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!

Figuring Out What I Want


Guest Orva26

Recommended Posts

Guest Orva26

Hello,

I'm losing it, my ability to perturb myself! Now this is a good thing but it also means that I think I'm at the point of actually figuring out what I want, that's right want. A need entails the outside it implies some drive to please another entity or organization, while a want is pure its you without any of that junk.

The big thing of contemplation today is hormones. Do I really want them? I have no delusions about what they are. They ARE NOT magic and to see them referred to as such bothers me. They're a life long medical regime one I'm not sure about.

I also gave my tome (journal/sketch book/thing) to my therapist last night. That was something that I resolved I should do before really talking about hormones with her. I mean if I don't show her everything beforehand I might end up screwing myself up. It also is kind of a milestone because hmmm... well remember some post here I pretty much outright apologized for bearing my ugliness? Well those where the ones that I could figure out how to get up here and obey the rules. In my own head and in my own book are a different set of rules, one that is more unfiltered. It actually is kind of a relief to be able to do.

It strange though when I contemplate hormones the question in my mind is, "Do I need them?" and I've realized I don't for the aforementioned reason that a need implies I have someone or something else to satiate aside from myself. But asking "Do I want them?" is equally as tough. My brain has a hard time formulating or even recognizing a future or way to not have 'em. Its like it doesn't want the idea that I can be happy without taking the plunge, but is that right? On the flip side its not like BAM! I am imagining a future with hormones all the time. Hmmm... maybe this is the path to being rational again.

I'm registered (well kind of my browser got funky so I'm not sure if I went through or not, I'll give it the day and see) for a conference about transgenderism taking place in two weeks in my state. Doing that was interesting too because I needed to sign up with my legal name; Orva can't exactly write checks with no "real" identity. But they also asked for a badge name and there I went with the unisex version of my "birth" name. Not to hide, I mean heck I'm going to the conference but rather for the reason that if I tell PRIDE at work about it coworkers might show up and I wouldn't want word getting out if it doesn't need to or before I talk with HR.

More importantly, a local endo who to my knowledge is THE person to currently see for cross-hormonal therapy will be there and will be speaking. My therapist actually refers people to him. I want to hear what he has to say because when it comes down to it he's the one with a M.D. and professional specialization in the area. There also will be talks about various other things, transitioning and working, how to seek legal action when discriminated against, and one with a title that is kind of ambiguous but I think it presents a teenager's perspective during their parent's transition. Oh yeah, and the keynote speaker, my therapist mentor.

Yikes, I really do need to zoom to work!

-Orva

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Orva,

It's good to hear that you are getting on a more even keel.

Semantics is a funny thing. I define want and need completely differently-in fact almost the opposite. For me what I need is something I must have to continue to survive as myself-or in some cases survive at all. Wants are something I'd like to have, sometimes intensely, but I can continue without it.

For months after finding out I was trans and finding Laura's I slowly peeled back layer after layer of feelings and realizations. I am introspective and thought I knew myself but here there was just too much that had been buried or pushed aside. I had to deal with each layer before I could go on to the next.

And I went from being secretly somewhat repelled by the idea of hormones to the point of needing them by my definition of need. I can't say where your journey will take you, but I can say that it takes time and changes as you go. And that you shouldn't ever do hormones until you are certain that it is what you want. What you must have to live a good life. Once I made that decision it became the most important thing in my life-like a primal drive. I have seen something similar with many others here. Sometimes coming in and hearing us talk about those feelings you are missing the months, even years, that preceded it. When we were unsure and conflicted and confused.

I even still have major doubts at times that I can do this. I miss knowing the rules even if I never fit them. But I also find myself eager for every shot. I wouldn't dream of stopping no matter what the doubts and fears. Which tells me that I am doing the right thing.

Your therapist will help you come to a point of certainty either way. You'll know when you are ready. And the good news is that this is not a race. There is no rush and you have all the time you need to find what is best for you.

Hugs

John

Link to comment
  • Admin

Doubts, fears and confusion are not bad things, Orva. They show that you're taking all this seriously, that you're considering all the angles, all the pluses and minuses, all the ramifications.

:goodjob:

My therapist told me that if I didn't have all of those doubts and fears, she would worry about me.

Keep researching it, keep discussing it, keep thinking about it, Orva. You will come to a decision at some point, and you will know the right path. No one but you can know what's best.

Like John, there came a time when I just knew that transition and HRT were what I absolutely needed to do. But it was a long and winding road before I reached that point. Sounds like you're on the same road.

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest JaniceW

Wow what a change you have gone through over the last few months. Since we share the same therapist I won't directly address want versus need because we both know where Patty stands on it. I did have a conversation with her a few evenings ago about want/need too and we talked a bit about need not being as simple as she saw it. The idea being that there are two kinds of need, the one that Patty usually refers to where we have been convinced that we "need" something and a different one that is like a diabetic "needing" versus "wanting" insulin. The conclusion was that we cannot know if we truly "need" (like insulin) HRT until after it has been started and we begin to feel the effects of it. Sometimes those effects include a feeling of general well being that indicates that our systems have had a biochemical imbalance corrected. Not all people have this experience, but for me it defines the difference between wanting HRT and needing HRT. "Wanting" = Life will be better if I have it, "Needing" = My body functioning is incorrect without it.

Patty's real point ot me was that she, as a therapist, listens carefully to her clients to see how often they use the words want and need and she feels that a person who uses only the word need and never says "I want to ..." may be having some difficulty sorting out their own desires from what they hear others telling them.

The other comment I have for you is, YOU GOT IT GIRL! You are on the right track and the progress I have seen in you over the last few months has been amazing. Keep it up.

Link to comment
Guest Susan57

Hi Orva,

I really appreciate your analytical and rational way (and oh so honest way) of sorting through this highly charged part of your life. I think you help a lot of people by example to think more broadly and carefully about their own situations. Your intelligence is greatly appreciated. Thank you and keep on keeping us on track. big hugs to you

Susan

Link to comment
Guest Orva26

Thanks everyone!

I apologize for taking so long to respond. I had my brother visiting me and well not being out to him meant no responses and heck even if I was out to him it wouldn't be polite as a host for me to sit here and write one while he's around.

Actually for a bit there was a mental battle about if I should come out or not. I mean this kid is awesome! He has such a breath of socio/political knowledge it is crazy! We end up talking about gender variance for a while and he brings up Khanith, a group I didn't even know about. I ended up compromising with myself, he knows that I am friendly with the trans community in Hartford just not that I am also part of it.

Sometimes coming in and hearing us talk about those feelings you are missing the months, even years, that preceded it. When we were unsure and conflicted and confused.

I like this, it is a very good point. Tied in with:

My therapist told me that if I didn't have all of those doubts and fears, she would worry about me.

What was it, the legal definition of insanity? Thought it was something like for an insanity plea to work it has to be shown that an individual acted without the ability to rationalize the consequences of their actions. So yeah if someone was not conflicted about hrt it should send like a billion red flags off. Well unless they already worked through that themselves. :rolleyes:

Good to know that the norm is for people to hem and haw over this. More often than not it is the things I'm on the fence about that are the things I end up wanting but this is a lot different than debating if I really want a ps3 or not.

And that you shouldn't ever do hormones until you are certain that it is what you want. What you must have to live a good life. Once I made that decision it became the most important thing in my life-like a primal drive.

Also like this. Though there is small disagreement that I believe hormones can be use diagnostically. But the thing that struck me as interesting in the response is word choice, specifically must and decision. A must is something that just has to be, for example in order to stay alive I MUST eat. Yet a decision is a conscious choice. Makes sense that they can interplay, In order to stay alive I must eat and I decide to eat chicken. Or in this case, I must express as myself and I decide to pursue hrt to do that.

I like this, it empowers the individual.

Patty's real point ot me was that she, as a therapist, listens carefully to her clients to see how often they use the words want and need and she feels that a person who uses only the word need and never says "I want to ..." may be having some difficulty sorting out their own desires from what they hear others telling them.

Yup ^^ It is a good point too. Now that there exist places like Lauras and other communities on the internet things are different than lets say 15 years ago. The information is out there and widely accessible for a lot of people. So a therapist must discern if a client is acting truly for themselves or if they are being caught up in some fanciful world.

The idea being that there are two kinds of need, the one that Patty usually refers to where we have been convinced that we "need" something and a different one that is like a diabetic "needing" versus "wanting" insulin

Also a good point I sort of had a similar idea formed but didn't know how to articulate it. I am also fond of its connecting one that some won't really know of the need until after they start. I have no delusions that life will be better if I go on hrt, for the most part it will be the same, might even get worse if I come out and lose people who are dear. Where the desire and perceived gain lie are in satiation. Being on hrt will allow me to have and do certain things that not being on it won't. I can't really get breast of my own flesh, or the knowledge that biochemically I am not aging as male without it. That is what I know it will afford me, well that and hopefully making me a cutie. ;)

Like John, there came a time when I just knew that transition and HRT were what I absolutely needed to do. But it was a long and winding road before I reached that point. Sounds like you're on the same road.

I like winding roads! When I first took drivers ed I had one instructor that made us drive on such roads and it was good because we learned how to actually handle a vehicle. But the second instructor was like, "LAWL I'm GONNA TEACH JO HOW TO PARALLEL PARK!" which sure his instruction got me to be next to flawless at it for my road test but at the end of the day the stuff I got from the first instructor was much more practical. Since my road test I have only parallel parked around 4 times maybe. :lol:

Other thing is winding roads connect you to your vehicle more. You get to feel how it handles on the turns, which is awesome for a four wheel drive Subaru owner like me. Um... yeah I freaking love driving! How womanly of me. :P:lol:

Hehehehe, I'm bleeding metaphor!

Though sometimes I'd really like to hop on the expressway.

I think you help a lot of people by example to think more broadly and carefully about their own situations.

Hehe, I make people go, "STOP! THINKING TIME!" :lol:

More seriously, thanks. I would hope everyone with uncertainty would approach the situation with a similar level of insight/caution. If reading what I am thinking can make someone who is acting rashly slow down then that is a pretty great bonus.

:friends:

Orva

PS. Been a while since I got the message that I am exceeding the allotted amount of quoted text. That's why some are in italics. This happen to anyone else?

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, 131 Guests (See full list)

    • afraid of self
    • Mealaini
    • Justine76
    • Ashley0616
    • AmandaJoy
    • Sol
    • Birdie
    • MaybeRob
    • Betty K
    • Thea
    • VickySGV
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.6k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,076
    • Most Online
      8,356

    AmandaJoy
    Newest Member
    AmandaJoy
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Angel Jamie
      Angel Jamie
      (24 years old)
    2. CallMeKeira
      CallMeKeira
      (31 years old)
    3. CamtheMan
      CamtheMan
    4. Jona
      Jona
      (22 years old)
    5. jpek
      jpek
  • Posts

    • Sol
      WOW HAS IT BEEN A WHILE SINCE I'VE UPDATED!!! Welp, I'm updating now, and it's been a lot of changes.  1. My mom is starting to come around a little (I think). She does refer to me more as her child now, and even offered to help me cut my hair so I think we're making a little progress. I'm still planning on going on T later and I'm gonna start saving up to buy trans tape (I can't wear binders because I have GERD), so hopefully the progress stays. My dad, sibling, friends, and my paternal grandparents have all been super supportive and I'm really lucky for that. My sibling also goes out of their way to introduce me as their brother and it makes me so happy :D 2. I've been socializing a lot more! Mostly on Discord, but I've made some new friends and I'm really happy about that!  3. I'm on birth control! I still need to go to the gyno but my GP got me on the depo shot and it's been working for me so far! My dysphoria has gone through a lot of ups and downs, especially around periods, but that source is pretty much gone now and I feel way better. I do have more dysphoria centered around my chest now but that's pretty easily fixed with baggy shirts most of the time.  4. I know 100% now that I'm hoping for a uterine ablation (cauterizing the uterine tissue so it doesn't grow) at some point in the future and it's likely something I'll have to save up for but from my research it's a lot less invasive and safer than a hysterectomy so I definitely recommend it if people are able to access it. I also know that after that, I want to save up for a reduction to combat the chest dysphoria, and I still like having it sometimes so I'll keep a bit of it (I'm shooting for an A cup, I'm a C cup currently).  5. I've been writing more and I've even got some ideas for art projects! I also got an Archive of Our Own account where I post my finished writing, and I'm starting a book project at my mom's urging (she said she wanted that as her Christmas present so I'm gonna try, might not get it done this year though). I haven't gotten to write much lately but I'm hoping to change that this month.  And finally, 6. I'm gonna be a college junior and I have a career path to pursue! I'm gonna be an archivist, hopefully working for a museum (not too specific on where, I just like museums).  So yeah, a lot of stuff has happened and it's been pretty good! 
    • Ivy
      Welcome Amanda
    • Ivy
    • Ivy
      Welcome Justine
    • Cynthia Slowan
      Welcome Amanda!! 💗 Cynthia 
    • Vidanjali
      Hello & welcome, Ash!
    • Timber Wolf
      Hi Amanda, Welcome to Transpulse. I'm glad you're here.   Lots of love and a big welcome hug,, Timber Wolf 🐾
    • Thea
      Do we have any programmers in the house?! I'm a computer hobbyist. I mainly write code in C and javascript. 
    • Timi
      Hi Amanda! Thank you for sharing.    -Timi
    • KathyLauren
      Around here, a culturally-appropriate gender-neutral form of address is either "dear" or "hun".  It tends to be mostly women who use those, though I did have a man address me as "dear" in a store today.    It could be startling for a come-ffrom-away to hear themselves being addressed that way, but, locally, it is considered a friendly, not particularly creepy, gender-neutral way to address someone.
    • Lydia_R
    • April Marie
      Welcome, Amanda!! You'll find many of us here who found ourselves late in life - it was at 68 for me. Each of us is unique but we also have similarities and can help each other   I understand the urge to move quickly, but remember that your wife also has to adjust as you transition. That doesn't mean you have to move slowly, just give both of you time to process the changes and the impacts.   Many of us have also benefitted greatly from working with a gender therapist. For me, it was literally life-saving. Just a thought you might want to consider. Mine is done completely on-line.   Again, welcome. Jump in where you feel comfortable.
    • MAN8791
      Change. I am so -censored- tired of change, and what I've just started in the last month with identifying and working through all of my . . . stuff . . . around gender dysphoria represents a level of change I dread and am terrified of.   2005 to 2019 feel like a pretty stable time period for me. Not a whole lot of change happened within me. I met someone, got married, had three kids with them. Struggled like hell with anxiety and depression but it was . . . ok. And then my spouse died (unexpectedly, brief bout with flu and then gone) and the five years since have been an unrelenting stream of change. I cannot think of a single way in which I, the person writing this from a library table in 2024, am in any way the same person who sat in an ICU room with my dying spouse 5 years ago. I move different, speak different, dress different, think different, have different goals, joys, and ambitions. And they are all **good.** but I am tired of the relentless pace of change and as much as I want and need to figure out my dysphoria and what will relieve the symptoms (am I "just" gender fluid, am I trans masc? no -censored- clue at the moment) I dread it at the same time. I just want to take a five year nap and be done with it.
    • VickySGV
      Welcome to the Forums Amanda, there are a number of us here who took that long or longer to come to grips with our personal reality.  Join right in and enjoy the company you have.
    • AmandaJoy
      I'm Amanda, and after 57 years of pretending to be a male crossdresser, I've recently admitted to myself that I'm a woman. It's pretty wild. I don't think that I've ever had a thought that was as clearly true and right, as when I first allowed myself to wonder, "wait, am I actually trans?"   The hilarious part is that I owe that insight to my urologist, and a minor problem with a pesky body part that genetic women don't come equipped with (no, not that one). I'll spare you the details, but the end result was him talking about a potential medication that has some side effects, notably a 1% chance of causing men to grow breasts. The first thought that bubbled up from the recesses of my mind was, "wow, that would be awesome!"   <<blink>><<blink>> Sorry, what was that again?   That led down a rabbit hole, and a long, honest conversation with myself, followed by a long, honest conversation with my wife. We both needed a couple of weeks, and a bit of crying and yelling, to settle in to this new reality. Her biggest issue? Several years ago, she asked me if I was trans, and I said, "no". That was a lie. And honestly, looking back over my life, a pretty stupid one.   I'm really early in the transition process - I have my first consultation with my doctor next week - but I'm already out to friends and family. I'm struggling with the "do everything now, now now!" demon, because I know that this is not a thing that just happens. It will be happening from now on, and trying to rush won't accomplish anything useful. Still, the struggle is real . I'm being happy with minor victories - my Alexa devices now say, "Good morning, Amanda", and I smile each and every time. My family and friends are being very supportive, after the initial shock wore off.   I'm going to need a lot of help though, which is another new thing for me. Being able to ask for help, that is. I'm looking forward to chatting with some of you who have been at this longer, and also those of you who are as new at this as I am. It's wild, and intoxicating, and terrifying... and I'm looking forward to every second of it.   Amanda Joy
  • 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...