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!

Things We Used To Believe As Kids?


Flint

Recommended Posts

Hey, I guess you could say I've been feeling somewhat nostalgic recently. It got me thinking i find it interesting and sometimes funny B):P when hearing other peoples stories about themselves when little. It could be gender related or it might not be gender related at all, I'm asking about stories you remember in general not just gender related. Like those insane beliefs some of us had as a child. :P

When i was younger i used to play out on the street, occasionally one of the war sirens would go off (I'd like to mention there was no war at the time ;) ) when it went off I'd shout to all the other kids playing "EVERYONE HIDE!" so I would go running into the house and I'd sit in the little little hall way looking out of the letter box. I wasn't playing a game or anything, i seriously believed that soldiers who were our enemies would come marching down the street with their guns. After the siren stopped I'd make sure all the kids remained in their hiding places for at least 10 minutes after, because i believed that there could still be enemies about. Then after that 10 minutes I'd leave my hiding place first and go crawling around front gardens checking for the enemies. Then I'd shout "CLEAR" when i was convinced there were no enemies.... B)

Link to comment
Guest Jewel

I remember one of my eldest brother's girlfriends telling me that if I ever kissed my own elbow, even by accident, I'd turn into a girl. Same deal for girls... kissing their own elbow would instantly transform them into a boy. Now being the skeptical science-nerdy six year old, I didn't believe it. And I think it was meant to be some sort of horror story... as in, "Don't ever ever ever let someone trick you into kissing your elbow or you'll change into an icky girl!!" But she gave me the funniest look when she caught me later that day trying to figure out how to contort myself so I could kiss my elbow. :lol:

Link to comment
Guest Flistan

Things I believed in when I was little...

1-Santa, Tooth Fairy, etc... (still do. ^.^)

2-I had the ability to fly

3-I was also psychic and telekinetic

4-I had purple eyes that could change color

5-I could fly

6-I would grow up intersexed

7-I was also part dragon

8-I could give accurate tarot readings with cards from an anime/tv show called Card Captors (I had a copy of the CLOW/book of cards- I was like, in 5th grade)

9-I could make my dad love me and sacrifice his money genuinely if I put myself in danger for that purpose. :/

10-I would become a storyteller(writer/artist) some day. Still working on it! ^.^

Lol.

Link to comment
Guest Flistan

OH YEAH! Funny story. Ugh, I was so gullible... When I was young, my sister and I were going through our closet to clean it and she found one of the sticks to the Chinese yo-yo. She grabbed it and was all "WOOOOW, do you know what this is?!!"

Me: "Um... a stick?"

Sis: "Noooo... this is something really special!"

Me: "What is it?!"

Sis: "It's a... bosomhalter..."

Me: "WOW! A BOSOMHALTER!"

*goes running down hall*

Me: "MOM, GUESS WHAT GUESS WHAT?! WE FOUND A BOSOMHALTER!"

She just cracked up so bad... Lol she told me it meant "bra" in German (bosom and "halter") and I was all... "huh?" >< Lol shortly after that I started wearing one... o.0 I was like... 7. ><

Link to comment
Guest My_Genesis

kinda related to being trans... but i used to think women could just get pregnant randomly. the thought of me being pregnant freaked me out so i was scared to grow up b/c i was so afraid that one day i would just randomly get pregnant.

Link to comment

I had a imaginary friend when I was little if that counts. He had a napolean hat and would watch me play super mario bros. He rocked.

Link to comment
Guest Lizzie McTrucker

Two silly ones. First I thought you could pause your dreams, you know in case you had to get up to use the bathroom in the middle of the night. Secondly I thought if you did pause your dream and took too long to restart it, someone else could fall asleep and take your dream and then you were stuck with theirs.

Link to comment
Guest My_Genesis
I had a imaginary friend when I was little if that counts. He had a napolean hat and would watch me play super mario bros. He rocked.

lol, grover from sesame street was my imaginary friend when I was about 4.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

The wind was caused by the trees moving like fans.

That if you crawled thru a culvert pipe, that you entered another world just like the on the side you just left - but different in some way you would not notice.

That prayer, if done just right, could be answered with a gender change as requested, and God would set it up like nobody noticed, except you.

That the Wonderful World of Disney, the show 'journey to the moon' 1959, was true instead of imaginary.

Lizzy

Link to comment
I had a imaginary friend when I was little if that counts. He had a napolean hat and would watch me play super mario bros. He rocked.

I didn't have imaginary friends till i was 18...... <_<

What? Fred is real! I don't care what you say! :P

But when i was younger i used to have a teddy, who i called Jake. Jake was my son. Yes, that is right. I pretended he was my son. :rolleyes: See i pretended that I'd adopted him and i was now his father. I guess that could be classed as a gender thing too. <_<

Link to comment
Guest again

hopefully parents can reply to this post..........I remember as a child I was convinced that the "the olden days came once a year"--for some reason I thought that once a year everyone turned into characters from the wild west, lol! also, I definitely thought I could fly---I used to have very vivid dreams of taking off from my top bunk in a bedroom with three sisters---once I must have been "sleep flying" as I soared out into the room and crashed to the floor in no time flat (no broken bones)! I used to think that as I walked around the house, I was really being filmed and would end up on TV at some point---this always kept me on my toes.....vivid imaginations are a wonderful thing!

Link to comment
Guest thefireship

I was a hard core Santa believer for many years. It helped that on one particular Christmas, I crawled into bed with my parents at 3am (because I couldn't sleep, DUH). No sooner did I pull the blanket up, and a big hickory nut fell off the tree outside, tap-tap-tapped down the chimney and made a resounding BANG against the tin fireplace blocker at the bottom. To further the 'proof' my parents actually had accidentally both purchased the same big item from my list. One said "From Mom and Dad" the other, of course, "From Santa." I was sold.

I used to believe that if I held my breath just right I could fly like I did in my dreams. I have no idea why holding my breath had anything to do with it though, but boy did I try a lot!

Okay one more silly one. I used to believe that if I "bottled" my sneezes and/or coughs I wouldn't get sick, nor contaminate the kids around me in class. What I did was sneeze or cough in my hands, then mime out putting them in small jars then screwing on the caps. Then, I'd set them beside my desk and made sure the other kids didn't walk into them. c_c I guess it was a halfhearted belief though. I knew I was full of bologna but it was still fun to make the other kids nervous.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

I knew the world was round but i didn't understand how big it is. I thought you COULD dig to China, if you had the right tools and enough time.

Lizzy

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

Oh my goodness...

When I was little I believed that if I was watching a movie and it was interupted by somethin (like supper) and you missed the end, when you died, God would let you see the rest of that movie....

Actually, I'm not too sure that's not how it works!

Donna Jean

Link to comment

I am extremely Naive and Gullible (and you thought I was Sally) so basically anything that I believed as a child, I still do.

With one notable exception - that Danged tooth fairy has become a real capitalist, when I was a child and I lost a tooth, I put it under the pillow and the next morning I had a quarter - a few years ago I broke a tooth and not only did the oral surgeon keep the tooth, I got a bill for over $2000 dollars for the extraction and implant and I bet he got my quarter too!

Teddy Bears are real and they can talk to you, you just have to listen very carefully because they are so shy.

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest Emilio

- Girls turned into boys and boys turned into girls on their tenth birthday.

- My bathroom was haunted by both a little blonde girl and a cranky old woman.

- I'd never grow up.

- I could time travel.

- I was an alien.

- My dad was in the mafia.

- When commercials started up and were suddenly cut off by another commercial, it was because someone cut in line at the tv station.

- The world used to be black and white.

Link to comment
Guest D.V. Faust

-I used to think Freddy Krueger was real (I knew nothing about the movies or his character, just that he was a killer. I didn't even see the first movie until over a year ago)

-That if I jumped off something, I could use an umbrella to gently float down (good thing I was too much of a wuss to jump off anything higher than the couch)

-That I could learn to run like the deer in "Bambi" (tried it. Also tried jumping off the couch like the deer jumped off the rocks)

-I stopped using a nightlight because I thought that Dracula (or a Dracula look-alike) was going to appear in my room. I figured I'd rather not see what's about to get me.

-I avoided sewer grates because I thought "IT" was real and living in the sewer.

-I seriously believed there were little people in my ears talking to each other (my ears used to make weird sounds)

Link to comment
Guest Girl Emily

I honestly believed that if I stepped on a crack I would break my mother's back...

I was the youngest and very gullible but thankfully my memory has saved me from the reallllly embarrassing beliefs. My siblings were so cruel.

Huggs,

Link to comment
Guest Janessa

1. I believed I would wake up the next day as a woman.

2. I thought that through training I could use telekinesis. XD (kids probably thought I was weird for staring at stuff all the time)

3. I believed in four leaf clovers being lucky... imagine my surprise when I found a 5 leaf clover. o.o

4. The whole blood sisters thing. I thought if we got a cut and put them together, we'd become related. XD

Link to comment
I remember one of my eldest brother's girlfriends telling me that if I ever kissed my own elbow, even by accident, I'd turn into a girl. Same deal for girls... kissing their own elbow would instantly transform them into a boy. Now being the skeptical science-nerdy six year old, I didn't believe it. And I think it was meant to be some sort of horror story... as in, "Don't ever ever ever let someone trick you into kissing your elbow or you'll change into an icky girl!!" But she gave me the funniest look when she caught me later that day trying to figure out how to contort myself so I could kiss my elbow. :lol:

OMG that happened with me too XD. Wayyy back in Kindergarten I believe. Except I was told that by one of the girls at my school, and it was my mother at home who was giving me weird looks when she caught me trying to kiss my elbow. XD

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   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 246 Guests (See full list)

    • MaryEllen
    • Karen Carey
    • Birdie
    • Stefi
    • April Marie
    • Vidanjali
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.1k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,094
    • Most Online
      8,356

    MossycupMolly
    Newest Member
    MossycupMolly
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Angelo christoper
      Angelo christoper
      (38 years old)
    2. Joslynn
      Joslynn
      (61 years old)
    3. Kaltia_Atlas
      Kaltia_Atlas
    4. Rika_Lil
      Rika_Lil
      (40 years old)
    5. Summerluv
      Summerluv
      (19 years old)
  • Posts

    • Mirrabooka
      Friday May 17th is IDAHOBIT (International Day Against HOmophobia, BIphobia and Transphobia).   Do you acknowledge or celebrate it? Do you do anything special for it, like taking part in any organized events or activities?   I'm not an activist and I prefer to fly under the radar, but I am slowly becoming aware of important dates. I have been aware of the date of IDAHOBIT for a few weeks now, but other important 'rainbow' dates have not been etched into my brain yet.    I will wear my favorite pride t-shirt as a token acknowledgement of the day, but it probably won't be seen; cool weather here will mean that it will be hidden under a sweater.    
    • Mirrabooka
    • Mirrabooka
      Happiness for me comes from being cognizant of the things that make me feel good.   Sunshine.   Pandering to my inner woman.   Knowing that some people in my life really 'know' me.   Vacations, and Eggs Benedict at an alfresco cafe.   My wife and I being telepathic.   Grandchildren.   Music.   Wine!    
    • Ivy
      True.  Every trans death is not a hate crime. There is so much hate expressed by some people, that we kinda get to expect it.
    • KymmieL
      happiness to me is being ME. At all times, and it has yet to happen.
    • Vidanjali
      Hello & welcome, giz! Your post makes me remember how excited I was to join here too. I also had queer friends at the time I joined, but any of my trans friends lived a long distance away. So most local queer friends are gay & I felt uncomfortable coming out to them bc I couldn't assume they'd understand genderqueerness. So it was a thrill to join here and immediately have access to do many wonderful, genuine, kind & thoughtful friends-to-be.   Are you saying you're concerned that if you come out to your queer friends that somehow your parents will find out?     My love, I just want to affirm that that's not a weird dysphoria. It's just dysphoria. And we definitely get it. You're in good company here!     Look forward to seeing you around here & getting to know you. I shoot for androgynous appearance as well, leaning towards masculine.   Hope you're having a splendid day!
    • Heather Shay
      Listening to a YouTube mix for me and this song came up and I immediately fell in love again and just want to play music with like minded musicians playing OUR music and feel the joy and fulfillment even if no one else gets it. I love to fall into the music....  
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, giz! We’re so happy you found us. You’ll find lots of information and many wonderful people here. Each of us is unique but we all share similarities as well. Look around, ask questions and join in where you feel comfortable!
    • Heather Shay
      NPR tiny desk winner 2024 - REALLY ENJOYED - simple song with wonderful melody, retro sound, reminds me of Billy Preston....  
    • Heather Shay
      What is happiness for you?
    • Birdie
      Funny.....   The day-centre transportation director told me yesterday morning that I was to receive an award, my picture on the website, etc... for having won the billiards tournament (I knew better).   Later that afternoon he returns to "shake my hand" and tell me, "thanks for participating."   I could have told him that was all I would receive earlier. I'm not well liked by management. 
    • Heather Shay
      Feelings are joyful as happiness spreads.
    • Heather Shay
      The Power of Feeling our Feelings: a story of joy and pain https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1683051267452-AAZVC5ZJZ5E2XRBOOPRE/unsplash-image-rOKbmUbcOVg.jpg Does “joy” feel like a distant memory or an intangible experience for you?  Are you on the journey of seeking more joy in your life? Maybe you’ve found this blog, as in your healing journey, “more joy” is the beacon that gets you through the tough times, and you are fearlessly on the quest to learn more about trauma, anxiety and depression and how to support a more joyous life. If that sounds like you, then welcome, this post is for you, and if that doesn’t feel like you that’s okay too, I invite you to stay for a story. Let me tell you a story about a woman named Ellie who came to therapy with the goal of “wanting to feel more joy + lightness in her life”. She sat on the couch across from me…she was so eternally wise, and self-aware. She had worked so hard to get to this place of understanding herself, but she still felt stuck and nowhere closer to her joyful, fulfilled life. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1684948947151-PH97YWGUXYF7JJT25K1I/image-asset.jpeg She came back session after session, explaining her struggles and breaking down the gritty details of who she was, until one day I said, I paused her again in attempts to help her connect more with her emotional experience, For the first time in her therapy experience, Ellie was still, she took a moment to check inside and find her sadness…she was really being with her emotional experience. Sometimes as humans we can be aware of feelings, but struggle to FEEL the feelings, tuning in to our emotions and letting them take up space. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1684949533886-EOI9VPKBEQ2EZHERTYT1/image-asset.jpeg All of a sudden she felt her throat getting tighter, her heart sinking, and tears welling up in her eyes. She said, as she began to cry, “ yeah I feel so sad because…” I so ever gently interrupted her again “hey Ellie it’s okay, can we just let the sadness be there, it's SO important why, and also its SO important to just feel, so just feel sad my dear”. Ellie, hearing this, felt her shoulders drop and soften in surrender, and spent the next minute or so letting her tears flow, crying, and being guided by me, to find support in her own breath and the pillows and blankets on the couch. This somatic release, was exactly what she needed. She cried, while I held space, providing compassionate support and company, until Ellie felt a huge sense of relief wash over her body and exclaimed “woah that felt so cathartic, I feel lighter”.  I cracked a very stereotypical nerdy therapist joke and Ellie let out a HUGE chuckle, beginning  to laugh deep into her belly, and that feeling of lightness transformed into a moment of JOY! Could it be? Ellie settled into a feeling of calm after her chuckle with me and asked, “What just happened? For a moment there I felt so light and wow, I really laughed. Is that joy? How is that possible?” I then began to share a bit of on emotions…."Let me explain the connection between our pain and joy. They might be more connected than you think!” Emotions are an integral part of the human experience. They provide us with valuable information about ourselves and our environment, and they can motivate us to take action or change our behavior. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1684950220510-2BYGYE4A5XKZODNS2I0Y/image-asset.jpeg However, it is common for people to try to avoid or suppress emotions such as sadness, anger, and fear.  They may try to explain it away, finding logical and “cognitive” ways to cope with the pain…. While this may seem like a reasonable strategy to avoid discomfort, it can actually have negative consequences, including a reduced ability to feel positive emotions. Our emotions are interconnected and interdependent, they are all processed in the same areas of the brain. The neural pathways that process pain are called the nociceptive pathways. The nociceptive pathways send signals to the brain's pain center, the somatosensory cortex, which processes the sensory information and generates the experience of pain.   However, the same neural pathways that process pain can also process pleasure and joy.  This is because the somatosensory cortex does not just process sensory information related to pain; it also processes sensory information related to other physical sensations, such as touch, temperature, and pressure. When we experience pleasure and joy, these sensory signals are processed in the same way as pain signals. However, instead of activating the pain center, they activate the brain's pleasure center. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1684950865903-TQRJXIIXD3SHELV065QA/image-asset.jpeg This means that the same sensory channels in the brain can be activated by both pain and pleasure, but the experience we have depends on which part of the brain is activated. When the pain center is activated, we experience pain, and when the pleasure center is activated, we experience pleasure and joy. Pain and joy are actually closely related to each other, cousins if you will! In other words, our emotional experiences are not isolated events, but rather a complex and dynamic system of interrelated experiences. When we try to avoid or suppress our perceived negative emotions, we are essentially shutting down a part of our emotional experience. This can create a "numbing" effect, where we feel less overall emotion, both positive and negative.  This is because the brain processes emotions as a whole, so if we try to suppress painful or uncomfortable emotions, it can also reduce the intensity and richness of positive emotions. Research has shown that people who struggle to identify or express their emotions, particularly painful ones, often experience lower levels of overall emotional experience, including positive emotions. This is because our ability to experience positive emotions is dependent on our ability to process and regulate negative emotions. By suppressing negative emotions, we may be hindering our ability to fully experience positive emotions. _____________________________ So, to wrap up this short story with a nice bow… Ellie was able to FEEL into her sadness, thus allowing her to FEEL into the depths of her own experience of joy. She was activating “stuck” pain and moving through the experience, using those key areas of the brain, so her JOY was fully expressed as well. This is why….I extend an invitation for you to FEEL it all my dear, the heavy and awful, the light, and all the emotions in between. These different parts of us, make up who we are. If it feels too scary at first that's okay, maybe find a trusted friend or a therapist that can help support you in feeling safe  to express your emotions slowly, bit by bit, over time.  And If you are ready to lean into those heavier feelings, let them out, because the pain that you may be avoiding feeling, just might be the very thing you need to feel, to then welcome and unlock the feeling of JOY. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/57cc4071725e25df3ef3c66a/1684950934538-PW47TOU8LXR9AINGG53F/unsplash-image-ktPKyUs3Qjs.jpg At Integrative Psychotherapy we help clients engage in therapy so they can feel more comfortable in their skin and befriend alllll their emotions.
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
  • 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...