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Guest Lauren D.

If anyone here is like me, then you forget all about other issues in your life and you convince yourself that once you sort out your gender identity issues, everything else will fall into place. I have to tell you, IT WON'T! Is there anything you just don't like about yourself? Like bad habits, aspects of your personality? They will still be there no matter what gender you are. So I've realized, that before I, or any of you, can deal with GID, we need to tackle the other issues that face us. The dark things that scream at your window and beat at your door need to be confronted before you can make any major decisions in your life. I've been fighting these things back for the longest time and trying to solve them all by solving my gender identity problems but today, I sat down and organized a list of these problems and how to deal with them. How can we see ourselves clearly is other issues are clouding the mirror?

First, I listed every serious problem that causes me difficulty in my everyday life. I came up with 10 and simplified to 7: Self-esteem issues, anger, obsessive behavior, constant self-evaluation, moping, anti-social attitude, regret, and then I skipped a few lines and wrote G.I.D. in big, bold letters.

On the next page I came up with a time line, telling me what issues can be resolved now, and what needs to wait. I evaluated why the issues needed to wait to make sure there were logical reasons why my problems could not be fixed in the present.

After this I came up with plausible solutions for every issue. I can do things to make myself feel pretty, or smart, or whatever I feel lacking in on a particular day. I can try to see the good in people and not just the negative aspects of their personalities. I can learn to let things go and focus on the world around me to keep those thoughts from creeping back in. I can confront problems from my past that cause me to feel regret. I can stop feeling sorry for myself, and I can put myself out there and be more social.

I am now going to set goals for myself in my notebook every morning that will help me to deal with these things and every evening I will check off what I managed to accomplish and the rest can be carried over to the next day. However, I will never plan on carrying them over to the next day!

I hope you like my little system and maybe some of you can even use it yourselves! What are your goals? Are there still issues in your life that you need to confront? Let's fix these problems, my people! :)

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Guest Elizabeth K

MY GOODNESS

That is such a wonderful post! YOU SEEM TO HAVE HIT ON A MAJOR THING WE EACH NEED TO DO - KNOWING THAT TRANSITIONING AIN'T NEVER GONNA BE THE ANSWER TO A LOT OF BAGGAGE WE CARRY!

Good advice on how to handle that!

Lizzy

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Guest KellyKat

Hey Lauren

How did you become so wise? You are like an old soul, with a young heart.

It took me nearly four decades to come to terms with myself and where I am heading in life.

I'm in a holding pattern for transitioning until certain aspects of my life are back to 'normal'.

But I view these also as tiny steps to reach my goal. For me finally coming to terms with myself was a relief.

I was a pressure cooker before - now I know how to vent. I still have hills and mountains to cross.

But I now try to focus on the future, with a timeline to guide me. For every small step brings me closer to happiness.

Even though my next step - quitting smoking - isn't a immediate concern. It's still something bad for me, and needs addressing.

I'm lightyears from HRT - but need to quit before then - so why not now? I have reduced from 2 packs a day to less than 1.

As each day comes I try to find a little more happiness and move one step closer to me.

Which in turn makes the next even easier. I do have my moments of rough times. But I also have you all to help when I need it.

Luv Kat :)

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Guest Donna Jean
MY GOODNESS

That is such a wonderful post! YOU SEEM TO HAVE HIT ON A MAJOR THING WE EACH NEED TO DO - KNOWING THAT TRANSITIONING AIN'T NEVER GONNA BE THE ANSWER TO A LOT OF BAGGAGE WE CARRY!

Good advice on how to handle that!

Lizzy

Lauren....Lizzy said just what I was going to say....

Transition is not the magic pill to a wonderful life and you totally understand that!

Wonderful...

So many people cannot see it that way and have unrealistic expectations!

You will still be you-----you don't turn into Angeline Jolie.....and have her life...

We become the correct gender/sex but, we drag all of our baggage with us...

Your list is awesome...

You really have a handle on it!

Good on you, Honey!

Love Donna Jean

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Lauren - you get it!

That is what we all have to understand - this changes only our outward appearance - we still have the same issues other than our dysphoria - so we had better fix them along the way.

Love ya,

Sally

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Guest Tamara Ann Valla

So true! No matter how you look, you still have your life to attend to. If you were messed up before SRS and didn't address the issue, then it will still be there after.

Making plans to change the undesirable aspects of one's life are just that, plans. Now is the time to quit smoking, drinking, doing drugs, whatever, and lose that excess weight.

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First off, I agree with the statement that "transitioning won't solve everything," but that really doesn't take into account the comorbidities associated with GID. I don't think that there is a single transsexual out there who hasn't dealt with clinical depression at some point. Some people smoke as a way to deal with it, some eat, some drink, some just implode. Yeah, the little things aren't going to change once someone transitions, but that depression, and the self-hatred, *should* go away, which relieves a bit of pressure from the other issues as well.

Once more, I totally agree that everyone should work on the small things prior to transitioning though. I mean, if you just plain suck at socializing or something, then that ain't going to change by itself.

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Guest Donna Jean
First off, I agree with the statement that "transitioning won't solve everything," but that really doesn't take into account the comorbidities associated with GID. I don't think that there is a single transsexual out there who hasn't dealt with clinical depression at some point. Some people smoke as a way to deal with it, some eat, some drink, some just implode. Yeah, the little things aren't going to change once someone transitions, but that depression, and the self-hatred, *should* go away, which relieves a bit of pressure from the other issues as well.

Once more, I totally agree that everyone should work on the small things prior to transitioning though. I mean, if you just plain suck at socializing or something, then that ain't going to change by itself.

Excellent point, Wry......

When I went to my therapist early on...I told him that I had a ton of issues. But, he told me that the gender dysphoria was most likely at the core and causing so many of the other things like depression, anger, uselessness......

When I accepted myself as Trans...a lot of the other issues cleared up...

Some things can be relieved by easing the dysphoria...

HUGGS!

Donna Jean

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Guest BeckyTG

Fabulous post, Lauren. You have hit on some wisdom there, girl and you understand the way to fix it. It's not as easy as fixing "a thing a day", but you understand to tackle an issue at a time.

Ben Franklin had similar ideas and wrote about his own program of self-improvement in his autobiography.

In many cases, those "other issues" are things that can actually prevent us from solving our gender issues or make them harder to solve.

Let us know how it goes.

Hugs,

Becky

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Guest Yinyang Mist

Wonderful idea! I have a way of thinking that your life is often shaped by the people around you in many ways. In respect to that many of the things about myself I do not like are the result of their ideals and way of being. I am learning to change my environment to suit my mental needs for overall comfort : )

Yes I know, easier said than done..

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Transition doesn't fix all those problems, I agree.

However, considering fixing any of those problems while still dealing with how much you have having to look into the mirror or open your mouth (I particularly hate my voice) would be overwhelming to any trans person. So while those problems don't disappear, it becomes possible to deal with them. Not necessarily easy, but just possible.

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    • benwitz2
      This might be really long so apologies in advance. I (26 y/o AMAB) was raised by two women. I have an older sister. All of my role models growing up were wonderful, mostly gay, women; the few male adults I had in my life were angry and abusive. My grandfather beat and psychologically tormented my mom and her twin brother. Whether that's the reason I'm not sure, but there was never any attempt to get me a male role model through a Big Brother program or anything like that. From a young age I felt intense alienation and shame for being male. When I went through puberty I started experiencing social dysphoria. My mannerisms, worldview, likes, dislikes, access to and depth of emotion, conceptions of friendship, intimacy, and romance, etc.-- all of it was/is squarely on the feminine side of the supposed binary. I have very few masculine aspects of self. I feel like a girl in spirit. This is not about the physical body for me, or it at least it wouldn't be if gender wasn't assigned by sex. In the summer of high school I finally met a man who was a beautiful and positive role model for masculinity, but he got terminally ill after one summer. During that summer I didn't feel any more masculine, but I at least had finally found a man that wasn't thrown by that-- he met me where I was, and treated me like he a son or little brother. I don't know if I experience gender dysphoria. I don't have any acute sense of body dysmorphia, but I don't like being seen or thought of as a man. I feel like I'm always performing or lying. I don't identify with my post-pubescent body. Being a boy was ok, but not a man (apparently Contrapoints said that too?). I don't HATE the hair on my chest. I can appreciate it in a detached way. It makes me feel adult, but I don't feel like a man with hair on his chest, if that makes sense. I don't like the message it sends to the world. And while I don't crave a vagina just for its material existence, I want people to treat me like I have one (breasts I'm still considering). I despise my bass singing voice and could count on my fingers how many times I've used it in my life. Sometimes I wish I were gay so that any of this made any sense. When I was 11 or 12 I had a massive, acute existential crisis that led to me going non verbal for a day, and I've been dissociating ever since with some episodes of depersonalization/derealization. Every day I wake up feeling grief and guilt. I used to pin all this on my moms' separation, but that's starting to feel more and more like a red herring. Recently I have theorized that that has something to do with the beginning of puberty, and that I removed myself from my body when it began to develop. It's very hard for me to "inhabit" my body, and when I do, all I feel is that grief. It's a very odd sensation-- it feels like I used to have this little sister who died when I was a kid. Last night a song from my early childhood brought back what felt like repressed emotions, and I sobbed harder than I have in years. I was racked with grief over a death that never happened of someone I never knew. The obvious trans reading of that is that that little sister was me, and I went into exile when puberty hit. I don't want to transition or be a trans girl-- I want to wake up having been a cis girl this whole time. And to be honest I want to want to be trans so that I can get over this fear and just start transitioning. Others have described their trans awakening as joyful, but all I feel is anger and grief for the way I was born. I am worried that this signals that it's more of an interpersonal schism/learned hatred of being a "man" than it is "genuine" transgenderism. Is it a thing to not want to transition at all, to not want to be transgender, but to want to be just cis of your preferred sex? What if I'm just a really feminine guy, and I'm stuck, as I want to act feminine and be perceived as feminine, but I'm not actually transgender? And if that's true, why do I still want to be transgender? I'm not asking for anyone to tell me whether or not I'm trans, I am just wondering if anyone sees themselves in these experiences.
    • Mikayla2024
      YASSSSSS GIRL!! 🥳🥳🥳   Such a small world, Kathy!! If you live in NS, you’re def a bluenoser in my eyes ⛴️ !! 😊    But thank you so much for the response and advice!! Everyone’s HRT path is def different and I realize that, I’m just thankful that I’m finally starting somewhere and you’re right having the script has totally relieved my dysphoria symptoms even more! It’s like a big weight has been lifted off my shoulders and I can finally start the transitioning process !!   The way I see it, It’s only 4 weeks or 28 days on Spiro then I’ll be on Estrogen pills along with it. So, it’s going to come much sooner than I would’ve liked to realize. I just have to trust the process as I’m her first patient ever to do a full transition from the beginning and the fact that she’s willing to take me on and learn about it at the same time makes me really comfortable and trust in her process. The thing I like about her is that she told me she took an online course on gender affirming care on her own time specifically for me. So I believe she might know a thing or two.    We have a plan to do that for 6 months to 1 year and if everything is good with my labs then it’ll be injections and I hear that alone is enough to suppress T once it’s suppressed by the original regiment. 
    • Betty K
      That’s a brilliant analogy! 
    • VickySGV
      Now that you put it that way, I fully agree on its potential for those putting together educational guidelines.  One of my HMO's medical centers, has a garden plot with ONLY our local plants that are poisonous to human beings as part of our diet or skin absorbtion for teaching purposes.  I can easily the document as that sort of display. 
    • Betty K
      I think there is one (and probably only one) way to positively view the Cass Review: it collects all the most powerful weapons of the “gender critical” movement into one convenient repository, at least as regards gender-affirming care. To me, it’s like a crash course in how to fight GC ideology and advocate for trans kids. I am seeing it as my doctorate in the topic.
    • Vidanjali
      That's great. I hope it's a peaceful time of renewal for you.
    • VickySGV
      They have done so already I am afraid.  Nothing new really, but Cass included views of our home brewed bigots to create this. 
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Met up with a teacher I had back in high school and went good.Was 27 years ago I last saw her after I graduated.Walked into her classroom and we hugged calling me Adrianna.Remembered seeing me as male seeing I was holding something in.Told her I am much happier now and said she noticed it now.Even said seen me as an 18 year old and now as a 45 year old transwoman.Did get to walk down the halls bringing back lots of memories too.Ran into another teacher I had too.She said I changed big time.Told her I go as Adrianna now,transgender on the hormones.Also said she noticed I was unhappy at times and I am much happier now.I did take a picture with both of these two
    • KathyLauren
      Hi, Kayla.   Another Bluenoser!  (Actually, I'm not a real one.  I am a CFA.)    I can't answer your question about the effects of spiro alone.  I started on spiro and estrogen at the same time.  I expect that spiro alone might relieve some dysphoria symptoms, but would not start any physical changes.  But that is just a guess.  The big thing with spiro is to drink enough water, since it is a powerful diuretic.   I started out getting my transition care from the Halifax Sexual Health Centre, but once my hormone regime was stable, I asked my GP if she would be comfortable taking over my prescription.  She was, so I no longer have to do the long commute into the city.   Regards, Kathy
    • MirandaB
      I can't answer your question since my doc's plan didn't start that way, but I do love to quote what she said to me when we began HRT when I see a post like this, "Let's get this party started!"
    • Betty K
      Thanks for listening Vidanjali. And don’t worry, I am now planning two weeks off before I try to write a more in-depth response. I am well aware of how much Cass has been hurting me. 
    • Mikayla2024
      Thank you, Mindy! Such a warm welcome!! I’m excited and honoured to be here !! 😊
    • Ivy
      I don't need that "new math."  My brain does it on its own.
    • Willow
      You know the advantages we had using long division and multiplication, slide rules and log table?  We can look at a result and know right away if something is wrong with it. Kids that have grown up using calculators can hit keystrokes on their calculator but they have no clue that the answer is wrong when there is a factor of ten that they messed up.  Also we learned our basic math tables inside out and upside down. They use this new math that mixes everything up.  
    • Mmindy
      Good afternoon Kayla,   Welcome to Transgender Pulse Forum, I hope you find this place as helpful and fun as I do. There are so many people from all walks of life, and locations in the World. Look around and join in on any threads you find interesting.   Best wishes, stay positive and motivated,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
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