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!

Do You Ever Forget About It?


Guest AlexanderG

Recommended Posts

Guest AlexanderG

I had a good weekend. Worked hard on an essay. Was mostly at ease with my family (mostly).

& more or less forgot about gender-issues. Except for those moments where I was directly confronted with being a girl and being conceived as a girl.

So there I go: see, I'm fine. I'm not transsexual, I don't need to become a man to be happy.

Or is it that Distraction Does the Trick?

on a sidenote: sorry I've been such a poor reader-responder lately. I guess I'm trying to not think about it, hoping I'll find that hey, I'm good, I was just... being theatrical. blah-blah that sorta thing.

So yeah, sorry.

Link to comment
Guest Anna_Banana

I used to be able to forget. But for some god-awful reason everyone is calling me "Sir" and "Dude" and "Man" these days. Let's not forget the dreaded "Mister." And then of course my mom rattles off male pronouns about me or at me every two seconds.

When everyone starts saying "Ma'am" or "Miss," maybe I can forget again.

.Anna

Link to comment
Guest andreahilton

Yeah, I have forgotten about being a transsexual girl. I think distraction does the trick. Strangely, when I'm at home I forget it so easily, in public I remember it completely and at school I just simply forget it so easily when I get into a topic or just simply chatting to another student or teacher.

My family and strangers make me need my rightful body so badly but students and teachers at school make me just wish I was just a boy and to be able to study hard for the future.

It's extremely strange.

Link to comment

Sleep.

And sometimes even then I'm reminded due to the fact it feels as though an antler had just sprouted from between my legs.

I won't raise too much hell about it here lately though, cause for some blessed reason (knock on wood. Ha! No pun intended) those have been few and far between for a good lil' bit now.

And that's certainly nothin' to complain about.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

We transpeople will always be transpeople I think. My post-op friends say they eventually just forget they were ever anything else but what they are now - but saying that shows they still do remember. GRIN

We have our moments - look to my profile and you can see I am MTF - and then consider what happened - a reverse misreading.

At a certain store the woman came up to me from behind and said, "Can I help you sir?" then when I turned around, 'Err... ma'am?' DELIGHTFUL as I was NOT in female presentstion - just me as I am now. My height had cued her I was one thing, I suppose my face showed her the other. YEAAAAAAA

Lizzy

Link to comment
Guest N. Jane
I think transition is about the only thing that works on a permanent basis.

Well, no, though it becomes a non-issue 95% of the time and it rarely interferes with daily life.

It still pops up when you are getting close to intimacy with a potential partner - how much to tell and when - and it comes up sometimes in a medical situation.

The biggest difference, I think, is that if you HAVE integrated, assimilated, it doesn't bother yu any more because you KNOW who and what you are - you just got there by a different route.

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

I tend to forget about it for long stretches of time anymore since I'm moving along in transition...my mind is at ease and The Dysphoria is at a very low level and I don't distress like I used to knowing that I'm moving in the right diction!

And I REALLY like that anymore....It's the best that I've felt in my life!

LOVE

Donna Jean

Link to comment
Guest julia_d

I don't even think about it any more. It's not relevant to my reality. I'm the girl I always have been.. with a few added extras XD

I swear.. the next person who deliberately calls me sir will need some pretty serious facial surgery before they can go out in public again!

Link to comment
Guest sarah f

I can only hope that I will eventually relate to myself as only a girl. You will always have the memories of your past self though. You can only block it out for so long and then the ugly side will come back out hopefully only for a moment. I am sorry that your family takes jabs at you for how you feel but you keep doing what is right for you not them.

Love,

Sarah F

Link to comment
Guest AshleyRF
Well, no, though it becomes a non-issue 95% of the time and it rarely interferes with daily life.

It still pops up when you are getting close to intimacy with a potential partner - how much to tell and when - and it comes up sometimes in a medical situation.

The biggest difference, I think, is that if you HAVE integrated, assimilated, it doesn't bother yu any more because you KNOW who and what you are - you just got there by a different route.

There are always going to be instances where it comes up, but on a day to day basis, I hardly ever think about it anymore. Sure I know the truth but being transgendered is no longer the number one thing on my brain anymore. It's still lingering back there but it no longer bothers me like it use to. I see myself the way the world sees me... as your average woman. All I know is that now that I'm fully assimilated into my chosen gender identity, I don't have the anxieties or issues I once had with being transgendered. I don't think there is anyway to make the knowledge of our nature go away, but transition sure does seem to make it a far far less important part of ourselves.

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...
Guest Joanna Phipps

I seem to have hit that point of 90%+ acceptance in my gender and I do forget about being trans, until I have to go to the bathroom. Give me a year or so and I wont have that problem either. As far as potential partners goes, for now thats not a problem and maynot be in the futue either (sorry wont say any more than that).

Even after surgery I will still be trans, however nothing short of a DNA scan will be able to tell. I will simply be another postmenopausal woman who happened to have a complete hystorectomy at sometime.

Link to comment

I forget about it every night, which is fantastic. I remember every morning when I have to get up to take a shower. That part's not so great. :(

But there are definitely times I'll go for a couple of hours without thinking about it, just being comfortable being _me_. I find that most of the time when this happens, I'm either having a great time with my friends, or acting more feminine around the house. I think that just knowing that I will transition someday has made it easier to relax and enjoy myself, without letting my gender-angst get in the way. :)

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

I usually forget about it when I'm in public since when I am in public my mind is on other things. The only time my gender issue really bothers me is when I'm alone and my thoughts are left to wreak havoc in my head. Considering I can't do much about my gender issues at the moment I usually tend to drown it out with music or day dreaming.

Link to comment
Guest nymphblossom

Before I started HRT, my gender dysphoria was a life sucking malaise. My medication has been a miracle. The gigantic boulder around my neck is gone. My preoccupation with thoughts of transitioning is gone. I can control my need to express my female self and I feel almost normal again.

Blossom

Link to comment

I used to dwell on it to the point of neglecting everything that I needed to do - I still do sometimes but only when I am alone or I meet a nice person that I would like to have as a friend but in the back of my mind the thought that I should wait and introduce myself later when it would be the real me and not the puppet man.

Do you ever forget?

No, it would require major brain damage to actually forget about 58 years of my life so it will be with me forever but I do hope that the further I go in my transition that it will haunt me less often.

Love ya,

Sally

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   11 Members, 0 Anonymous, 166 Guests (See full list)

    • MaryEllen
    • KathyLauren
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Mmindy
    • VickySGV
    • Ashley0616
    • EasyE
    • LucyF
    • Birdie
    • Karen Carey
    • Jet McCartney
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,083
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Amberoni
    Newest Member
    Amberoni
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Alex2022
      Alex2022
      (20 years old)
    2. cvincent
      cvincent
      (69 years old)
    3. Demorriana
      Demorriana
      (25 years old)
    4. forbiddenforest
      forbiddenforest
      (26 years old)
    5. LoganXB
      LoganXB
  • Posts

    • Ashley0616
      I love that picture!
    • Vidanjali
      Associating LGBTQIA+ with pedophilia or "grooming" is a conspiracy theory as old as the study of psychiatry (mid-19th century) when early "scientists" theorized that homosexuality was caused by childhood trauma of having been molested by older men. Some of us have moved on and become educated since those days, but conspiracy theories have an uncanny staying power...the "power" of ignorance, including the titillation of scandal. There is some psychology about people being attracted to outrage and fear. Life is naturally dynamic and uncertain. Unless you have developed a transcendent mastermind, most people have some level of discomfort with that. Therefore, it is weirdly comforting to target a particular thing as a threat and to make a big fuss about it, whether or not it has any credence. And it is comforting to be one among a mass who are equally outraged about a thing, whether or not the thing is real. It is also boosts the ego to speak with vehement "authority" about a thing that is a known trigger for the masses. Like Vicky said, Dunning-Kruger Effect.   However prominent a movement there is or not of pedophiles claiming that their perversion is a sexuality (I have heard of that, but never as it being a major influence), it is the case that much of the viral spread of disinformation associating LBGTQIA+ with pedophilia is due to online trolls. Surely, there are loads of 'em. But here's just one reported story. https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/posing-gay-men-twitter-troll-goes-viral-attempts-falsely-tie-n954721  
    • Birdie
      Another interesting day at the day-centre....   Another participant called me "sweet cheeks" and we both got reprimanded for inappropriate behavior. 🙄
    • Amberoni
      She stood at the world's edge, awaiting judgment Isolation judged to be an insufficient burden The skies above required a hand, precisely two To keep the heavens high and keep the vaulted sky from crushing you She bent her knee and gritted teeth, awaiting weight Mentally preparing mind and body for the grimmest fate. Her head was bent, the firmament so hard to hold, Her back against the wall and braced against a fall And all that matters is she never ever drop it There she stands.  If they weren't full, her head would be in her hands. Heroes they came, from far and from wide to gawk at the girl who held up the sky.
    • Jet McCartney
      This is a lovely look for you!
    • VickySGV
      Lets get this topic back on track folks.  Please spell out your acronyms for your specific meaning of the letter combinations and then re-read your own typing before hitting the send button.  We are here to be supporting each other and not stomping on someone's last nerve.  In the past we have used our DWF (Dirty Word Filter) to interpret certain acronyms and then the members were begging us to delete the posts for them one or two leaving with injured feelings.  Community Rules 7 (about posts being in clear English and Rule 8 (being suitable for people under 18) can come into play here. Thank you.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I could be described, I suppose, as a RWNJ.   A little stereotyping seems to be going on.  Don't complain about Trans stereotypes if you turn around and stereotype others.  A lot of RWNJs are actually decent people and get called that by people who pick up on one or two alleged beliefs.  I would rather single out influential individuals of whatever camp and call them to correction.   Trans folk are a small minority, even as small minorities go.  There are probably a lot more RWNJs running around than there are trans folk.
    • Ivy
    • Ivy
      They cut a lot of trees here as well.  A lot of them toward the coast end up chipped up and sent to Europe to burn in power plants.  That bothers me, seems like a dumb idea.
    • Ivy
      Most likely.   Unfortunately this was expected.  I expect it will be the norm in any GOP controlled state that hasn't already done it.  So much effort expended against so few.  I certainly haven't seen my area being overrun by trans kids.   And yeah, I fully expect them to go after my HRT next. I think those that are railing against us are much more dangerous than some non-binary high school sophomore.
    • April Marie
      Her name is Sunny and she is so much fun. But, as you said @KymmieL, it is a challenge with a new puppy. Thankfully our 13 year old Lab is taking the addition in stride and being supremely tolerant.  
    • Ivy
      It should be the league's business whether it allows trans women to play, not the park's.   (They seem to be inclusive - good on them)
    • Mirrabooka
      Sticking my neck out here, but that's what I see the RWNJ's doing all the time! They always need someone or something to "fight". Everything is a contest to them; there's always a battle to be had, an opponent to defeat, a dragon to slay, then another, and another.    *Sigh* if only they'd put their energy into working with people instead of against them.
    • Charlize
      I think i became much more emotional overall.  Perhaps because use a topical E i haven't had the swings that some folks feel but i can laugh  and cry so much easier, sometimes over situations i would never have seen before.  Perhaps my age has something to do with it, but i am also much more peaceful and accepting of the storm life keeps presenting.   Hugs,   Charlize 
    • Mirrabooka
      I think the interpretation of the question is always going to provide a wide array of answers. Do I have a rich inner life? Yes! Why? Good question!   Circumstances often dictate how we feel within ourselves. I don't have to deal with work anymore and we've been jus' cruzin ever since. I don't have to fix anything, literal or otherwise. My wife and I live a relatively simple life and we are true partners, but deep inside, I'm not answerable to anyone except myself. So, how's that going? Well, since I came out to myself, which happened before I stopped working, I have felt an inner glow that was never apparent before. It is permanent now and it sustains me. How? Effed if I know! All I know is that even if I have down days, and there certainly have been a few, my heart, mind and soul are still smiling. I think it comes from a realization that I am finally happy just to be me.     
  • 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...