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!

Dreams!!!!


Guest Apriladam

Recommended Posts

Guest Apriladam

Hey,

Ever since I can remember i have never had a single dream in which i am the Gender i was assigned at birth, that is obviously male, I have always dreamt that i am female. However in these dreams, i have either been in first person, or once or twice i have been in a kind of third person view, looking over what is happening, but i have never seen my female face in these dreams.

Basically, my question to you all is this:

Do you or have you experienced this?

and

Is there any significant meaning behind these dreams?

April

xx

Link to comment

April,

The interpretation of dreams is a subject of great debate. Some place major importance on the dreams others don't, some see the dreams as literal while others tend to analyze a lot of symbolism into them. I think of my dreams as a sort of escape from the real world - in the few that I remember I am almost always female. On rare occasions when I have dreamt of myself as male - there was some sort of threatening confrontation in my real life and in the dream I become a sort of James Bond or Rambo and vanquish the evil doer rather handily - but the next dream I'm female again.

I believe that dreams are dreams - what you really want to be comes out in these glimpses into your subconscience. That's why I dream as female and so do you. Only great duress makes me dream as male for even the shortest periods.

Is there any significant meaning behind these dreams? Yes, it let's you know who you need to be, nothing more. Some people would place importance on the fact that you have never seen your female face - I don't we only see our own faces in reflections and photographs, so why should we in our dreams?

That's enough thinking for today, I need to sleep - purchance to dream...

Love ya,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

Dreams...interesting..

I always seem to dream genderless and looking down at a situation from above.I can't ever remember seeing myself as either male or female. It's like I'm watching myself, but, not really seeing myself...too weird. Must talk to therapist about this......

(once I dreamed I was eating marshmellows and when I woke up my pillow was gone! :P )

Donna Jean

Link to comment
Guest Kelly Ann

I was having this really strange dream the other night and woke up and my leg was irritated...I went back to sleep...I woke up, again...my leg was REALLY irritated now...I rolled over...the dream didn't come back...but I woke up again now the other leg was irritated...it's like 3:30 a.m. on a Wednesday morning for crying out loud. I have to get out of the bed...turn on the lights...search the bed, I was looking for a pea...and didn't see anything. I started to rub my arm across the bed and doggoneit...there was a quill sticking out from the feather bed. Finally got back to sleep...never remembered the dream and didn't pick it back up...darn it I hardly ever dream. I'd be afraid to ask Donna Jean...or know what happened after she found her pillow gone with the marshmellow dream...I just HOPE there wasn't any foods the night before that might have caused gas the next day...hopefully it was a VEEeeeEERY smaaaall pillow (-; Kelly Ann

I've been taking Chantix to stop smoking for about 6 weeks now...and I've had more bizarre half-rememberances of dreams in the last six weeks than in years...there's actually a warning about it in the literature...I DO seem to remember sitting in some like...director's chair with some really obnoxious person egging on this rather large crowd and me too...so there I was...sticking my tounge out suddenly at him/them and walking off stage and <boink> awake with an irritated leg

Link to comment
Guest geek_girl

95% of my dreams involve me and my friends being chased by zombies lol. sometimes we win sometimes we don't, but i almost always am in first person and the times when i do dream in 3rd person i don't even look like i really do.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

Good question! I read somewhere most people dream in installments, three times a night - usually REM sleep (Rapid Eye Movement). Each one lasts about 15 minutes - and only the last one just before you wake up is the one you can remember, usually. :P

Dreams are where your brain dumps all the memories of the past day or so - but these filter through life experieces stored in your brain, so you never know what is happening. Thats probably why things change so fast in a dream ..

Personally, I don't remember most dreams - but some are so powerful I wake up! Some are erotic - and most often I am genderless in them, either way.

BUT

I do have about twenty or thirty a year where I am one hunded percent female. Most are very peaceful and I am soooo happy. Sometimes I have just accidently outed myself. Sometimes - go figure, I am with my husband and two boys aged 8 and 11. Previous life? And I do have erotic dreams as a female - nuff said bout those... :lol:

But now that I am truely at peace with my transitioning, I find I wake up feeling female almost every morning, and have to concentrate on facing the day - weekdays especially are difficult as I am not out at work. uggggh - nasty to have to shift gears - cannot wait until transition is complete - wow.

On those erotic ones, a little hint - I worry afterwards if my birth contol is gonna work! Yikes. :blush:

Link to comment
Guest Karen-1954

Of all the dreams I can remember, I have always been female. Even when it did not seem apropriate. I just figured it was another part of my always having felt I was female.

Link to comment
Dreams...interesting..

I always seem to dream genderless and looking down at a situation from above.I can't ever remember seeing myself as either male or female. It's like I'm watching myself, but, not really seeing myself...too weird. Must talk to therapist about this......

(once I dreamed I was eating marshmellows and when I woke up my pillow was gone! :P )

Donna Jean

I dream this way also ......If I dream at all which is very seldom.Yes I know that we all supposedly dream but I am very seldom aware of having dreams.

The real reason I wanted to quate this was the disappearing pillow just busted me up.LOL :lol:

Link to comment
  • 4 months later...
Guest AshleyLauren

Hamlet' Fifth Soliloquy, very nice (I'm a drama major, it's an all girls class ... they just don't know it)

I find that when I dream I'm usually a girl but it varies, sometimes I'm completely female in my dreams, sometimes I'm simply wearing a skirt ... dreams are strange, all i know is the ones i remember most are happy dreams, the dreams where I'm a girl ...there's my favorite one of them all where I'm a brides made at my best friends wedding :D

Talk again soon and remember this above all; to thine own self be true.

Alysha :lol:

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

In an amazing coincidence - I was going to post on this today. I have been very nervous of where I will be in one year from now, 16 -18 mnths into HRT. I PM'd a girlfriend on this last night. THEN -I went to bed and I dreamed of what I would look like - I was beautiful!

I knew it was about a year in the future because my hair was about 6 inches longer than it is now. Wow

If it is really true! Oh if it is...

Lizzy

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

Strangely enough, only lately have the dreams I've been having featured me as a female. Before that, I was sort of genderless, much like Donna Jean said, but lately my gender has played a rather prominent role, from me sitting at a table with some girls being depressed because they're talking about having children and I can't (so perhaps not fully female) to me and a boyfriend (that does not exist in real life ;-;). However, before the dreams in which I was female, I seldom remembered them... and now I seem to be remembering nearly all of my dreams, or if not remembering in clarity, remembering that it did feature me as a female.

Link to comment
Guest My_Genesis

sorry to be boring here but my dreams are usually unrelated to trans stuff...at least not internally or directly (occasionally ill have a dream such as the one where a guy tried to kiss me and i punched him and said "what the **** is wrong with you?!?!")

lol.

but really i cant say what gender i am in my dreams, theyre focused on whats going around me and im kinda just watching it all and not paying attention to my gender.

im still waiting for one of those sex dreams so many people here keep posting threads about though :lol:

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, 101 Guests (See full list)

    • LC
    • Kerrigan888
    • KathyLauren
    • Heather Shay
    • Ashley0616
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,057
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Aleksandria
    Newest Member
    Aleksandria
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      (22 years old)
    2. CtN1p
      CtN1p
    3. heyim_finn
      heyim_finn
      (21 years old)
    4. Jayn
      Jayn
    5. joni_girl_1988
      joni_girl_1988
      (51 years old)
  • Posts

    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Do you use make-up? If so, why and what  types?
    • Heather Shay
      Pride is primarily about yourself, even when it is not you who did something that you are proud about. You can also be proud of something someone else did, who you associate with, such as your children or your favorite football team. People can feel proud of their culture, their family name, or their appearance, none of which require them to actively contribute to the praiseworthy thing1. However, the opinions of others are of crucial importance, as best demonstrated when you purposefully do something that other people praise. Pride is a social emotion, and to feel proud, you need other people’s (real or imagined) confirmation that you have a reason to feel that way. Because of this, other people can also ‘be in your head’ and prevent you from feeling pride. Namely, what is praiseworthy is subjective. Things that may be considered good in a certain (cultural) group may not be praiseworthy in another (e.g., if you grew up in a family that greatly values academics, your athletic abilities may not evoke much praise). Moreover, what is praiseworthy is relative (e.g., if you are a good runner in an athletically average school, you may regularly feel proud about your times; but if you move to a school with highly competent athletes, these same times may seem unremarkable to you). Thus, the more exclusive your quality is in your surroundings, the prouder you feel. Pride has recognizable features. Although its static facial expression (typically a smile or laugh) does not clearly distinguish it from other positive emotions, it typically results in a bodily posture, gestures, and behavior that are clearly recognizable: lifting your chin, looking people in the eye, walking confidently, or in extreme cases, raising arms above your head. In a way, you try to make yourself larger and more noticeable, as if to say: ‘look at me!’ You may also exhibit more perseverance in your activities2. People generally find it very pleasant to experience pride, as it elevates our feeling of social self-worth and status3. At the same time, many social groups, religions, and cultures (especially those that are highly collectivistic, such as the East Asian or African culture) believe that pride needs to be checked. Unchecked pride leads to arrogance and misplaced feelings of superiority (‘letting something get to your head’, ‘hubris comes before the fall’), and social groups typically do not tolerate members feeling like they are superior or deserve special treatment.  
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • April Marie
      Thank you @missyjo! You do wonders for my ego.   It turns out that pastel colors were the "thing" at Kentucky Derby Day so my dress was perfect. I went with white 5" heeled sandals and a wide-brimmed fuscia hat. Dinner and Mint Juleps added to the fun of watching the (recorded) festivities and races.   Perhaps, we'll repeat it for the Preakness in 2 weeks.   Right now it's just blue striped sleep shorts with pink flowers, a pink t-shirt and flip flops. I can't tell you how much wearing  sleep-rated breast forms at night has done to quell my dysphoria. 
    • April Marie
      I can still rock 5" heels.
    • April Marie
      Good morning, everyone!!   My wife and I had our yearly Kentucky Derby Day evening. Dresses, heels, hats, Mint Juleps and a light dinner while watching the festivities and races. Relaxing and fun. I think we'll do the same for the Preakness in two weeks.   It's rainy and cool here today so it's pretty much going to keep me indoors. Ahh, well. A day of rest.   Enjoy and be safe!!
    • Ladypcnj
      Thanks Sally Stone
    • KymmieL
      Thanks, Mindy. It has been so far. Tomorrow, work some more on the wife's grand monkey. Got the right side of the hood primed, just need to do a little more work on the left then I can prime it. Then a 600grit wet sand.   I promised the wife we would take out the bike this weekend.   Kymmie
    • JessicaMW
      During my last visit with my psychologist (who has agreed to provide required letters of recommendation along with a colleague to provide the second) we discussed the shift towards my wife's acceptance. It was a long discussion but one point I mentioned was how much the two of us sitting down and watching this documentary helped:  The Kings | A transgender love story (2017)
    • Betty K
      Oops, I did not mean to post that comment yet! I was going to also say, having read a mountain of commentary on the Review, I think Julia Serano’s response (linked by Vicky above) is the most accurate and thorough. You can also read a non-paywalled version at Substack: https://juliaserano.substack.com/p/the-cass-review-wpath-files-and-the   To me the three key areas in which the review is deficient are:   1. As has already been said here, its views on social transition;   2. Its attempts to give credence to the “ROGD” theory (without ever actually mentioning ROGD because presumably a canny editor knows that would be too transparently transphobic);   3. To me, most crucially, its claims about trans youth and suicide, which are dealt with summarily in about five pages and do not stand up to any deeper scrutiny.    I will be writing about each of these issues in isolation over the next few weeks and appearing on a radio show and podcast to discuss them late in the month. I will post links to these on TP later if anyone is interested.   All that said, I actually think it’s dangerous for us to respond with outright vitriol and condemnation to the review since, like any effective piece of disinformation, it does actually contain some factually based and even helpful recommendations. The Tavistock Gender Identity Service really was underfunded and understaffed and certain staff were not adequately trained. Trans kids really were funnelled away from mental-health support once they started gender-affirming care too. So yes, more investment in youth psychology services would help, as would a less centralised model of care, more training in treatment of trans kids, and more research.   One last thing for now: beware the claim that Cass ignored 98% of studies. That’s not strictly true. She seems to have taken other studies into account but leaned heavily on the 2% that met her standards. Nor does she ever claim that only randomised controlled trials are good enough evidence to justify the use of blockers for kids; just as with ROGD, she strongly suggests this, but is too canny to say it, because she knows such trials would be impossible. For now, I think the best response to this comes from the Trans Safety Network: “[…] we believe there to be systemic biases in the ways that the review prioritises speculative and hearsay evidence to advance its own recommendations while using highly stringent evidence standards to exclude empirical and observational data on actual patients. “ (https://transsafety.network/posts/tsn-statement-on-cass-final-report/)   To me, the scariest aspect of all this is that, if it follows Cass’s recommendations, the NHS will very likely follow Finland’s recent model of trans care, which seems to amount to a prolonged form of conversion therapy. I can’t find the link right now, which is probably lucky for anyone reading this, but I bawled my guts out reading the testimonies of kids who had been mistreated by that system. Truly horrific. To me, at least from my Australian perspective, the Cass Review is the most frightening development in trans rights in recent years. To me, the safe care of trans kids is THE number one issue in politics atm.   Ruth Pierce has a good summary of responses from trans folk and their allies sk far: https://ruthpearce.net/2024/04/16/whats-wrong-with-the-cass-review-a-round-up-of-commentary-and-evidence/    
    • Sally Stone
      Welcome to the wide, wild world of transgender, M.A.  It can definitively be overwhelming, but everyone here is amazing, so no doubt you'll get bunches of wonderful support. I think you'll be happy you found us.   
    • Sally Stone
      @Ladypcnj  This is so true.  I think all of us here have had a post or two that didn't get a response.  Sometimes, it's as simple as adding to your original to post for a clearer explanation, or re-reading what you wrote originally, and rephrasing it.  But don't despair, we aren't ignoring you.   Hugs,   Sally 
  • 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...