Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

In about another week it will be two months since I started estrogen 'therapy'. I mentioned sometime in the last two weeks or so (I am too calm to want to check the exact date!) that I am feeling really calm now. I mean super calm most of the time. It's amazing that I can get my work at the office done. 😄 That, fortunately, is not a problem. I think I may be getting more accomplished because I just go ahead and get things done rather than get tense about being overloaded.

It may not be long now before I can better answer MrT's earlier
Danya (imported) wrote: Fri Jul 11, 2008 8:03 pm questions about what it feels like to be
a transsexual woman. Not only do I feel calm but I am getting much more emotional. Somehow, I feel more feminine and vulnerable. I enjoy this but it can be a bit of a double-edged sword.

Earlier in the evening I thought I was going to cry because I am not beautiful enough. 😄 Really, a lot of emotions were coming out and some of that was tied in various ways to how I look. I was never so concerned about my looks as a man.

I can imagine some of you are thinking something similar to 'get over it, honey, we've all got problems'. :) These feelings are so new to me, though, I am not yet good at handling them. I need my mommy to hold me and tell me I am fine just the way I am. :D
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

Transitioning is truly the biggest opportunity in my life. For the first time, I feel fully engaged with other people and the world. I feel part of life around me.

I have always known myself well with the exception of burying who I truly am for so long. That is a a quite a significant exception. This is what enabled me in many ways, though, to understand myself so thoroughly. I never fit in so I spent my time learning who I was in just about every way but the 'exception'.

Now that I am so open to others I am vulnerable in ways I never before permitted. I never allowed anyone entirely into my life before and in a way that was not possible no matter how much I wanted it or tried. I was playing out a part that never fit so I could not be truly open.

So now people enter my life in various new ways. I have grown to really care about some of them. I value everyone who touches my life even if they do no more than recognize me for who I am.

I took a good friend out to see 'Dark Knight' after work. We had not seen each other in several weeks so it was good to have a little chance to talk face-to-face before the movie. It may be that the movie got to me. Specifically Heath Ledger's superb portrayal of the Joker. Heath was a young man who never seemed very confident in his own abilities despite mounting success as an actor. Yes, I think this is what got to me.

That and the fact that I feel like I have finally arrived in life to a place it would have been so fine to have reached decades ago. There is a keen awareness, too, of the parental nurturing I never received and could not receive because my parents could not see me. What they saw was the creation I became to please them and even that was not enough. I never had much faith in my own abilities no matter how much I succeeded in different areas.

My own accomplishments as a child often seemed unrecognized or could elicit surprised responses. Every child needs positive parental feedback and to feel confident of the parents' love. Each child has different strengths. I was strong in academics and pathetic in sports. When I told my father I had gotten the highest SAT scores in my high school class, his response was "I didn't think you would do well." That was it. There was nothing like "hey, that's wonderful and congratulations."

I know my parents did the best job they could given their own backgrounds. I do not want it to sound like we never had fun times together. That would not be true. Long before they died I accepted them for who they were and loved them. I told them I loved them and I hugged them every time we visited. Doing that was a heart felt gift to them that also helped me. Yet the end result of our lives together is that I was emotionally abandoned. Tonight I am keenly feeling that.

As I drove home from the movie, I was in tears. I have arrived at last to a genuine life but I feel like there is no one there to welcome me into it. This is not to belittle the wonderful support of folks and friends on the Archive or in my non-virtual life. What I feel is a lack of a special someone who wants to grab me in his arms and love me. To finally be appreciated and understood by one person who will finally see who I really am.

Tonight I have felt like a child again who is looking for validation and emotional nurturing. I had not yet arrived home when I was sobbing out loud 'there is no one there' repeatedly.

This is where I am newly vulnerable and at risk. I have opened myself up in new ways and this has let in new feelings. In a way, the journey I have just started seems like dangerous ground. Before, I lived a life walled off from others in many ways. That felt safe even though I was never entirely comfortable and not at all happy. No one could hurt me.

Now it is very different and I long for many things. Experiences with people as my true self and perhaps someday a special someone in my life. Can I ever recover the parts of life I have missed along the way? No, that will not be possible and I grieve. Will the future hold something much better? Almost certainly it will be much better. So far it has been more than I could have hoped. Will it be enough to fill this new emptiness I feel, though, because I have opened myself to new possibilities that are as yet unrealized? I do not know the answer but I am hopeful. I am a little frightened that there will still be no one truly central in my life, a significant other, who will get to know and love me for who I am. Someone that I can know and love in return. That is the risk I have to take, though, to be myself. I could still remain happy and live a relatively isolated life. I know, though, that I will be so very disappointed if I am not in the end fully understood and loved.

Tonight, I feel that nothing I have experienced or anything I have achieved before compares to the magnitude of this opportunity. Nothing else has carried the danger of such disappointment, either.

As I have written before, I view some of my posts as my personal journal. That is why I have written this tonight. It has helped and I feel better already. Life is truly good and I will be fortunate whatever else may happen along the way.
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

I am doing very well. Looking back at my last post from Friday, I wonder if the estrogen I have been on for two months was contributing to my strong emotional reactions. On the other hand, I have always been an emotional person. That is what has made it possible to connect with people through my piano and organ music.

In about ten days, I meet with my HRT doctor. She will have my latest blood work results in by then and I am very hopeful we can then double the amount of estrogen I take. Just in time for the Midwest MoM! :) I never properly celebrated my new birthday of May 19, the day I transitioned at work. A higher dosage of estrogen will be a celebration.

Much of the weekend I have been stuck in the house because I haven't been feeling well. By late this morning, I had enough of that. So I got dressed and nicely made up to go out for some groceries and to pick up some printer ink.

At Best Buy, I got the ink but my attention was diverted by the cameras. They even carried some of the less expensive Nikon digital SLR cameras which surprised me. What really caught my eye was a zoom lens with vibration reduction. I was content to look. Well, I may have actually drooled a bit, too, but I still managed to walk on by. 😄

Just for fun, I also stopped to look at several of the Canon point and shoot cameras. At that display, a delightful young man with dazzling white teeth, a beautiful smile, gorgeous wavy hair - well, he asked me what my name was and then introduced himself. That was the beginning of a very nice conversation on photography.

Today, I'll spend more time looking for online teaching and tutoring positions. Much of the afternoon I will work on my still life photography skills to create stock photos.
twaddler (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by twaddler (imported) »

"
Danya (imported) wrote: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:27 am At Best Buy, I got the ink but my attention was diverted by the cameras.
"

I always love to drool over the the camera section there. :D I must try them all! :O

BTW: camera pron (http://journal.jpfast.net/364854.html?N ... 0-unboxing) (I want one!).
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

"
Danya (imported) wrote: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:27 am At Best Buy, I got the ink bu
twaddler (imported) wrote: Mon Jul 28, 2008 11:19 am t my attention was diverted by the cameras.
"

I always love to drool over the the camera section there. :D I must try them all! :O

BTW: camera pron (http://journal.jpfas
t.net/364854.html?Nikon-D700-unboxing) (I want one!).

Ah, yes, the just released Nikon D700. It is exciting because it goes back to using the older, larger sensor with the FX format. Very expensive, though, and most of my Nikkor lenses are optimized for the prevailing DX format used on somewhat less expensive, but still costly, DX DSLR's.

Maybe the price of the D300 will drop, though, as the D700 has come out. The D300 is a very fine, somewhat pricey but very capable camera. I have been sorely tempted by the D300. It is inherently less noisy than the D200 I have. In addition, its CMOS 12.3 megapixel sensor would allow me to sell photos that could command 50% more than the pictures I get on the 10 megapixel CCD sensor on my D200. The D200 is still a fine camera. What I have to keep in mind is any decision to get a D300 needs to be based on a clear business need. Then there's the other matter of having sufficient cash!

Clear business need? Can this be me writing this? Holy cow, it is! Amazing. 😄

I had mentioned to tanglog that the lens I had dropped a few weeks ago was a Nikkor 18 - 200 mm with vibration reduction. This is a fine lens and I do not have the money to replace it. Besides, it sounds like Nikon will probably be able to repair it for about 1/7 the cost of buying a new one. This is very good news. I will send it off tomorrow.
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

One of the requirements of the real life test (RLT) is that I legally change my name to a more feminine one than what I've now got. I have held off a bit because I have gotten by nicely without credit cards and my finances have been very tight lately. That situation has improved a little so I am ready to pay hundreds of dollars to do what I need. Besides, I am tired of not being able to get into my safe deposit box, having my IDs showing my old male name and other hassles.

I hope to have my gender changed to female on my license at the same time. This is possible in my state even for those who have not had SRS. The process is involved isn't designed for this, but it works. All I need is for my HRT doctor to sign on the dotted line.... I see her next week, right before MoM!

I may accept a non-binding resolution at the Midwest MoM on a new middle and last name. Their could be exciting prizes as an enticement! 😄 As a friend here has suggested, a new last name need not be one anyone else has likely used. I just say it needs to sounds nice.

A month or so ago, a young woman at work who knows I have transitioned wondered aloud why I would need to change or create a middle name. I already have one, she said! Ah, this is true but it is very masculine. Not good. 😄

Right now, I am deciding if I need a middle name. I haven't put any real effort into thinking of one but if something nice strikes me, I may go with that.

Then there is the last name issue. Do I keep my birth surname or select a new one? I am not really in 'stealth' mode, trying to hide my male history. I may still go with a new last name, though, because I do not have any strong ties to the current one. My parents, aunts, uncles and grandparents are long gone, I am the oldest surviving grandchild, I haven't seen any cousins in decades and my immediate family of two brothers cannot deal with my being different.

I guesstimate a slight possibility that my youngest brother may someday, in the distant future, want to contact me. He has not since I announced my transgender status in mid-February, 2008. This is the brother who has said several times to me 'You raised me.'

My religiously conservative other brother is another matter. I try to look at his situation in a clear way without deluding myself with thoughts of how I would like things to be. Then I accept that he is extremely unlikely to ever change his stated opinion that what I am doing is bizarre and a choice. I seriously doubt he will ever see things differently.

It is not solely his reaction to me as a transsexual woman that I base this on but rather a lifetime of experience. Our relationship has always been strained. Okay, maybe when I was 3 and he was 1 it was not nearly as strained. 😄 I don't know, I cannot remember. By his own words over several decades, he has found it harder to accept me as time goes by. He was beginning to thaw slightly after over 12 years of pondering my announcement that I was gay in late 1995.

I care about my family, including my religiously conservative brother, and I know somewhere in all of this they still care for me in their own ways. As I wrote in an earlier post here, I am not angry with them for not understanding. I have read all kinds of support materials for families with transitioning relatives and I know how difficult this can be. I sent my family much of that information.

In some ways, a transitioning adult can be more of an adjustment for a family than a child. With the adult, there may be decades of experiencing that person in their 'body' gender. For many relatives it can be impossible for them to 'regender' the adult transitioner, to paraphrase Lynn Conway. Should we try to reconnect, it is likely my brothers will hurt me not by intent but because they cannot see who I really am and relate to me in a very new way. They will also be hurt because I cannot even pretend to be who they remember.

With a transsexual or TG child, the parents can certainly (and understandably) have very major adjustment issues. There, though, once the child has accepted a new gender identity the family has a lifetime remaining to get to know that child as he or she really is. There is a long, although unimagined and certainly not sought, future to get to know their child in a new way.

My body and emotions, maybe even the way I think, are all changing. The more time passes before they respond to my notes the more difficult it will be for all of us to reconnect. I will be unable to be who they want and expect and they will be unable to see me for who I really am under the weight of their lifetime experience with me as someone I never really was. That other person is their reality, though, not mine.

In the end, there are many reasons I am not strongly attached to my current last name. Whether I actually choose a new one remains to be seen.
mrt (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by mrt (imported) »

Congrats. And thanks for the incite to the whole SRS or not experience and everything. BTW got my fingers crossed that your "go" for more E2. My limited experience is that Estrogen = emotions. And I think that this is what your meant for.

_____ Ann ______ is a good one but rather common. In my hick family the middle name was always 'Bell' or 'belle" Like Lulu Bell or Anny Bell

No, the boys middle names were not JOEBOB

Yee Ha!
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

mrt (imported) wrote: Thu Jul 31, 2008 1:46 pm Congrats. And thanks for the incite to the whole SRS or not experience and everything. BTW got my fingers crossed that your "go" for more E2. My limited experience is that Estrogen = emotions. And I think that this is what your meant for.

_____ Ann ______ is a good one but rather common. In my hick family the middle name was always 'Bell' or 'belle" Like Lulu Bell or Anny Bell

No, the boys middle names were not JOEBOB

Yee Ha!

Hi MrT,

I looked at my work calendar today and realized my appointment with the HRT doctor is the week after MoM. This is a week later than I thought. The lab work will be done early next week. Meanwhile, I will be out of the estrogen prescription by the weekend with no more refills. Yikes! :)

This morning I called the pharmacy to get another prescription for estrogen. I just hope the doctor will go ahead with that before she has the lab results and sees me. I really like the emotions I have on estrogen and hope she will double the dosage when I see her.

I agree, Ann is a good name. There are several reasons why I won't go with that. The chief one is it is my ex-wife's middle name. 😄

As far as SRS goes, if I could just snap my fingers or wave my magic wand and make it all happen I would do that in an instant. After the one-year RLT, of course! The truth is, I think I will want surgery but I am not on a deadline for that to be accomplished. I don't know what will happen along the way, either, as I continue to learn who I am. My feelings will make everything more clear in time.
Danya (imported)
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by Danya (imported) »

My first day as a woman at work, a woman in another department commented that I looked much better as a woman than I ever had as a man. I was very pleased by this. :)

Earlier this week, I mentioned this to someone who had been to the company training that covered, among other things, how to treat a transitioning woman. He was surprised she had said this. Apparently, employees had been instructed in some way not to make 'before' and 'after' appearance comparisons.

Somehow, I don't see the problem here. Now, if this woman had said 'you looked better as a man' I would have felt at least a little slighted. Just the opposite is what happened. When she did not immediately recognize my old male self behind the image of the woman in front of her that first day, though, her honest reaction was 'you look better now'. Where is the problem? I felt affirmed.
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Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life

Post by twaddler (imported) »

"
Danya (imported) wrote: Thu Jul 31, 2008 8:16 pm I looked much better as a woman than I ever had as a man. I was very pleased by this.
"

I think this counts as quite an acceptable compliment. I know it would have made me smile with more than a little squee-ness (though I'm easily squee'd, maybe it's just me :D).
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