Re: Late onset (yet always there)
Posted: Tue Sep 04, 2007 6:55 pm
Hi all,
(NOTE: Hesitated to post this diary entry. Why? Don't want you worrying about me, and it involves arcane issues about TSism and TVism which most people wouldn't worry about anyway. But if I only told you about how good today was without mentioning yesterday, you would get an incomplete picture. So, posting this as an honest/open diary of what transition can be like for some people.)
Today has been great! Was femme for the entire day. Went shopping for clothes, even trying them on in the ladies fitting room. Had lunch and dinner out at fast food places. Used my [somewhat] femme voice for all interactions. Didn't have any uncomfortable encounters (but nor did I use a public restroom). Finished the day with a walk in my neighborhood.
What a difference from yesterday! Had an emotional crash. Even unwrapped an "aftermath of suicide" video I had purchased months ago. (Had gotten it figuring it would help deter me from suicide during low times, so was saving it for a rainy day. Yesterday qualified.) Only had to watch it for a couple of minutes before it had the intended therapeutic effect.
What made yesterday so bad? A combination of things. For one, I keep questioning transition. It is such a radical treatment, so I wonder, "Is it really necessary? Is there another, 'less-invasive' way?" You see, I am an eager-to-please, easy-going, cooperative sort of person. So it's out of character to march off and do something which offends/alienates family (not to mention society in general) and jeopardizes employment.
So, not giving myself fully to transition was one factor in yesterday's emotional crash. Another is a TG friend invited me to a free church dinner. Although the church is friendly toward TGs and I intended to go, found I had to turn the car around. For that's when the emotional crash occurred: too many tears to drive. The rejection I experienced in Florida left too strong a mark.
A third factor was an apparent resurgence of transvestism. First off, keep in mind it is an insult if you call a transsexual a transvestite. To accuse a GID sufferer of dressing for base sexual pleasure...ARGH! All I can say is the accuser hasn't a clue! Second, transvestism is one of the reasons I sought castration (and it worked). But here's where the problem came in: I purchased some nylon underwear and washed it yesterday morning. While setting the underwear out to dry, Mr. Penis saluted the occasion. I thought, "How am I ever going to wear this stuff?" That's NOT why I bought the underwear.
Anyway, it resulted in something of an identity crisis: "Am I really a TV in denial, hiding under the cloak of TSism?" Didn't feel better about it until my evening walk when I realized: "I dress androgynously with the hope that most people will perceive me as female. Why don't I go out femme more often? Because I don't want to be taken for a man in women's clothing. If I were TV, dressing would provide its own reward. But dressing is nothing for me; being perceived as the right gender is everything." (Sorry if my thinking is a bit convoluted, but it does makes sense to this TS.)
Today was a big improvement over yesterday. Got back on the proverbial horse and took control of my transition by having an all-femme day. Something which helped enourage is I may have "found my voice." First voice was too much like Julia Child. The second was a highly-resonant androgynous voice. This third voice was the first to gain approval from others.
Terri
(NOTE: Hesitated to post this diary entry. Why? Don't want you worrying about me, and it involves arcane issues about TSism and TVism which most people wouldn't worry about anyway. But if I only told you about how good today was without mentioning yesterday, you would get an incomplete picture. So, posting this as an honest/open diary of what transition can be like for some people.)
Today has been great! Was femme for the entire day. Went shopping for clothes, even trying them on in the ladies fitting room. Had lunch and dinner out at fast food places. Used my [somewhat] femme voice for all interactions. Didn't have any uncomfortable encounters (but nor did I use a public restroom). Finished the day with a walk in my neighborhood.
What a difference from yesterday! Had an emotional crash. Even unwrapped an "aftermath of suicide" video I had purchased months ago. (Had gotten it figuring it would help deter me from suicide during low times, so was saving it for a rainy day. Yesterday qualified.) Only had to watch it for a couple of minutes before it had the intended therapeutic effect.
What made yesterday so bad? A combination of things. For one, I keep questioning transition. It is such a radical treatment, so I wonder, "Is it really necessary? Is there another, 'less-invasive' way?" You see, I am an eager-to-please, easy-going, cooperative sort of person. So it's out of character to march off and do something which offends/alienates family (not to mention society in general) and jeopardizes employment.
So, not giving myself fully to transition was one factor in yesterday's emotional crash. Another is a TG friend invited me to a free church dinner. Although the church is friendly toward TGs and I intended to go, found I had to turn the car around. For that's when the emotional crash occurred: too many tears to drive. The rejection I experienced in Florida left too strong a mark.
A third factor was an apparent resurgence of transvestism. First off, keep in mind it is an insult if you call a transsexual a transvestite. To accuse a GID sufferer of dressing for base sexual pleasure...ARGH! All I can say is the accuser hasn't a clue! Second, transvestism is one of the reasons I sought castration (and it worked). But here's where the problem came in: I purchased some nylon underwear and washed it yesterday morning. While setting the underwear out to dry, Mr. Penis saluted the occasion. I thought, "How am I ever going to wear this stuff?" That's NOT why I bought the underwear.
Anyway, it resulted in something of an identity crisis: "Am I really a TV in denial, hiding under the cloak of TSism?" Didn't feel better about it until my evening walk when I realized: "I dress androgynously with the hope that most people will perceive me as female. Why don't I go out femme more often? Because I don't want to be taken for a man in women's clothing. If I were TV, dressing would provide its own reward. But dressing is nothing for me; being perceived as the right gender is everything." (Sorry if my thinking is a bit convoluted, but it does makes sense to this TS.)
Today was a big improvement over yesterday. Got back on the proverbial horse and took control of my transition by having an all-femme day. Something which helped enourage is I may have "found my voice." First voice was too much like Julia Child. The second was a highly-resonant androgynous voice. This third voice was the first to gain approval from others.
Terri