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!

Deposit Sent (scary)


Guest NatashaJade

Recommended Posts

Guest NatashaJade

So I put my deposit money in the mail to Montreal today (I wanted to make sure I could write it off of this year's taxes). And while I am super thrilled and excited about it, it think it's finally hitting home that I am actually doing this, actually going to have a major surgery to correct an issue that has long needed to be corrected. In just 150 days.

And I'm a little scared.

Not of possibly having any regrets. I am not frightened of that at all. I have not a single doubt that this is the right thing to do.

No, I'm just scared of having an operation, really. I've never been put under before and I think it's somewhat healthy to fear going under the knife. They say there are no minor surgeries and this one is definitely not minor. My problem is that my mind is constantly writing and rewriting my life to come and so, now that there is a certainty of this operation, my mind has gone into overdrive creating and recreating the events to come, sometimes to frightening outcomes.

But mostly, really, everything goes well. I'm not really all that worried. Just a little scared. Heck, I'm frightened to get on the plane to New Hampshire more than the surgery, and I've flown probably hundreds of thousands of miles in my lifetime.

But this is the unknown. I know it will all be okay, really. (and I will repeat that over and over until they put me under)

xoxo

Link to comment
Guest Isobelle Fox

I am so enormously excited for you. That feeling you are experiencing seems entirely natural to me - I have experienced much smaller but still very intense versions of it many times in my transition, though I know that this really is so much bigger than that. All of those feelings have been followed by profound relief and gratitude for the changes that resulted, though, and I just know that this will be the same for you. Its scary, but its going to be AWESOME when its all done, and you are going to be just fine! Keep us updated, and we will keep you in our thoughts!

Link to comment
Guest John Chiv

Tasha,

I have also never had surgery and while my fear is not anywhere like it used to be, I do think about some concerns. Yet, I will do what I need when the time comes.

You seem to have talked yourself calmly through this and when the time is near, you will be in my prayers.

John

Link to comment

Congrats Natasha, it is normal to be scared, i know i was, after all this is major surgery, 4 - 5 hours worth, the best thing is they put you under one minute and seemingly the next you are waking up in recovery.

I felt the exact same way you are after i sent my deposit to Dr. Mcginn, and like you i had no doubt that this was the right thing for me, i was more worried if i would wake up after surgery, but knowing that i was in the best shape physically and that they would not operate if the blood work and tests indicated it would be too big of a risk put me at ease, everyone involved in your surgery are professionals and want a good outcome for you.

Paula

Link to comment
Guest Leah1026
So I put my deposit money in the mail to Montreal today (I wanted to make sure I could write it off of this year's taxes). And while I am super thrilled and excited about it, it think it's finally hitting home that I am actually doing this, actually going to have a major surgery to correct an issue that has long needed to be corrected. In just 150 days.

Congratulations!

Heck, I'm frightened to get on the plane to New Hampshire more than the surgery

Why aren't you flying into Montreal? Dr Brassard's office will send a car to pick you up at the airport. It's about a 4 hour drive to Montreal from southern New Hampshire.

Link to comment
Guest NatashaJade

Why aren't you flying into Montreal? Dr Brassard's office will send a car to pick you up at the airport. It's about a 4 hour drive to Montreal from southern New Hampshire.

Mainly because the flight into Montreal costs twice as much as the flight into Manchester. Plus one of my best friends in the world (who was my best man at my wedding) now lives in Manchester and is excited to drive me across Vermont, which is one of my favorite places in the world and the location of my novels (giving me the opportunity to take a few publicity shots of me on covered bridges). It will be a nice excuse to spend a few hours with a dear friend. While I do not relish the drive back, the savings for me and my spouse are considerable when we are pinching a lot of pennies to make this happen, especially given that she is coming with me.

xoxo

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I've been under a few times and was always terrified -that old what if? I believe the last time -which was an emergency surgery-I was asking the Dr that question as I went out. It isn't bad-going under. At least to me.

And the rewards this time-Wow!

I'm happy and excited for you. I 'm pretty sure as a writer you'll keep writing those scenarios in your head, occupational hazard, along with the great blessing and joy of imagination. But I know it will be fine.

Hugs

Johnny

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

.

ENVIOUS!

Yeah, that's what I am!

Congratz, Girlfriend.......

I understand your concern about having surgery, but, that is how it's done....lol

Huggs

Dee Jay

Link to comment
Guest Leah1026

Why aren't you flying into Montreal? Dr Brassard's office will send a car to pick you up at the airport. It's about a 4 hour drive to Montreal from southern New Hampshire.

Mainly because the flight into Montreal costs twice as much as the flight into Manchester. Plus one of my best friends in the world (who was my best man at my wedding) now lives in Manchester and is excited to drive me across Vermont, which is one of my favorite places in the world and the location of my novels (giving me the opportunity to take a few publicity shots of me on covered bridges). It will be a nice excuse to spend a few hours with a dear friend.

LOL I live just a few miles south of Manchester.

If you looking for a convenient covered bridge to shoot, one of New Hampshire's prettiest (IMO) is just 2 miles off I-89's exit 9. If you're interested, go right at the bottom of the exit ramp (west on Rt 103). Not even 2 miles on the left there is a little sign telling you the Waterloo Bridge is down that little side road. Go down (literally) the road not half a mile (through one stop sign). You'll see the bridge straight ahead and you can park at a business on the left in the refurbished depot building.

http://g2.img-dpreview.com/383187673BD3452789B851A21B454C1C.jpg

It'll only take 15 minutes to get off and back on the highway… unless you linger for a while taking pics.

Link to comment
Guest Karen K

Natasha,

Sweetheart, I am also envious of you. I will be thinking of and pray for you. I am sure everything will be fine. I have much to accomplish before I consider that surgery. What a wonderful way to begin the new year.

Laura Jane

Link to comment
Guest Teagan

You'll be fine, chica. You won't even be under general... Brassard's use of an epidural + heavy sedation is safer than general anesthesia, you'll be well taken care of, you have a brilliant surgeon, and you have friends who have been there both literally and figuratively who will support you, if from a distance.

It's all good. You'll do just fine.

Link to comment
Guest NatashaJade

You'll be fine, chica. You won't even be under general... Brassard's use of an epidural + heavy sedation is safer than general anesthesia, you'll be well taken care of, you have a brilliant surgeon, and you have friends who have been there both literally and figuratively who will support you, if from a distance.

It's all good. You'll do just fine.

Oh, I know, Teagan. But you know me. When given nothing much else to worry about, I'll find other things to worry about. The question I keep having for myself is what will I worry about after all this is done?

xoxo

Link to comment
Guest Teagan

You'll be fine, chica. You won't even be under general... Brassard's use of an epidural + heavy sedation is safer than general anesthesia, you'll be well taken care of, you have a brilliant surgeon, and you have friends who have been there both literally and figuratively who will support you, if from a distance.

It's all good. You'll do just fine.

Oh, I know, Teagan. But you know me. When given nothing much else to worry about, I'll find other things to worry about. The question I keep having for myself is what will I worry about after all this is done?

xoxo

Lessee... kids, books, cookies, students, to name a few. :)

Link to comment
Guest Sarah Michelle

You will do great Natasha. I am so happy that you are on your countdown now. Exciting times ahead for you girl.

I remember laying there in the waiting room and just thought that this is finally going to happen. I was not nervous at all just ready for it all to be over with.

You will love Montreal. Be sure to take a short walk over to the river as it is beautiful. Just don't over do it like I did and hurt too much the next day.

Link to comment
Guest NatashaJade

You will do great Natasha. I am so happy that you are on your countdown now. Exciting times ahead for you girl.

I remember laying there in the waiting room and just thought that this is finally going to happen. I was not nervous at all just ready for it all to be over with.

You will love Montreal. Be sure to take a short walk over to the river as it is beautiful. Just don't over do it like I did and hurt too much the next day.

Thanks, Sarah. I don't know if you can tell, but I'm really looking forward to it. I remember seeing a picture of you by that river and made a point of remembering to visit there as well.

It's great to see you back here, btw :D

*Sigh* Do you know how jealous I am? I bet you do...

Best of luck when the time comes :)

I do only in that I have stood by as friends have moved on and I was both incredibly happy for them and just a bit jealous as well. I don't think there's anything wrong with feeling that way.

xoxo

Link to comment
Guest John Chiv

Sarah, great to see you!

Tasha, my wish for you other than a healthy soeedy recovery is that you don't have anything to worry about and just are able to be the wife, mother, teacher, friend that you are and enjoy each day.

John

Link to comment
Guest Stormrider2112

So I put my deposit money in the mail to Montreal today (I wanted to make sure I could write it off of this year's taxes). And while I am super thrilled and excited about it, it think it's finally hitting home that I am actually doing this, actually going to have a major surgery to correct an issue that has long needed to be corrected. In just 150 days.

And I'm a little scared.

Not of possibly having any regrets. I am not frightened of that at all. I have not a single doubt that this is the right thing to do.

No, I'm just scared of having an operation, really. I've never been put under before and I think it's somewhat healthy to fear going under the knife. They say there are no minor surgeries and this one is definitely not minor. My problem is that my mind is constantly writing and rewriting my life to come and so, now that there is a certainty of this operation, my mind has gone into overdrive creating and recreating the events to come, sometimes to frightening outcomes.

But mostly, really, everything goes well. I'm not really all that worried. Just a little scared. Heck, I'm frightened to get on the plane to New Hampshire more than the surgery, and I've flown probably hundreds of thousands of miles in my lifetime.

But this is the unknown. I know it will all be okay, really. (and I will repeat that over and over until they put me under)

xoxo

Awesome! Also, if I may suggest, take an hour or so to stroll around Woodstock, VT before you head to Montreal (take Rte. 4 west off of I-89)...quite possibly the most beautiful village I've seen...outside my native Kennebunkport :D

And best of luck to you!

Link to comment
Guest NatashaJade

Awesome! Also, if I may suggest, take an hour or so to stroll around Woodstock, VT before you head to Montreal (take Rte. 4 west off of I-89)...quite possibly the most beautiful village I've seen...outside my native Kennebunkport :D

And best of luck to you!

Thank you, Stormrider :D Years and years ago when my spouse and I honeymooned in Vermont, we had lunch in Woodstock and I told her that it was either Woodstock or Middlebury (I want to be a professor at Middlebury College...one of my little dreams in life). But Woodstock is beautiful and is the model for the town in my novels.

We also drove up through Maine and had lunch in Kennebunk. They have this wonderfully kitchy lighthouse store up in the area that I bought some stuff at (I love lighthouses) and we stopped at all the lighthouses on the way back down the coast. I think it was the first time I ever saw sea foam.

xoxo

Link to comment
Guest Lizzie McTrucker

Between now and then you should check to see if your doctor offers a groupon for SRS.

..maybe a coupon? Buy one get one free? Buy one gender reassignment get a free labiaplasty with purchase?

Free limited edition red and white glittery "Canada, eh?" dilator?

Never hurts to look. ;)

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   5 Members, 0 Anonymous, 69 Guests (See full list)

    • VickySGV
    • MirandaB
    • MaryEllen
    • SamC
    • Abigail Genevieve
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,107
    • Most Online
      8,356

    SimplyMadeloeine
    Newest Member
    SimplyMadeloeine
    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

    • MirandaB
      @April Marie Yes, it's something to shop for at least for 6-8 weeks. 
    • VickySGV
      Definitely points to learn and keep in mind.  A bunch of stuff I had put in mental "cold storage" thawed out a bit there and ready again to run through my mill.  As said, a bit long and as usual from her a tad bit challenging.  Overall I see it and can use it as a working hypothesis.  
    • kristinabee
      right handed  
    • Vidanjali
      That's awesome, Davie. Keep the faith!
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Yes,I hate that     Also finding out I might be father of a 24 year young lady.I had an one night stand with a woman off base when I was in the army.Called this afternoon and said I am possibly the father of her now 24 year old daughter.Told her I will agree with a paternity test that will be done.
    • 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 🤣
  • 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...