The thing that DID it.

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I have frequently heard trans folk say that they felt that stress had a roll in their final decision to actually "come out", do it, get cut, and all that. I can distinctly remember the very day and minute that I finally threw the towel in, though my "comming out" and final decision did not come for a while.

Would any of you care to share that moment with us?

Khadija

Comments

Knowledge

For me, I was totally ignorant of what was possible. I'd never heard of transexual or transgender or SRS or any of it (I'd probably heard the term 'sex change' at some point, but only in a negative context). I finally went looking online for information, thinking that maybe, some day, I might be able to do something. When I found out about everything there was no question of what I was, but I didn't think I'd be able to pass. Then I found out about facial feminization surgery and that was that (I didn't end up needing it, thankfully, but I'd still like to have it done someday). I didn't have to decide anything, I knew instantly that I was going all the way.

I think stress had something to do with why I went looking when I did, but it's hard to say. I didn't come out right away, either, because I wanted to be as far along as possible before I did in case the reaction was bad.

"But it is also tradition that times *must* and always do change, my friend." - Eddie Murphy, Coming To America


"But it is also tradition that times *must* and always do change, my friend." - Eddie Murphy, Coming To America

Makes me laugh (at myself)

Way back in the days of Feminet BBS, I thought those "purple football shaped pills" were yet another fantasy story device... SRS, RLT? all fantasies..who knew? Thank the Gods for the internet, now kids can get way more information than they ever wanted in just a few keystrokes. The upside as well is there are places like this that through stories they can get an idea what is possible, hopefully they read enough of them to see that there are positive outcomes, we do survive the crisis and life does get better.

It was stress for me.

I was unemployed at the time and had virtually no money left. Thankfully my best friend and room mate was picking up what I could not. Most days I would wake up and I couldn't decide who I was going to be that day, him or her, and I spent most of the day agonizing about who to be.

One day I had to be my true self. It also happened to be a federal election day. So here I am walking in as a woman and all my ID, my voter registration card were in my male name. I think the poor old lady who had the misfortune of trying to help me must have had a mental breakdown as she never said a word. She just didn't get what I was trying to explain to her. Fortunately the other woman at the registration table was a few years younger and more capable of handling the contradiction in front of her. Thankfully I got to have my vote that day.

It was because of that incident that I finally said enough indecision. From that day forward with few exceptions I was me. No more pretending to be a male. It was a few months after making the decision that I finally found work again.

So yes stress and the situation with that old lady were what pushed me to be me.

Arwen

Funny that

I finally full-timed under job stress circumstances also. Weird since being unemployed and just about running out on unemployment insurance and looking for a job while going full-time and needing references to support me - it would seem it was the wrong time to go full-time. But I did. And I did it on my 2nd company I interviewed with a LOT of support from my former boss when I almost botched one of my interviews - and with only about a month left on my unemployment insurance - which had already been extended to nine months by the state I lived in. And I was on the verge of suicide due to all the stress.

I was however ready to go since I had finished electrolysis, have been 3 years on hormones and had finally mastered my voice barely 6 months before I got laid off so I was able to handle the phone interview that got me the real interviews. I also matched their job requirements to the letter. I was the perfect match so they were willing to relocate me 3 states away to where I still live after nearly 20 years. Finally, I had very little credit card debt so I was able to bridge my finances for a month or two.

There are other things too that happened to make it possible but I will not go into it. A lot of planning made my transition possible but at the critical moment I sincerely believe I succeeded because either I was the luckiest woman in this world or more likely the deity had taken pity upon me and protected me when I needed it most. What happened after I moved down here is another story but how many miracles does one expect in life ?

Kim

What made me?

I first partially came out - back in '87, but circumstances caused me to "pull back" and continue to pretend to be a guy...

Things gradually got worse over the intervening years. I would periodically "suppress" this side of me. About a year and a half ago, I came to the conclusion that I either needed to come out to my wife - in a controlled way, or it might just "come out" at some point and explode. I couldn't find a "good time" (as a few friends can attest). Last summer, got a medical diagnosis I'd rather have not known about - and then got a cancer scare (turned out to be a bad spot on the x-ray film)... But the two combined to tell me I NEEDED to do something NOW. Well, now took a few months, and I actually came out to a cousin before I did my wife... And that required a little help from another friend (At the time my cousin was REALLY busy, so the friend clued her in that I needed to chat). Coming out to my wife was the hardest thing I've ever done, and continuing to be not just tolerated but to be accepted and loved anyway has been WONDERFUL!

So, was there something that "pushed" me over into coming out? I guess so. But, it was more a long series of things, and one finally "broke the camel's back" as the saying goes.

I'm now moving forward, slowly but surely. We expect a transition is in my future. Surgery? Who knows what/when. Circumstances and finances will govern that.

Annette

The decisive moment

I've related in my blog here more or less how I got to the point of accepting who and what I was a few years back, but hadn't at that time determined what I could or would do about it. Oh, I knew where I wished I could go, where I'd dreamed of going since even before I found out (at age 11) that it was actually more or less possible. But I had a relationship I wanted to preserve as badly as I wanted the opportunity to be myself, and having stupidly gotten myself into a position where the two looked to be mutually exclusive, was looking for the balance point.

"The Moment" came for me when my wife finally let me know that for her there was no such point--no meaningful compromise would be acceptable. It came when I pressed her in couples counseling to support me in coming out to the kids, and she announced that if we were going to tell them that, then we were also going to tell them we were getting divorced.

It took me a while to realize it, but with that ultimatum, my last internal obstacle to following my lifelong dream had disappeared. It's been four months since that day, I've now been living full-time for a month or two (depending on how you count it), I've legally changed my name, and tomorrow I will finally have my ducks in a row to apply to have the gender marker changed on my driver license. And in spite of six months unemployed, at the limit of my credit, and being in the throes of a divorce that keeps threatening to get messy, I've never been happier.

I knew 'transition',

I knew 'transition', counseling, hormonal therapy, surgery was possible but I also knew I had way too much to lose, a wonderful spouse, children. Add to that, a career as both a RN (Registered Nurse) and software developer. I have 2 degrees, 1 in Nursing the other in ComSci. So much to lose.

Eventually, even my wife said that I needed to 'talk with someone' about my 'problems'. It took me a while longer to admit that I couldn't deal with 'it' by myself. I couldn't keep holding 'it' in, trying to ignore 'it'. I went to several counselors who were blunt in saying that I, my wife and my family, had to come to grips with the issues. The even trying to contain them or ignore them would make the issues, and me, worse. I eventually found one that would try to help me contain the growing pressure. The counselor/therapist I went to is a PhD in Clinical Psych with significant experience in working with people who have gender issues. IMO, the psychologist worked very diligently and honestly to try to help me control this 'beast', this 'pressure'.

I'll jump forward a bit. For medication reasons, I was also seeing a psychiatrist but the psychologist was my primary therapist. As I found out later, the psychiatrist thought I was suicidal and talked with the psychologist about involuntary committal for my own safety. The psychologist, while very concerned about my state, thought she could 'get my through it'. Obviously, she was right, since I'm writing this.

Not that I told the psychologist at the time, but I decided that I, 'it', was hopeless. I had nothing to lose since I was going to be dead or lose everything. So I reluctantly agreed to start hormonal therapy. Again, without telling my therapist, I would give the medication therapy, spironolactone and estrogen, 90 days. At the end of 90 days, I was going to be better or dead.

And so it went, fighting "tooth and nail" as the saying goes. I fought 'it' every step. It was about 3 years after beginning HRT, and MANY sessions with the psychologist, some sessions between the psychologist and my wife. Both myself and my spouse very reluctantly decided that complete transition, aka surgery, was necessary.

My spouse even went with me for surgery. We even went a week early and made a vacation out of it. That was over 5 years ago.

I am incredibly fortunate! We are still married though a few people try to argue that. If I even bother to reply, I tell them that I can show them a valid marriage license and ask them if they can show a divorce or annulment document or where one of us has died. :) At that point, I typically walk away.

Our children still come to visit, in the same house they grew up in where we've lived for 27 years. And we go to visit them. Our daughter has 5 children of her own now.

I'm still with the same company where I worked before transitioning. The company has added gender identity and gender expression to the corporate diversity policy. Two more people have transitioned since then. One of them went full-time a week ago, July 1st.

It's been a wild ride. One that I wouldn't recommend to anyone. IMO, It's something a person does because they "have" to. There is no other choice.

Everyone, take care of yourselves!

hugs,
Brenda

I gave up hiding when

I discovered the internet. I shared my history many times with many TSes and found that my history was earily similar to a great many people. This reduced my doubt dramatically. With their encouragement I went to my family doctor... it was like taking a rib spreader and baring my ugly self to him. My chest literally ached for days after. I didn't transition because it would cost more than I had. A Transophile (person who is sexually attracted to trans people) said if money is all that is stopping you... how much do you need. I told him. He sent a cheque which didn't bounce and I transitioned. I knew I could NEVER EVER go back. (Cost = $290 to change my name and IDs, and $80 for new glasses, and the rest on a work outfits til payday).

Funny thing... Two weeks after I transitioned... I experience a cramping pain in my groin.. when my supervisor at work asked what was wrong...I groaned..."Women's Issues." He let me go home.

Nobody.

My Decision

I had crossdressed since I was ten, but I won't go into childhood stuff. I basically married the first womyn I had sex with. I had other partners, but no one wanted me except Axxx. After living together and apart and visiting she said she had pressure from her parents to get engaged or leave me, etc. I looked into the future and didn't want to be alone and I had no other prospects (or much self esteem) so we got engaged; married in '74. She caught me dressing in her clothes in '77. I felt terrible and suicidal and went to see a pshrink. I got on antidepressants. I told A that I just dressed cuz I was stressed and depressed and it made me feel better.

I dressed off and on and saw many mental health people. I never wanted to purge, but A made me get rid of stuff I'd collected twice. In '87 I got on Prozac. Finally an antidepressant that worked. I did better at work, got on the technical ladder, felt better about myself and it was midlife transition time. (Actually from young adult to middle age. The time when mid life crises happen.) So, like all kinds of people, not just gender minorities, I felt I had my family and job going well and wanted to do something for me for a change. Not a red sports car. I told A I had tried for years to stop dressing and I couldn't. I was now going to do it and she had to try to change. Soon I was dressing at home, but felt lonely. I'd read some of Virginia Prince's books, which sort of convinced me I was too big to try the TS route, but I did find out about tri-ess. A het crossdressers club/support group.

In '89, after mailing whoever I could think of and waiting many months, I was contacted by the VP of the local tri-ess to be interviewed/screened. She presented as a guy, but had her own long hair and after thinking back on meeting her, I realized she had small breasts. I went to the Jan'90 meeting. The group was supposed to be for het CDs, but the Pres and VP were both TS and beginning to transition. There were also some CDs; guys in bad dresses, horrible wigs standing around and with their guy voices, talking about trucks and football. I didn't want to go near them. I couldn't keep myself away from the TSs and their fairly passible friends. I got to know them and they mentored me a lot. I just sorta slid into it. I stopped cutting my hair. I was overjoyed when I could produce a decent fem voice and pass in public. I could actually go into stores and try on the clothes and shoes I wanted to buy. I saw an experienced gender councilor; she knew my two TS friends. I told her how I felt and she said I sounded like both T and D and they are transitioning. I came as a womyn, first time out during the day; next time as a man, then again as a womyn. She said I looked a lot better as a womyn.

It was just obvious that transitioning was what I wanted. Since I passed just fine and was treated so nicely, my willingness to present as a guy just went away. It was like before, I did it (pretend to be a guy) because i thought I had no other choice. Now that I knew I could live as a womyn, I just couldn't stand pretending to be a guy. I was feeling really vulnerable, I worried that I wasn't passing as a normal guy and I might get beaten or worse if I continued to do that. I had a minor breakdown and was off work about 2 weeks. When I came back I was starting my RLT. I got on hormones 3 months after that. (cart before the horse?) A year after than I had GRS with Biber. During '91 and '92 I felt like I was on a rocketsled ('50's tech); I was changing things and accomplishing goals so fast. That's why I wrote the one poem that I posted here.

Hugs and Bright Blessings,
Renee

Hugs and Bright Blessings,
Renee

Mom? Dad? I'm a predictable stereotype...

I told my parents in a scene something like the following. (I've edited out all the stuff they said. And most of the unimportant stuff. Names, stuttering and shivering in fear have been omitted to protect the innocent.) This was back in the 70s.

----

"Mom, Dad, I flew out to tell you I'm gonna start looking for a doctor and a psychiatrist to maybe change my sex."
-
"Yeah, hormones and maybe surgery and all that. But only if it's safe."
-
"No, I can't just keep dressing up, it's not about the clothes."
-
"I thought it was too important and I thought a letter... well, I *did* write a couple dozen, but I wanted to tell you in person."
-
"I promise to tell you before I do anything really important, okay?"
-
"I dunno. It's pretty confusing but I'm not really seeing anyone right now, but I'm probably a lesbian... so, yeah, I'm gay. Or will be."
-
"I already told work, my boss and friends anyway. He's good with it."
-
"Yeah, electrolysis. I've been going for all this year. Neat, hunh?"
-
"No, I'll call (my older sister) and she'll tell everyone..."

----

I was (and am) very lucky in life: I have parents who'd only ever been negative about my gender expression when I endangered myself (my dad was a cop) or when I made my sisters mad by borrowing their clothes (which I hadn't for years, since I moved out to a student residence at age 17).

My parents, close friends and family already knew I'd cross-dressed all my life. I decided to transition physically because I was gradually becoming suicidally unhappy as a male and realized that something had to change. I *didn't* tell my parents that I'd weighed suicide, even if fleetingly.

I trusted that my family wouldn't reject me, and I was right, even though they were more frightened for me than I'd thought. My father mentioned that he knew transsexuals attempted suicide more than most, that he'd seen it, and I had to do what made me happy. In the following months Mom had recurring nightmares about surgery and me being unhappy.

Even trusting their love, telling them was the second most stressful event of my life, the first being the day I thought that dying might be easier than growing more masculine in appearance.

----

Predictable plots aside, that so many opt to tell people about their gender identities in times of personal stress makes a lot of sense to me.

People do the hard, scary, world-destroying stuff when:
a) we have to - there are no other options except dying.
b) we *can* - despite the risks, an opportunity leaps out and screams *DO IT!*
c) we feel so safe and accepted that the hard, scary feelings fade away a little.
Or d) when any or all of a, b or c come together.

Except for choice 'c,' they're all stressful, as hard, scary, world-destroying stuff should be. Risking your family, friends, home and income is what you do when you tell someone you're like the weird people on the talk shows and bad movies... even if you're not.

Even if you trust that you're loved enough.

----

I haven't thought back to that time in years. Thanks.

Michelle

I'm still kind of in the middle...

...of the coming out process.

I typed out a whole great long response to your question, and then realized just how long it was, so I'll post it under my own blog, and if you want to read it, you can look there.

Thank you for asking the question, though, Khadija. I've been wanting to write this down in a semi-organized way for a while, and this was a great excuse (and a distraction from other writing... >.> )

-Liz

-Liz

Successor to the LToC
Formerly known as "momonoimoto"

The thing that did it

Hi Gwen,

What did it for me was relizing that not only was I extremly unhappy with life. But that my family and job were also being affected!! At that time I wrote a poem that kinda says it all.
It is called Different and was published in 1999. Here it is:

“I am different!!

Why?? Because I choose to be who I am not what society dictates!

Men think I have chosen to become a second class citizen.

Women applaud my courage in understanding my true self!

What is this difference??

I have admitted to myself that I am female not male as the doctors declared when I was born.

They chose based on some external visual objects.

I chose because in my heart I have always known!!

I tried their way and it led to dispair and darkness!!

THEN I CHOSE LIFE!!!” Pamela Ann Reed