result of that was he told me I was inexperienced and then the next 3 months pretty much went with him telling me I needed to go out and get a boyfriend. To me that is the wrong approach, I mean you can't just go out and find someone to love, it is going to happen when it happens, not at a scheduled time and place.
It would be silly to force yourself, and not honest to your new boyfriend as well. However, finding someone to ->-bleeped-<- in the gay scene is not  difficult once you know how the scene "works". But if you're not interested in sex, then of course that's no good option for you.
Quote from: Lisa on November 26, 2010, 08:11:58 PM
The question I really hate the most is this one:
So if you get this sex change then are you going to sleep with men or women?
Oh, I got that asked too.Well, my answer was different from yours (and honest, mind you!): "I haven't ever cared yet, I don't think I'll ever care in the future. I have loved both sexes and genders and have ->-bleeped-<-ed both as well, don't see much of a difference there in terms of attraction, so why would that change?" Maybe it's just nasty to deal with a full-blown bisexual and transsexual patient if you're a therapist and need or want clichés to cling to. P*ssed me off as well as I thought - what does it matter??? But from the viewpoint of psychoanalysis, being bisexual means... I don't remenber it in detail, but it was some very weird quasi-esoteric explanation which probably makes bi people highly fascinating for psychoanalysts as we don't fit neatly into the scheme, even less if we're trans. Has something to do with your anal or oedipal or whatever phase being resolved in an unusual way or whatever. Psychoanalysis is just quackery, pseudo-science (see Wikipedia entry), so who cares what exactly they mean by that. Best advice: don't take that for serious. It's no more scientific than astrology. 
Quote from: Layn on November 28, 2010, 05:37:04 PM
my therapist here in germany is all "You gotta do a year RLE before hormones!" too. I didn't go right into the hormone thing, because i didn't want to give the impression that i am there just for the hormones. of course i am, but i'm thinking that makes him more open to what i have to say. However our talks feel very antagonistic, and i really don't know what to talk about. lately a lot of the time no one says anything, which really bothers me because when theres silence i need to fill it. at the beginning he made some odd questions about sexuality, but i think once he got that i'm asexual, he stopped. it scares me that i feel happy and that i feel victorious when he contradicts himself or i feel that i have outsmarted him.
Sure, you haven't been open and out right from the start for what you want from him, so of course that does not help for the relationship. On the other hand, it's interesting how much the non-hormonal 1 year RLE is sooo important in countries where you don't pay the therapist yourself, and in other countries it tends to be much cooler. They seem to be very aware of who pays them... As long as you got the letter, it's fine.
Whatefer, if you have a pseudo-therapeutic relationship with your therapist, best thing to do is: throw pseudo-issues into the sessions which you may work on together and where he may "help" you and feel fine about having been able to help you. I did this with a sick building syndrome of my parents, but based on real toxic substances where they lived, and other stuff as well. Didn't need him for any of that, but it helped us avoid sessions without any talk. That was a good pastime.
Quote from: E on November 28, 2010, 07:44:15 PM
I definitely have an antagonistic relationship with my therapist (who's the kind of therapist to refer to post-transition trans women as "he", and tried to cheer me up by telling a story about how "he" managed to "fool" his partner into thinking "he" was a woman for years). She asked me the question of what sex I am in my sexual fantasies - I told her the truth: Female.
I came in to session 1 with high hopes. I left more depressed than I've ever been in my entire life, and haven't recovered fully since. At this stage, she is my enemy - my nemesis - and I have to defeat her.
So, yeah, I'm right there with you.
Sounds awful, and hope you'll be better soon. I did not have that depressing effect. But dealt with a shrink (psychoanalysis again) for my second letter, and in her writings, she refers to trans people throughout with their gender assigned at birth, even after operation. That was weird. Very weird. But at least I knew where I was with her. You know you deal with a person who does not respect you at all in what you are. I told her that and got a typical semi-esoteric psychoanalytic fuzzy response to my question which I cannot reproduce any more, something with development phases and creative solutions to them. I mean, why don't they send us to astrologists right away? Or people who use a pendulum to figure out if we're trans or not? Both my shrink and she are psychoanalysts, by the way. Very weird.
I hope things will work out fine for you.