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!

Wrong approach, or?


Guest KimSecure

Recommended Posts

Guest KimSecure

Hi! I'm a 18 year old born male from Norway and this is my last year in school before I start 1 1/2 years a trainee.

I've since puberty had lots of mixed up feelings, I've been dreaming about, wishing, and honestly begging sometimes that I was born a girl instead. During my growth, there were little to none information regarding this subject and I felt so confused, at the age of 14 or 15 i saw a documentary about children with transgender condition and couldn't but feel facinated and feeling that something finally made sence, but I was watching this while at a friends house, he beeing (I believe) trasphobic he laughed at them and called them freaks, and I just tried to smile and "yeah..." And with that I felt so ashamed of my feelings tried to bury them and focus on school, but on a regular basis these thoughts allways came up in my head.

Finally I decided to read more about the subject and found lots of informative pages, and really found it interesting, but upon reading that one would become sterile something just changed in my head "Okay, you've read about this things now, if you want your own children STFU and forget about this crap." This worked fantastic, beeing drowned with school and constaly new computer games I never got "urges" again, but now latelly, this last half year I've really hit a wall. I couldn't stopp thinking about it and stopped speaking with all of my friends, just sat in my room for days trying to find out what these feelings were, and honestly how I could get them away. This completly broke me apart, I stopped eating, sleeping and having a mayor depression, what should i do? I thought to my self. I was reading some stories about people and how they did the whole coming out thing, and one thing totally scared me, "I felt like life or death, either transition or I kill myself", upon reading this I got really woried. I didn't want it to get this out of hand, to the point where I would consider suicide.

I needed to tell somebody, but me only having friends with deep Gay - Lesbian - Bisexual- and Trasphobic I were horified and didn't know where to go to. I found the Norwegian Transgender community page and started reading, but beeing a small country there is only 3 centers around the country, the one closest is 1-2 hours with car. Then I sat down, I've allways trusted my parents and I've allways felt i could tell them anything, but was this one of the things one would tell your parents first? I finnaly decided, love it, whatever they do, it can't be worse that the starving, sleepless person that I'm now! I wrote my feelings and thoughts on a paper, just sat there writing. and ended up with a "book" of 3 full pages, more than most of my school essays! I took this letter with me and ventured towards our livving room where my mom sat.

When I entered the room she could clearly see something was wrong with me and asked me if I wanted to tell here. I managed to get out a short small "yes" and sat down next to her. I had a hard time even making a sound, I just wanted to run out off here again, but I knew it was for the best for me. She started "guessing" what my issues were: "Is it drugs? Have somebody done something to you? Have you done somthing towards someone? Have you joined a gang? Have you done something criminal? Are you gay?" I could by this time see she was getting really worried, so I just handled her my letter and let out a short "Read..." While reading I could see here eyes starting to get wet and I felt so ashamed for telling someone about me, but on the same time so free! After she had read the letter she just: "Oh god, you got me all worried about nothing! It's nothing wrong with you, we will guide you through your transition and allways support you! But, we gotta tell this to your dad." After she said that I had the same fear as before, but worse, I don't want my dad seeing my crying like this and hearing storries like that about me... But I knew it was the right thing to do, so I just noded and my mom ran out and called him and told him to come right now.

When he came home he saw me sitting in the sofa crying and my mom told him "Your son told me this personally, but has it written down, please read this letter" and so he sat down. At this point I just hold my ears and started crying uncontrolably, hes going to be so angry! I could see him flik the pages over, tearing apart the bindings I had made. "He's going to kill me for sure". But as soon as he finished: "Okay."

"I thought it was something horifying like he's dead in a ditch or something" he was smiling, but I could see the sadness in his eyes. After this we had a long talk about stuff, how it's possible to do this through hormones and stuff, but that it would be hard and people would talk behind my back, which I already knew.

This might sound fantastic? No, not at all, I've yet to accept my self and telling my parrents made it worse. I felt the way they looked at me, and their expectations around me changed. And whats even worse, even though I know their just trying to be nice and all, they came up to my room and said "Well, I guess you're going to needa wardrobe and a more suiting name then." !!!!! I'm still trying to find out who or what I'm and your making it worse!

What confuses me is, contrary to many other stories, I'm not all girlygirl, I would never play with dolls, during youth I would spend hour realeasing my imagination with lego, and during highschool I've loved everything technology related, Computers science etc. I've even build my own computer and started learning programming. They line of work i study (Automation and robotics i believe it's called in english) there's only 1 other girl and it's heavily mans dominated and it involves lots of computer technology and science. And I don't understand, had I been all girlygirl and stuff I would understand, but beeing so... Not girly everything feels more confusing. But on the same time, I hate sports, and don't see the big deal with cars and don't understand why people would bodybuild, as most of my class does. I love to listen to people, about their days and life and can easily cry if a movie is sad, and...

Ugh, everything feels so different at home, I feel that my parents have different view on me now, and that I will change now but I don't know what to do... Was it right of me going to my parents before contacting a psychiatrist?

We have planned to go to a gender-psychiatrist but, being in Norway, everything is sooooo slow. First of I got to speak with my doctor, which will take a week of waiting, then he'll send my to a psychiatrist which will take another 1-3 weeks, and after that I will be sent to gender-psychiatrist. And I don't know if I can't stay together for that long, so in hope of someone to talk to I'm going to be acctive on these forums so I atleast have someone to talk with.

Thanks for reading, sorry if its long and being a mess, I've just poured my hearth out and tried to make Somewhat sence. :)

Link to comment
  • Root Admin

Hi Kim,

No, you're not taking the wrong approach and yes, you are making sense. It's wonderful that your parents are supportive of you. It is a bit time consuming but taking the medical approach is the thing to do. A gender therapist will help you sort out the confusion you have. Not all girls are girly girls and not all males are super macho. Do the things that you enjoy and don't worry if it seems too masculine for you. I've known many genetic girls who have more masculine traits than many men and vice versa for men. Enjoy your life and don't worry about inconsequential things. :)

MaryEllen

Link to comment

Hi Kim, welcome.

I'll start by telling you about me. I was the furthest thing from girlie. I did everything I could to make sure I was the MAN... If a friend did something manly, I did it twice as manly. Sometimes on purpose, sometimes not. I was not girlie. I'm very girlie now, bur wasn't then.

It's nice that your parents are helping. Don't try and read into it, just accept it, like they are. It's hard on everyone. So if they seem fake at times, it's because they too are going through this. They need time to process it all. Just be happy. Smile and let things happen.

You're free. The hardest part is over. Now you can dream of a future.

Autumn

Link to comment
Guest Jesse0319

Welcome to the forums, Kim :)

What you did was very brave! I think that your parents are trying hard to be supportive. If their actions are really bothering you, maybe you could ask them to calm down a little, and let you figure things out for yourself, first. If you're having a hard time with it yourself, I can see why them thinking about your name and wardrobe can be a little stressful! But maybe they don't see that.

As for not being girly...Well, I'm a super feminine guy (FtM). Always have been, always will be. I love singing (and not heavy metal, either!), and I LOVE ballet, tap, and other kinds of dancing...I'm an art nerd, and a band geek...I know next to nothing about computers, and can't name car parts to save my life. But I'm still a guy, and it's ok. You don't have to like pink and ponies to be a girl, so don't feel you aren't one JUST because you like typical "guy" stuff ;)

And I understand your frustration with the slow process. I'm 18 too, and the nearest LGBT center is like 1-2 hours away, and since I don't drive and my parents' work schedules change a lot, my appointments are sometimes 3-4 weeks apart. Look at it this way: at least the slow process will give you thinking time. It'll get better :)

-Jesse

Link to comment

Hi Kim and welcome to Laura's. :)

We are glad to have you here and hope you can feel right at home. This is a safe haven where you can express your thoughts and no one will judge you. Feel free to post in any forum and add to any discussion when you feel you have something to contribute.

When you get a chance please read the terms and conditions found in the bottom right corner on almost every page. We moderate this site to keep it safe for everybody.

I read your entire introduction and am looking forward to reading how things are going with your transition. Having your parents support will help immensely in the process.

{{{Hugs}}}

Jenny

Link to comment

First thing first: welcome to the playground!

Also, congratulations for finding the courage to come out to your parents. This is a huge step.

There are a couple of points in your post I think I can give you some advise:

This might sound fantastic? No, not at all, I've yet to accept my self and telling my parrents made it worse. I felt the way they looked at me, and their expectations around me changed. And whats even worse, even though I know their just trying to be nice and all, they came up to my room and said "Well, I guess you're going to needa wardrobe and a more suiting name then." !!!!! I'm still trying to find out who or what I'm and your making it worse!

It is, in fact, a fantastic thing that your parents are that supportive. You need to realize, however, that they are probably as confused and disoriented about this as you are. If something they say or do is wrong (even if they are trying to help), try to explain them what's the issue. Just speak from your hearth like you did on your post, and I'm almost sure they will understand. As a plus, some practice on letting out your concerns and emotions may make things smoother once you start therapy ;)

What confuses me is, contrary to many other stories, I'm not all girlygirl, I would never play with dolls, during youth I would spend hour realeasing my imagination with lego, and during highschool I've loved everything technology related, Computers science etc.

Ok, I just did a rough calculation and found a low estimate: during my childhood, I have spent some thousand hours (maybe even tens of thousands) with lego. Massive (sometimes almost as large as myself) "dreadnought" spaceships and that kind of stuff. Sure, that's not a very "girly" activity, but it ain't very "boyish" either (most boys of my age use to play soccer or other sports).

On the field of computing, I'll admit that there ain't too many women: in my campus someone even made a complete statistic analysis of the gender demographics (in summary, <15% females among thousands of students). But there are some girls that are into computing after all, so we can just be a couple of specimens of that uncommon breed ;)

If you really want to find out who you are, you need to put stereotypes aside. There is nothing wrong with being different from the majority. Actually, if there weren't some variety, the world would be quite boring :P

We have planned to go to a gender-psychiatrist but, being in Norway, everything is sooooo slow. First of I got to speak with my doctor, which will take a week of waiting, then he'll send my to a psychiatrist which will take another 1-3 weeks, and after that I will be sent to gender-psychiatrist. And I don't know if I can't stay together for that long, so in hope of someone to talk to I'm going to be acctive on these forums so I atleast have someone to talk with.

Then you are lucky to not be in Spain like me: it took me two weeks to get a visit to the "general" doctor so I could be referred to a therapist, and then almost two more months to get the first visit with the therapist. Oh, and the "gender therapist" concept just doesn't even exist within Spain's public health system, so a "generic" therapist is all I can get.

In all honesty, a few weeks won't make too much of a difference regarding transition. Regarding to staying together, you already made some good choices: asking your questions or outing your concerns here is a good option. Just don't forget that you can also count on your parents.

So, in summary, you actually took the right approach, and have started a journey that will eventually lead you to your true self, whatever it is. And there is plenty of people here that will be more than glad to give you support and some advise along the way. With a therapist as a guide, and your parents' support as fuel and protection, you are in for an amazing trip ;)

Link to comment
Guest KimSecure

Thank you all for your quick reponse! And sorry for being slow on "coming" back, I've had car theory classes all afternoon (Highly inoformative and facinating...! And unbelivable good time to spend on thinking!) and work week in the morning, leaving me quite tired at the end of the day

And, yes, your spot on with my parents, I can clearly see this have impacted them greatly. My dad even came over to me, all politely, and said "You know, I'm much like you. Whenever I get some problems, or I'm not certain about something I allways run to my mom... What I'm trying to say is, is okay for you that I tell your grandmother, my mother about this?"

I didn't want to make my dad feel awefull, but on the same time I allready feel too many people knew, I just had to tell him no, I didn't want to tell anyone else untill I had seen some kind of psychiatrist and sort out my feelings. And he fully understood this and told me to tell him when I felt ready.

But the more I think about it the more confused I get, it feels so right, but on the same time... I've always seen myself as a "logical person", everything has a logic reason behind it, and never done anything "fun" as the maner of just going, everything must have a good reason behind it. And this is really messes with me, I feel like this is the right thing to do and that it allways was me, but on the same time, the logical me tells me, I'm born male, You look like a male, You act like a male.What I'm really struggeling with is accepting myself and It's wearing me out, I have lost all appetite for food, I've problems sleeping and living breath I have I spend staring into floor and thinking, fighting myself. My parents have told me to stop looking so sad and try to smile as its making them worried about me, easier said than done when there's not a single joyfull thought in my head.

Ugh, sorry for sounding so... dramatic or whatever. I've never releseased me feelings before and when I opened this "dam" everthing came flooding over me,overwhelming me, so much feeling I've surpressed and never had before...

And I've yet to tell any friends about this, and doubt I will any soon so I'll just keep posting my toughts and feelings here, hopefully get some new friends along the road.

On a more serius note, me and my mom have spoke with the doctor, and will have an appointment tomorrow!, and hopefully she'll send me onwards to a psychiatrist of some sort.

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, 81 Guests (See full list)

    • Birdie
    • Ivy
    • April Marie
    • MaryEllen
    • JenniferB
    • Petra Jane
    • awkward-yet-sweet
  • 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

    • 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
    • Nicola_Atherton
      Hi everyone, I'm new here, but I hope it's OK to tell ou about my book. It's called Going Out, and it's by me, Nicola Atherton, and it's on Amazon. It's my first book, and I've had such good reviews of it, but I'd LOVE to know what people think of it here. Thanks!
  • 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...