So, if I'm ever going to be a writer now (which yes, I still dream about!), it will probably have to be with the aid of some kind of voice recognition software. Which will be weird, because I'll be talking rather than writing, and I'm not sure how well that will work.
In any case, I have a lot to report since my last post! I have undergone some major life changes. Probably the biggest is that a couple months ago, I said goodbye to Ohio after 9 1/2 years and moved to Chicago. I love it! Chicago is an amazing city, and a move is what I had needed for a long time. Rail transit is much more efficient than the buses of Ohio (see next paragraph regarding the other major change). Also, I have come to see how much more Chicago is a big city than what I thought of as the "big city" in Ohio. The former is a true urban environment, while the latter is almost entirely sprawl outside of a narrow downtown corridor that those without much city experience might consider urban.
The other big change is that I no longer own a car. Yep, I'm car-free, as some of us like to say! I gave up my car on the last day of March after a long and grueling debate. While life without a car has had its challenges (probably yucky Midwest weather being the biggest of them), it's also brought some pretty cool financial and health benefits. And it's certainly been much easier in Chicago.
A move was possible in large part because of how versatile my job is. Folks who do what I do are needed all over the country. I was hired less than a month after moving, though it still wasn't as soon as I would have liked, and moving drained much of what I had saved from not having a car.
My financial future is looking brighter though. Leaving employment in Ohio means I can finally touch that retirement account I built up over the last 7 years (and the balance isn't too shabby for someone my age). While I debated long and hard about whether to cash it in or roll it over, I ultimately opted for the former because I need financial stability in my life now before I start worrying about retirement. Financial stability is something I've needed for a long time. I had it briefly last year before squandering it on a car with a transmission that failed not long after I bought it. I will be putting a little less than half into a savings account and then reinvesting the rest for retirement.
While the move has been good for me, I have come to realize (and knew even before I moved) that some things would come with me. The Asperger's/autism and the corresponding loneliness certainly has. I love my new living environment, but it's not all I need for happiness. And honestly, it's been a rough year for me since losing the project last December that I started a couple years ago. There hasn't been much going on in my life outside of work since then, and it's showing. My loneliness and feelings of there not being anyone in the world who can understand me have been a big problem for me this year. The way people are and the way the world is these days have also been bothering me a lot recently. Dwelling on any of those for too long can bring suicidial thoughts pretty quickly for me, so I have to be careful. What I'm working on now is not letting the selfishness of people and the modern world get to me and learning to enjoy life for the gift that it is regardless.
About the same time as I lost the project last December, I learned that my brother passed away unexpectedly. Last I heard, it's still not certain whether he was murdered or it was a hit-and-run. Even after a year and even though I hadn't seen or heard from him in many years before that, I still miss him.
So it's been a challenging year, and I am going to be glad to ring in the new one soon.
Gender/hormone-wise, in recent months I've shifted from E to T and back again after almost a year on E (and the longest period of time). Now it's been a couple months back on E. The shifts don't bother or surprise me as much as they used to - I have accepted it's possible they will be with me for the rest of my life. After all, they've already been around for the last 13 1/2 years! I'll get tired of one hormone and want to go back to the other. And vice-versa.
The good news is that after all these years, I think I may have finally cracked the case. These days the term "bigender" makes the most sense to me when it comes to my own identity. I now recognize there is both a masculine and feminine component
ose components aren't strictly "male" and/or "female." Both sides have a need to be expressed, especially when the other has been dominant for too long. Hence the shifts in hormone preference.
But that isn't all I've figured out. I figured out what it is I want - now if there was only really a way to make it happen.
I also know that I love what E does for me mentally and emotionally. I hate the sex drive and functioning of T. But E - the moods (and I'm getting used to the swings, even if the deep "lows" E can also bring are much less pleasant), the amazing highs and feelings of just utter happiness that E often brings - amazing! The ability to smell for the first time in my life - fantastic! (Even if people don't always smell as pleasant as you'd hope.) Noticing the beauty in so many things such as clothes, colors, jewelry, and more - wonderful! Seeing men in a whole new light - certainly not unpleasant.
I think though that my favorite thing is when I see a woman and think to myself "Wow, she's absolutely beautiful," yet there being nothing sexual involved in that appreciation of beauty at all. A very different kind of feeling I had never known before. It's really hard to explain if you haven't experienced it.
And so, to sum it up, I think I can safely say that I have finally figured out this is what I want - to look like a man yet feel like I do on E.
for that, I'd be in absolute heaven, and I think the shifts would be no more.
Given the medical issues, I suspect that future updates will be infrequent, if they happen at all. So I'll leave with this:
If you asked me whether I regret my castration after all these years (13 1/2 tomorrow, to be exact), what would I say?
I'd say yes, of course I do. If I said anything else, I'd be lying to both you and myself. Yes, there is a not-so-small part of me that regrets it deeply. A part that regrets not being the man I could have been. Even if it had to happen eventually, maybe age 20 was too young. If only I had waited, masculinized more. Maybe the physical dysphoria wouldn't be so bad today. And who knows? Maybe I'd have a child of my own (something I still want but will probably never have).
But that's just one part of me. The other part (who would also be being honest) would say no, of course not. If I hadn't been castrated, I might have never experienced life on the other side. E and its mental and emotional effects are a wonderful thing, and getting to say you've experienced life in two genders is pretty special! Plus, if I hadn't been castrated, I wouldn't have a lot I do today. I wouldn't have gotten to know any of the many amazing people who run this site. It's extremely unlikely I would have moved to Ohio and made the wonderful friends I did there.
And maybe most importantly of all, I would never have met her. That was one of the happiest times of my life, and just for that alone, it was all worth it.
So the answer is both. Yes, I do regret my castration, and no, I don't.
You see, as I've gotten older, I've come to realize that there are no right or wrong decisions in life, no right or wrong paths for our lives to take. There are only decisions we make and paths we take. None is more "right" or "wrong" than any other. Each just has different lessons to teach us. Each just provides us with different opportunities for growth.
And as for regrets? Well, recently I heard something in a podcast that I thought was interesting and probably sums up my thoughts on the matter pretty well. The podcaster said that her goal in life had been to die without regrets. Then she said she was told that isn't possible, that everyone dies with regrets. She said that what she meant was she wanted to die without regret defining her life. And that I think is the key.
So, what about me, at just a few weeks shy of turning 34? If I died tomorrow, how would I judge my life? Well yes, I might regret my unpleasant childhood. Might regret being castrated. Might regret not sticking with that first major in college that might have actually led to a career. Might regret my poor financial decisions. But when you think about it, I've actually led a pretty amazing life! I have travelled overseas and spent 7 weeks traveling parts of my own country. I walked across an entire state. I work a job I love. I moved to different states on a whim not just once but twice (so far!) All of those are things many people never get to do. And then of course I got to experience the deep bond with another human that is love.
As I said above, life is most certainly a gift. We could have been born as anything, but here we are, as humans. As life forms who not only survive but have the amazing ability to consciously comprehend and contemplate the wonderful universe around us. Such a special thing! Don't waste that gift and make the most of it!