Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Social Phobia/anxiety/depression


TassieTiff

Recommended Posts

Hi Folks,

Over the course of my transition (M2F) I have progressively become more social phobic and anxious when away from home. I am reasonably intelligent and realise nearly all phobias are irrational and over time and with support can be overcome and mastered. I have good days and bad days, as we all do, but the good days are now few and far between. I would love to have a support network of friends I could 'lean' on from time to time , but nearly everyone I know has the same or worse psychological problems. Spending so much time on my own I often dwell on whether ditching what was a fairly successful life as a 'pretend male' to be the real me was such a good idea. And yet I would rather be dead than go backwards now I have come this far. Have burnt all the bridges to my past now and painted myself into a corner. Well meaning friends give advice designed to get me out of the rut, but they can't see the world through my eyes.

Social and financial pressures, not to mention chronological age and health issues, are getting to the point that full GRS is starting to look like nothing more than a Dream, rapidly becoming a nightmare. It is 5 years since I was in a relationship of any kind and over three years since any real intimacy. Having just discovered this place maybe now I can find someone I can actually talk to about it as people the least bit conversant in GID issues are virtually non existent in this area. I went and seen a psychiatrist about it and it was no real help.

When I do go out I dress androgynous (Stealth) so as not to draw attention to myself, spend as little time as possible in places that are crowded and do grocery shopping Etc: at times when I know the shopping centres will be dead quiet and I slip in and out as quickly as possible. I thought as time went by it would become easier...I was wrong.

Any advice would be appreciated

Hobart is the capital city of Tasmania but is a small town really about 200K within a 50 kilometer radius (30 miles for the US readers). there is no Gender support groups. There is no GLBTI 'Scene'.Feedback and comments from the negative people I have interacted with has robbed me of any self confidence I did have at the start of this journey. Crazy part is... as a MALE I had more front than a MACK truck. That is all history, water under the bridge.

I get scared, lonely and emotional all the time and wonder is this as good as it gets? If so, Do I really want to continue living like this... IF at ALL...

Sorry this post is a Downer

I have no alternative venue to 'vent' and let off steam

Not sure this thread is in the right section of the forum but no doubt some MOD will move it if it isn't.

Regards, Tiff.

Link to comment

Well it is not an uncommon side effect of transitioning to become even more socially reclusive.

I tend to keep to myself a great deal more now than before but it is not a phobia just a choice, once I have gotten into my Real Life Experience and am out to everyone I will get back out there.

Most people allow themselves to become paranoid about being around people.

We have been able to help a few through this but mostly it requires a good deal of just telling yourself that you can do this and must do this - like when you first decided to transition, you just have to.

Social anxiety is just another phobia and must be dealt with like any other - head on and making yourself aware that it is only fear and not fact.

Nothing will happen to you if you go out among people you might catch a cold but other than that nothing much.

Try thinking of it like that.

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment

Sally,

Sad part is, everything you are saying makes sense and I realise it, but the anxiety is debilitating and feels real. I have to be OUT OF everything before I venture out shopping or paying bills. The shrink I saw about it labeled it Borderline personality disorder...When I have company I am extraverted in public often to the point of being embarrassing. When I am out and about SOLO I hide in the shadows and avoid scrutiny. NO.. it doesn't make sense.... I know it.

Link to comment

Oh yes it does!

I am the same way - alone very shy and in a group I am outspoken and borderline obnoxious - no comments from Dee Jay or Lizzy on that one.

I have been dealing with those same issues for a long time I wish that I could say that they go away but they never do - you just have to make yourself do what you need to do.

It is a struggle every day but it is worth it because when you get home you can be proud of yourself as well as having gotten what you needed.

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest ~Brenda~

Oh Tiff,

Ooooo, I want to HUG you so close. Sweetie, yes, vent and say what is on your mind. Honey, when you feel that no one is around you that you can talk to, remember that you can always talk to us :)

Just know that we all care about you Tiff!!!

Love

Brenda

Link to comment
Guest krisspykriss

I get social anxiety at times. I will be looking pretty and fairly passable and yet I will have difficulty going into stores and such while dressed female. the other day, I was all over Indianapolis in girl mode and was addressed as a female at all times. Not one mean look or giggle that I noticed. I was walking on air I felt so good. So good, I went into a lingerie store and asked to be fitted for my first bra. They were very nice and sweet. I got all the help I needed and more. It was a great day.

So the next day I needed to go shopping for a few winter clothing items and I couldn't force myself to go inside a store. I looked the same. I was just as passable, and yet I couldn't go in. There was no reason for it.

Just the day before I was so excited to go to the next store and see how well I passed. Did people make me? Yes, but to the best of my knowledge it was only ones I interacted with (my voice needs a lot of work still) and they were so nice regardless. I was feeling so good I was planning on going full time in my small rural home town as soon as I got home.

The next day, it was all different. I had no confidence. I was so scared something might happen even though not much of anything negative has happened in a long while in girl mode. I dont think most people make me anymore until we talk. I just sometimes get so paranoid for no reason.

I don't know how common this is, but this has been my life lately. It doesnt make sense and I need to get over it somehow. I just don't know how yet.

Link to comment

Krissy,

That's my Problem too.... Confidence comes and goes... Some days you feel so damned good you wanna get Tarted up and go out and take on the world.... Others you just feel like hiding in a corner some place. and it Hurts....AND it isn't like I started transition yesterday.... I have been doing it in public 7 1/2 years....I'm often left wondering 'is this as good as it gets'? Some times..... Frustration and Attitude just takes over..... AND you say to yourself STUFF-IT.... If they can't accept me as I am... it's there problem not mine.... But the stares and whispers and the giggles in the distance all seem to be pointed your way....

I Have a Full wardrobe full of clothes.... I WANT for nothing... BUT every time I dress to go out... I think to myself.... CAN I get away with 'THAT' where I am going.... AND more often than not, I dress down so as not to attract attention to myself...

My love and best wishes to ALL

Tiff

Link to comment

the way i take it, it is one of the most common phobias to have as a trans person your changing from one social structure to another so social anxiety is bound to happen but interaction is how you fine tune your self so there is no friction between you and the rest of the world

i had it a bit when i first came out i just forced my self to go and do it if i came to a place were i was nervouse or felt like i might get skittish i would sit in my car for a moment smoke and extra cigaret take a deep breath and do it i have found the best way to beat a phobia is to do it first and get the courage after, that way when it confronts you again you can say "hey i already did this once i can do it again !!!" do it and say it,do it and say it til you need no pep talks any more

i have lived so far beyond my comfort zone that i dont even have one any more

Sakura

Link to comment
Guest nymphblossom

Sakura wrote:

i have found the best way to beat a phobia is to do it first and get the courage after...i have lived so far beyond my comfort zone that i dont even have one any more

Sakura, you took the words out of my mouth- I do the exact same thing!

Blossom

Link to comment

Hi Folks,

Over the course of my transition (M2F) I have progressively become more social phobic and anxious when away from home. I am reasonably intelligent and realise nearly all phobias are irrational and over time and with support can be overcome and mastered. I have good days and bad days, as we all do, but the good days are now few and far between. I would love to have a support network of friends I could 'lean' on from time to time , but nearly everyone I know has the same or worse psychological problems. Spending so much time on my own I often dwell on whether ditching what was a fairly successful life as a 'pretend male' to be the real me was such a good idea. And yet I would rather be dead than go backwards now I have come this far. Have burnt all the bridges to my past now and painted myself into a corner. Well meaning friends give advice designed to get me out of the rut, but they can't see the world through my eyes.

Social and financial pressures, not to mention chronological age and health issues, are getting to the point that full GRS is starting to look like nothing more than a Dream, rapidly becoming a nightmare. It is 5 years since I was in a relationship of any kind and over three years since any real intimacy. Having just discovered this place maybe now I can find someone I can actually talk to about it as people the least bit conversant in GID issues are virtually non existent in this area. I went and seen a psychiatrist about it and it was no real help.

When I do go out I dress androgynous (Stealth) so as not to draw attention to myself, spend as little time as possible in places that are crowded and do grocery shopping Etc: at times when I know the shopping centres will be dead quiet and I slip in and out as quickly as possible. I thought as time went by it would become easier...I was wrong.

Any advice would be appreciated

Hobart is the capital city of Tasmania but is a small town really about 200K within a 50 kilometer radius (30 miles for the US readers). there is no Gender support groups. There is no GLBTI 'Scene'.Feedback and comments from the negative people I have interacted with has robbed me of any self confidence I did have at the start of this journey. Crazy part is... as a MALE I had more front than a MACK truck. That is all history, water under the bridge.

I get scared, lonely and emotional all the time and wonder is this as good as it gets? If so, Do I really want to continue living like this... IF at ALL...

Sorry this post is a Downer

I have no alternative venue to 'vent' and let off steam

Not sure this thread is in the right section of the forum but no doubt some MOD will move it if it isn't.

Regards, Tiff.

Hi Tiff, Viv again .

We spoke earlier in a thread I started and I found your advice good. Gee, you are a little"on yer own" there , sorry for your troubles as they say.

Just an idea Tiff but have you ever thought of moving say to a more populated town or city where you can find friendship with women like us?. In the morning I am

going to visit a trans woman friend of mine who is living outside Dublin , I try to visit once a week as she likes the company, thing is she is going to move to our

capitol asap as the life outside the city is too lonely and that aint good for her. At 60 years she says she is not too old to "uproot" as she plans to be around till 90 at

least. Moving can be a big deal I know but if its worth it than I would go for it . Ya never know girl, could be something nice waiting for you in the city. :) Viv.

Link to comment
Guest Anna_Banana
Sally,

Sad part is, everything you are saying makes sense and I realise it, but the anxiety is debilitating and feels real. I have to be OUT OF everything before I venture out shopping or paying bills. The shrink I saw about it labeled it Borderline personality disorder...When I have company I am extraverted in public often to the point of being embarrassing. When I am out and about SOLO I hide in the shadows and avoid scrutiny. NO.. it doesn't make sense.... I know it.

Actually, this is me all the time when I go out in public in girl-mode. I'm so afraid that people will know I'm natally male. Having to talk to people is worse. Cashiers always want to be friendly ("Hi, Welcome to Whatever! How are you?"), but I fear that speaking will be awkward. I have no vocal training so I'm going to sound like the stereotypical transvestite you see in the movies. Plus my mannerisms aren't quite up to par. Years of being trained against my natural grain (I used to be really female as a child, though my parents deny it) have put me in a now awkward position. My ex used to tell me that I looked, to other people, like I was stealing something or preparing to rob a bank or something. This is because I'm looking all around me for people staring at me or making fun of me. Being trans is very difficult and takes a lot of work to get right. Honestly, I feel there should be "rehabilitation" centers everywhere that helps trans people become who they are on the inside. Kind of like going to a Yoga school or a personal trainer for fitness. But alas, I digress.

.Anna

Link to comment

Hi Again Viv,

I sent you a message...... Take a look in your 'box'.... OK... points one at a time in reply to your post here.

I lived in Sydney for 45 years and don't miss it ( 5 Million people there)...I have had friends in Tasmania who have ripped me off financially or alternately weren't entirely honest with me and as a result of that have built an emotional wall around myself . I have PTSD... not everything has gone according to the script down here. As far as intimacy goes... I gave it a try, had a F*** Buddy... wanted more than what was on offer and kicked him to the kerb over 3 years ago, He was a Married guy and I didn't think it was fair of him to make me complicit in her deception and there has been nothing and no-one since... Don't miss that either. I want to finish this journey prior to even considering the acquisition of a S/O. It is all too complicated while the Ambiguity remains.

Read your mail when you get a chance.... AS the forums are not meant for letter writing

Regards, Tiff.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   7 Members, 0 Anonymous, 70 Guests (See full list)

    • Desert Fox
    • VickySGV
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • evy-emaciated
    • Ivy
    • AmandaJoy
    • MaryEllen
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,105
    • Most Online
      8,356

    evy-emaciated
    Newest Member
    evy-emaciated
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. austin_4
      austin_4
      (17 years old)
    2. Britany_Relia
      Britany_Relia
      (39 years old)
    3. Emily S
      Emily S
      (67 years old)
    4. Hoof Arted
      Hoof Arted
      (22 years old)
    5. n3eeko
      n3eeko
  • Posts

    • Adrianna Danielle
      Yes,I hate that     Also finding out I might be father of a 24 year young lady.I had an one night stand with a woman off base when I was in the army.Called this afternoon and said I am possibly the father of her now 24 year old daughter.Told her I will agree with a paternity test that will be done.
    • Ivy
      Yeah.  I like Nebula, that was where I watched it.   I posted the YouTube cause I figured more people could see it.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      We agree on most of this... and the church/state thing is kind of a tangent anyways. Oops. LOL   I think it has long been established that all different kinds of groups have access to public funds. In my opinion, either everybody has access or nobody does. I would prefer "nobody."   Relying on public funds gives the government the power to take it away, and puts that power in the hands of whatever group controls the government at the moment... the news article that is the topic of this thread shows a clear example of that happening.  Organizations trust government at their peril.
    • DonkeySocks
      Fantastic news! Thank you for updating us.
    • Davie
      More info on Abigail Thorne here: https://go.nebula.tv/philosophytube and, Dracula's ex-girlfriend, on Philosophy tube.   "The reason why Nebula is so cheap for what it is, is because there's no upper hierarchical group looking yo skim off the top. Imagine how much cheaper EVERYTHING could be if it was like that for every other service or product; if the money went straight to workers, not up a chain of command until it reached someone who did exactly "jack" to produce what's being sold.
    • Ivy
    • Ivy
      I'm aware that the young US ended up fighting a war with these people, and that phrase was not meant to address Church & state.  But somebody was willing to include it at the time.   I am also aware that your family arrangements would not go over well with most christian nationalists.  But that is kinda where I'm coming from on this.  I believe you and others of us with an unconventional lifestyle should be free to live as we desire - as long as we are not hurting anyone else.  And by "hurting" I don't mean only their feelings.   Using christianity to justify oppression is just wrong.  As is forced conversion, or forced conversion therapy.   Regarding public funds, LGBTQetc people have as much right to them as straight-cis folks.  I'm not arguing that queer people have more rights, just equal rights.
    • Davie
      Even better news:  It turns out for my sister it was cardio not stroke. She’s put on new blood thinner and sent home. False alarm! Yay.
    • JenniferB
      Things have changed since I've been on HRT for about 15 years. The consequence is I am not so concerned about how I present all the time.  I wear t-shirts a lot. I am pragmatic in how I shop. No, I don't want to look male, but will buy some male clothing because it fits. I am tall and built like a football linebacker, so buying women's clothes that fit can be difficult. For one I have no problem buying men's sneakers if they can pass as unisex. I wear size 12-13 women's shoes. And that can be hard to find. And, I don't like wearing slacks without pockets. I use pockets for work.    I've learned to be pragmatic. I dress up when I want to go out in public, and not so much at work. I do have a favorite blouse that accentuates the girls. And one blue striped blouse where I wear a cami top.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      https://www.patheos.com/blogs/danthropology/2016/05/secularists-please-stop-quoting-the-treaty-of-tripoli/   ^^^ an interesting piece about the treaty, written by an atheist.   I totally understand why the Christian nationalist stuff makes people uncomfortable. For me, it is uncomfortable in a different way, as modern Christian nationalism is not nearly as "generic" as the views of the Founders.  Its specifically Evangelical.  I'm in a plural marriage, so definitely not approved of.    I believe the intent of the Founders was to uhold generic Christian ideas... "in God we trust" and "there's a God who created the world and He wrote ten commandments for us" sort of stuff.  Nothing beyond that, nothing specific enough to use against folks.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Free?!?!  That's insane.  I can understand perhaps mistaking somebody's well equipped garage as a business, but demanding free work is ridiculous.   My GF once remarked that while few things in life are free, butt-kickings are an exception. She offers those free-of-charge, to any who ask. A little charity helps the world go round 🤣
    • Ivy
      I had a CDL when I was working for the city.  But I let it go when I retired.  I couldn't justify paying so much just to drive myself around.
    • Ivy
      While I'm sure the "Founders" had the 30 years war, etc. on their minds, they didn't write the constitution as considering only Christian sects. The early colonists (I used the word) did mostly come from areas of "christian culture" but it's hard to reconcile some of their actions with what Christ himself taught.   Christians have a right to their beliefs, but there are a lot of American citizens that do not consider themselves "christian."  I have seen writings where the US was specifically said not to be a "Christian Nation". "The 1797 Treaty of Tripoli that sought to secure America from attacks by the so-called Barbary pirates who were Muslim made a point to say that the United States "is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion.""    It shouldn't be difficult to understand why the "Christian Nationalist" movement makes some of us uncomfortable.  
    • EasyE
    • Adrianna Danielle
      She wanted it done now for free,I hate the Karen's whom are a pain in the butt
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...