Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life
Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 1:18 pm
Danya (imported) wrote: Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:50 am Sometimes small things can bring me a lot of happiness and I'm sure this is the case for many people. I had a party at my place yesterday to celebrate my name change. I live in a relatively small townhouse and there is limited parking. I had wanted to invite more people but there wasn't space.
At the party, I had the sense of having family around me and I found this extremely comforting. The people there, and others from the Archive, my church and work have in a very real way been my family for many months now. Everyone of these folks has been accepting of me for who I am and supportive besides.
I'm so glad that I could join your party in a small way via the telepho
this is a great cause for celebration in your lif
n that I felt connected to people who care about me.Danya (imported) wrote: Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:50 am e. Thank you for inviting me. It was indeed an honor.
It's been a month since I let my two brothers and sister-in-law know about my legal name change. In that time I have heard nothing back, despite my sister-in-law's promise to write a 'sensitive email' in mid-April. I have not heard one word from my younger brother since I first told them that I am transgender, back in mid-February.
Of course, I am still dealing with some grief over my family situation, but that is lessening with time and it has never been overwhelming. In fact, I hardly ever think of my family these days. Anyway, the important thing is, I am moving on with my life very well without their support. Part of the reason I am able to do that is because of the kind words from Archive members.
In a way, I hope I never hear from my family. I have a strong suspicion that the most I could ever get from them would be a grudging tolerance for who I am. For me, that isn't enough. I don't want to be tolerated. To me, this is too much like 'We love you but...'. I don't want to hear words from my middle brother like 'I disapprove of what you are doing in transitioning but I love you anyway'. How very condescending. We could then spend the rest of our lives dancing around the issue of who I really am. I do not want a relationship like that.
What I have been feeling lately is an emptiness from the lack of any real family connectedness. It's not that I want that from my biological family because, realistically, I doubt they will ever be able to provide it. The party was very good for me, then, i
I know it's very hard to live without the people that were supposed to love us all of our lives, people that called themselves family. At a time of such great joy for us who are transsexual, it's hard not to be able to share this joy of finally finding yourself and the real person that has always been within us with them. It's only natural because you love them. As we have discussed before, the sad truth of the whole matter is that we love them more than they love us. All they are capable of offering to us is conditional love...something we don't need and can live without.
It's hard to be us Danya. If I could, I'd give you a big hug right now.
All you can do is live your life without them and for yourself. As I'
very glad I have a family here and elsewhere, made up of caring people who love and accept me just the way I am.EricaAnn (imported) wrote: Tue Apr 22, 2008 4:46 pm ve said before, it's theirfor they will not allow themselves to know the real and beautiful people we really are.
I am
You will always have people here that will love you and accept you for who you are. We are the fortunate ones, the ones who you have shared yourself with, we are the ones that know the real Danya.