Re: Transitioning at work and in all of my life
Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 12:05 pm
mrt (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2009 9:52 am Ha those Kirk and Spock actors are way too young. Cradle robber!
You can calm down, MrT. The actors and I are all consenting adults.
mrt (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2009 9:52 am Well at least we don't have to worry about your sex drive going to pot.![]()
Whatever sex drive I have is in my mind.
mrt (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2009 9:52 am Danya you "blend" very well. The way you look, dress, talk etc are all totally feminine I don't know you any other way so don't continue to be shocked that people accept you for who you are.
I suppose I continue to surprised because, since leaving my job, I am frequently put in social situations that I have not experienced before. Like speaking before a group of over one hundred strangers.
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I appreciate your kind remarks.
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Re the relatives... I've thought long and hard about it. Its still weird to me that they don't get it but maybe its that they are wired to think of you in your pre transition persona and just are not seeing you now enough and thus... Don't get it. And of course some of it might be that they
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see things on TV with over the top drag queens or whatever and think "this" is you when its clearly not.
When I recently wrote to my family, I was very diplomatic but firm. I sent them photos of me at Christmas, so they should know I do not look like a drag queen.
As soon as I locate it, I will place a link here to one of my earlier posts where I quoted Lynn Conway's take on family reactions to relatives who transition between genders. I suspect a lot of her own experience also applies to my family, with the exception that I have never been invited to visit since I transitioned. This is very unusual as they would typically call or write saying they miss should fly to see them.
Here is part of what Lynn Conway wrote about family reactions to transsexual relatives. I quote her at greater length in my post 121 on this thread, on page 9, where I include the URL to her web site:
130&page=9Danya (imported) wrote: Wed Jul 16, 2008 5:06 pm http://www.eunuch.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=13
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"Danya (imported) wrote: Tue May 27, 2008 9:47 am However, TS women must remember it's not their fault that such things happen, nor is it their family members' fault. Instead, these rejections are caused by deep aspects of human nature being acted out under extremely trying circumstances. What we witness is an almost animal-level reaction to something that seems incomprehensible to close family members.
The more successful that a TS woman is in her transition, the more superstitiously emotional and profoundly shocked a reaction she may get from her family. This should not be surprising, being a natural reaction to witnessing one human being disappear forever and a completely different one replace them.
Try to put yourself in their shoes. Think how you would feel if a beloved son or brother of father transitioned. It's a terrible quandary for family members, especially if they didn't have a clue this was coming. Some family members may try hard to still "see the boy" in the transitioner and cling to the past, and thus alienate the new girl. Others willranger" (the transitioner) for making this all happen.mrt (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 30, 2009 9:52 am suddenly "don't know this new person who seems to have killed the boy", feel grief at the loss of their loved one, and feel great anger at the "st
Anyway, glad you had a great Thanksgiving.
How did it go with your surgeon? Did she find a good code to put in that the insurance would accept?
I should find out later this week if the insurance company will approve the orchiectomy.
Hugs,
Danya