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Bullies.


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Ever since I was first exposed to kids my age when I was in kindergarten, my peers have endlessly bullied me.

Because I can't fit in, because I don't know how to talk to people or deal with certain situations (I have Asperger's), because I have been so confused my entire life about my gender identity.

Even if I hid my transsexual feelings, the bullying wouldn't cease. It dramatically quieted down though... for all I know, that is.

I have social anxiety, so I'm terrified of rejection, right? But I feel a HUNDRED times more confident while at least trying to be my true self--a boy, and some days I just don't give the slightest dang what people think of me.

This year I've been taking the "dressing/acting" etc like a boy thing further than ever. I have a male haircut, I dress like a guy, I bind, etc etc. I have never passed so well in my life. Even the particular morons who I suspect are the main culprits of being the losers who bully me behind my back (haha so pathetic right?) first thought I was a boy.

Now, when I'm not looking (but I can still hear sometimes) they call me "IT." God. Even "she" is better than "it" for chrissake. I. Am. Human. Too.

I already knew these idiots were mocking me and stuff but it didn't really upset me, I just considered them stupid losers who weren't worth my time.

Lately my friend learned people (she didn't specify who, since some kid told her about this) were making fun of me behind my back because I look, act, and dress like a boy.

What. Pansies.

If you have something to say to me, say it to my face. Any coward can talk about someone when they're not even looking. But hey, maybe they're jealous I'm manlier than they are?

But now I've been thinking... Hey, maybe this isn't something I should just let go of so easily.

Even if they are immature cowards, even if it doesn't bother me all that much... at the same time it does. Because I know I shouldn't allow them to get away with this. To mock me--or anyone--for who they are, or anything.

Problem: How do I confront these people if I don't even know who they are?!

Problem: How do I approach any such people? I suck at social skills and have severe anxiety. How do you go about approaching a bully especially? People are difficult, but bullies... god, they're impossible. I just don't know what to do or say.

I also really want to know if it's the same people talking about me behind my back over and over... Because THEN I have a problem. Just some stupid teenagers gossiping--whatever, but if these kids start getting to the point of loathing, obsession, or anything.. Who knows how safe I'll be then. And if these kids are those who I suspect, then I could easily see them resorting to violence. I could probably take out some of them, like a couple that are scrawnier than even me, but against the rest, especially all at once... heck no.

I dunno. I don't want to "ask an adult" or anything because they ALWAYS go up to the kids all like "NOW DID YOU DO THIS..." and it only makes it all worse. Besides, I could be blowing this up into something bigger than it is.

I can't just ignore them, because it never works.

I can't be assertive all like "hey stop it i really don't like you disrespecting me like that blahblah" because these are the types of morons that really, truly don't care about how you feel at all. I might as well be inhuman to them. To them I'm a joke.

I've had people bully me my entire life, but I never learned how to deal with them and how to get some respect. It seems like there really is no way.

Any advice, please?

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Thia may sound like a lot of stuff that you have heard before, but it is true. Idiots bully , because THEY feel inferior - they can only feel good about themselves if they know that they have made someone else feel inferior to them.

"No one can make you feel inferior without your consent." Eleanor Roosevelt.

Confronting these types of people seldom helps - you can lead a horse to water but you can't make it THINK!

As to getting respect, you won't get it from those jerks, but from any people who could possibly matter to you - the key is to respect yourself! You seem to be very down on yourself (I've been there) and people pick up on this (like a shark senses blood in the water) and they are down on you too. If you can (and this is the hard part) develop a more possitive self image, you will feel more confident and people will sense that as well. Treat others with respect and the ones that are worth caring about will respect you. And really, Who cares about the other jerks? You wouldn't want to spend your time with those idiots anyway.

I hope that you can work through these negative feelings of your own, then the negativity of others can't effect you. Most bullies (especially the ones who don't even face you) never really do anything but talk. If you become more comfortable with yourself, they will lose interest in talking bout you if it has no effect on you.

I hope that you can work through this, you are a special person and deserve to be treated as such.

Love ya,

Sally

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Guest eshaver

Sphere, my son who is only nine suffers from Asburgers . I'm trying to learn all I can about it as I also rent to a gay college student who has it too. Second you're from the only state in the country that tried to give me a second chance when no one else would after a hurricane in 1972. I will never forget the kindness given to me by strangers there in the Houston area. I hope folks in Texas are listening cause I'm never going to forget who became my REAL friends when I needed friends . now meanwhile , I'm here in the land that time forgot , Richmond Va. How can I help you ? Ellen Shaver

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Kids, young people can be very brutal and cruel to the ones that don't seem to fit in, or are different in some ways. I was definitely on the low end of the pecking order through school, mostly it had to do with me not talking. I seldom, rarely talked. If I was asked in a class to answer something I would almost die of the fear, and generally not be able to say a thing, just sit there silently while they waited for me to say something lol. It really did not have much to do with my gender issues, but more how I did not / could not socialize with the other kids. And I had practically no self esteem or confidence in myself, a lot of times I thought I deserved what I got, I was afraid to stand up for myself.

7th through 10th grade were the very worst for me. After that a lot of the other kids seemed to mature a little bit and backed off some, though not completely. Having to take PE was a nightmare though - being in confined spaces without teacher's immediately around and left to fend for myself was very brutal at times (teachers - Good GOD! I would try to get in and out of the locker rooms as fast as possible without a shower, and sneak out, but often the teacher would catch me and make me go back in to take a shower. Good grief, they had no freaking idea what happened to people like me in those damned showers!) .

I did lash back once in 9th grade. In the locker room of course. One guy, unfortunately by himself without the gang that day, thought it was business as usual whipping me with the towel and calling me a F@g and I let loose on him. The next 4 years in school he never said one word to me lol. He avoided me to all end's. In retrospect, as an adult, I feel bad for beating the crap out of him, and feel like I owe him some amends for that. He was not the worst of them, he more of a follower, and he just pushed the wrong button on the wrong day. Not to justify what he was doing, but I went overboard in my response.

There were a few other times I lashed back as I grew older, usually with the same type of result where the individual would back off and leave me alone. Later in high-school most thought I was whacked and off the wall loony and dangerous and for the most part had no problem leaving me alone. I do regret that I to often ended up resorting to violence to resolve these things.

I think it comes down to confidence and self esteem. If you feel confident in yourself others, even young people, will pick up on it and tend to have second thoughts about what they say or do to you. But it took me a long time to find a little bit of that kind of confidence in myself where I would not have to resort of lashing out to get people to back off.

Not much help, but I do relate to what you say.

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Guest eshaver

Arbon may I add some more to my previous story? Yes I was in Junior high, yeah 1964. The coach was raggin on me and I cornered him and tried to do physical harm to him , hell I lost it , I admit to it and to this day I would do it again given the same circumstances too! he calmed me down , however I was ready to do hard time even at my young age for the abuse he gave me every day in P E . Do you know all the so called "Tough -Guys " left me alone from then on? Yep, no one not even the Coach ever put me down , said a word out of line , anything ! I guess thats where I became an all out activist . Ellen Shaver

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Guest sara w.

well i was worried about this to, and i still am (since i havn't come out yet as a TG person) so i read into it and heard about people who were bullied about this sort of this, and its actually ILLEGAL its considered sexual harrassmen if you just tell and adult about it, or confront the buillies and tell them its illegal it should stop, if it dosn't they could be charged.

hope my advice helps ;)

-sara w

P.S and another reason they could be doing this is because its probobly strange for them they don't understand the inner torment tans kids have to deal with, there in the right body so they feel like its strange, they dont know how it feels to have a boys brain and a girls body.

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I know this is gonna sound kinda korny but it gets better. As a kid I was bullied all the time girls used to beat me up after school and the boys would call me names that hurt. I was a short a skinny kid, shy, and consirdered a little strange. As I got older I started hanging out with the other kids that were being picked on. I suppose that was a good thing because it helped me to grow, and to realize that getting back at them was only a waste of time. I learned to respect myself and others. To "kill" them with kindness, it didn't always work but it made me feel better. I guess what I'm saying is always be yourself and it will shine out to everyone else.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Sphere: listen to me and look at me! Get out of that school. I want to tell you, you need to be in agifted and talented program. Your post was impeccably written. You must do something withthis talent and getting destroyed by these bullies will do you futher emotional harm, and hinder your natural talent as a writer.

Start getting norticed. Write letters toyour local newspaper etc. But an even better idea start posting anonymous letters in your H.S. abiout the bully crowd and the crap they cause you and every one else who is differnt than their little mind culture.

The pen is mightier than the sword, pin them down, then get out of their and enroll in a school with people of your intelligence level. PRONTO................Mia.

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Guest CharliTo

Hmm, I dunno if ur still getting bullied, but I have memories of that back in the days too. I would get called the f word (the 6 letter one) all the time when I was acting girly...so I tried toughening up and I confronted them and ask them what was their problem while firmly gripping their hand.

Unfortunately, this worked for me because I'm 5'11'' and I live in a state where average person is like 5'6''.

Like what mia says, pen is mightier than the sword...or another way to put that is words are more painful than punches. It stings and lasts a lot longer. When I confronted the bullies, it was more my words that stopped them than me grabbing them.

I wish I can fully remember what I was saying then. I can't remember it fully unfortunately.

It's a terrible thing...I would say it scarred me. I still feel like I'm being overly paranoid now days...and that is very common for those that got bullied behind their back.

Everybody's situation is different so there's none that's a work-for-all kinda thing. You can do something similar, but you have to make it your own. (This awfully sounds like scriptwriting btw. :)...which btw, since you write so well, u might wanna try that ;))

Hope you're doing better and let us know if you need more things to ask pleaaase.

*hug*

G'luck too.

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  • 5 weeks later...

Hi Sphere, I'm sorry to hear about your experiences and I can relate to some extent. When I was in grade 4 I was a typical confused kid but learned very quickly the rules of the school yard. Though I had very few bullying/harassment incidents they left an impression. Luckily my family moved to a new area and I decided to re-invent my image/persona for the new school. Where I was once shy, timid and introverted, I became outgoing, friendly and funny. I made a lot of friends and that "strength in numbers" shielded me for the most part from bullying. Later on in high school I was nearly forced into fighting and I had no desire to because I knew it wouldn't end with one battle...luckily I was able to avoid it. Once I hit university I became built and never again did I experience any such incident. If you are able to move, that'd be best. If not then try to avoid confrontations as much as possible. If its a daily ongoing issue, get some authority figures or adults involved since you probably can't handle it on your own.

But at the end of the day the only thing bullies really understand is force-this is true not only for the small scale, but also between countries. If you have no options then it'd be a good idea to have a friend or two to back you up and single out each bully (when they're alone) and teach them a lesson and make sure they understand the consequences will be much more severe if they ever come after you again-fear is a good motivator. Ultimately this is war at the level of the individual. It is one person trying to brutalize and destroy another person for whatever twisted reason they have. One psychologist has referred to it as the 'authoritarian-victimizer' complex. People who most fear being victimized become authoritarian (bullies) so it doesn't happen to them.

Always remember we're human and share common weaknesses. Anyone can be dropped to their knees if you know how to fight, taking a self-defense class might serve you well. About a year ago after getting groceries in my neighborhood, near a parking lot I caught two teenage boys picking on younger kids (I think they were brother/sister). It took a great deal of willpower to restrain my rage at the bullies and they could see I was liable to snap on them. I solved the incident and gave them a very stern warning but I doubt they listened. Unfortunately in our 'free society' people can get away with a lot of evil in the shadows. Our hearts go out to you and we wish you all the best and hope you have a safe, secure future.

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Guest RainBird

The links and association with both Asperger's and GID is rather interesting, I used to get bullied quite severely as a small child in primary school, coming home with many scratches and/or bruises. I had always experienced trouble with socializing and communicating with others becuase of my nature and being rather different to all the other boys, often going off doing my own thing, as a result a family doctor diagnosed me with Asperger's Syndrome when i was like 9 years old.

More recent diagnosis indicates there was confusion resulting in the striking similarity from many of the known symptoms and behavior, being correctly diagnosed with GID.

Sphere, I really feel for you, Bullies are just bad apples in the bunch (the ones that end up getting thrown out), there isn't really any point trying to gain respect from such low lives because they do not deserve your time, friendship or patience, their lack of intellegence and vulnrability is over conpensated by their acts of primative behavior in an attempt to mask what they are try to hide around others.

Just try to ignore them. Phase them out and show them that no matter what they say it isn't going get to you (like water of a ducks back), they will then get bored with the idea of trying to bug you as they can see they are not getting anywhere with it or getting the desired reactions they expect. ;)

Big hug and much luv! :)

Jacci

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Guest Little Sara
Ever since I was first exposed to kids my age when I was in kindergarten, my peers have endlessly bullied me.

Because I can't fit in, because I don't know how to talk to people or deal with certain situations (I have Asperger's), because I have been so confused my entire life about my gender identity.

Even if I hid my transsexual feelings, the bullying wouldn't cease. It dramatically quieted down though... for all I know, that is.

I have social anxiety, so I'm terrified of rejection, right? But I feel a HUNDRED times more confident while at least trying to be my true self--a boy, and some days I just don't give the slightest dang what people think of me.

This is exactly me, 100%, except replace "a boy" with "a girl" in the last line. And note that to me, this was years ago. (I graduated high school 1999).

Having to take PE was a nightmare though - being in confined spaces without teacher's immediately around and left to fend for myself was very brutal at times (teachers - Good GOD! I would try to get in and out of the locker rooms as fast as possible without a shower, and sneak out, but often the teacher would catch me and make me go back in to take a shower. Good grief, they had no freaking idea what happened to people like me in those damned showers!) .

I never took a shower in PE, school, or day camp, or anything. I only took baths at home. I was never forced to take one, or told I should take one (though I'll admit, I hardly sweat). *Forcing* someone to take showers in a communal area is sexual harassment imo.

I'm pretty sure I do have AS and GID, them both separately. I was bad at socializing before GID became an issue front and center for bullies. I never made friends for one.

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  • 4 weeks later...
Guest Thresa_XD

Sphere I know how you feel being bullied all the time in school.

I was always bullied through out my entire time in school except for late in the 9th grade. In elementary the others would always call me cry baby or sissy since I would cry or hang out with my cousin and her friends. Since I was always taller than the other kids by almost a head the teachers would just ignore my pleas and tell me to stand up for myself,but as soon as I attempted to fight back I was the one in trouble.They always believed the others because they were shorter than me.

Then in middle school I had gained a little weight and ever since I've been the fat ugly cry baby and their insults only made me eat more. The other students would tease and hit me and during middle school I would regularly come home with cuts, bruises or scrapes from being picked on. I had always had long hair but in middle school it was down to my shoulder blades and people would call me a sweetheart, sissy boy, look at the little girl, and some would say suck my penis sweetheart and start laughing with their friends. To make things worse I got my looks from my mom so when my hair was down I looked like a girl but it did make my dress ups more satisfying that I didn’t have a man face. The worst event was one time in gym when the teacher had to leave every one ganged up on me calling degrading names and taking turns hitting me and one even pretended to hump me from behind saying you like that don't you pregnant dog, as you can guess no one got in trouble for hurting me.

The only reason people stopped bullying me in high school was because I beat up a strong bully who was popular and on the foot ball team. I had been so fed up with all the abuse and insults I snapped and managed to beat him up real bad, by luck. If I had lost the fight I know for a fact I would of been bullied my entire high school years like my previous grades. I know violence shouldn’t of been the answer but I couldn’t take it any more and didn’t know what else to do at the situation. Atleast they finally left me alone for once.

I’m lucky I didn’t get in too much trouble for breaking his nose and knocking out a few teeth it was a miracle I didn’t go to jail. But ever since my school life I have been more shy than I normally was, have –55% confidence, am afraid to be in large groups or crowds with fear of being hit from my previous encounters and have no motivation or drive to do anything because I never had any one to support me,no one on my side,and not too many friends. I have grown a huge fear of society and spend most of my day in a sense of day dreaming and fantasizing. the teachers and even mom didn’t stand up for me during the abuse even with all my marks on my body they all thought I was just being a vagina who couldn’t stand up for himself.

And sadly that is exactly what I was. T_T

I hope you can get out of that environment. No one ever should be treated this way.

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Guest Little Sara
Since I was always taller than the other kids by almost a head the teachers would just ignore my pleas and tell me to stand up for myself,but as soon as I attempted to fight back I was the one in trouble.They always believed the others because they were shorter than me.

It seems they don't care if you're a head shorter than everyone either. Because staff blamed me for my being bullied and I was one of the shortest kids (girls included) in all my grades except maybe 11th grade, I wasn't extremely-outlier, but just 'very outlier' in 11th grade. For a boy I have always been "extremely outlier" except at 18 (not in school then) when I attained my final height, then I became "very outlier" heh.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Pepper spray and brass knuckles work wonderfully in this situation. Kidding.

I'm just tryin' to be funny...and probably failing.

Anywho, I got bullied by this puddle of snot when I was in grade and middle school.

He was always bigger than me then and he used to scare the peepee out of me, right?

Well, he stopped growin' somewhere along the way and I know for a fact he wouldn't post up with me now.

He's a very sad and pathetic individual. It's common knowledge here in town that he beats his wife.

But that's a very relevant bit of info, you realize?

That's what bullies do. They prey upon who they feel to be weaker and less a challenge, if at all opposition in the least.

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Guest Donna Jean
He's a very sad and pathetic individual. It's common knowledge here in town that he beats his wife.

But that's a very relevant bit of info, you realize?

That's what bullies do. They prey upon who they feel to be weaker and less a challenge, if at all opposition in the least.

How right you are, Amie.....pathetic!

My own personal bullie would poke a sharp pencil in my leg while I was going down the school stairs or knock the books out of my hands in the hall...

But he overstepped his bullie bounds over the years and is now doing serious time at The Lucasville Correctional Institute here in Ohio.....and my first reaction to that is to say "Good for his sorry self!", but actually it makes me quite sad.....

Unfortunatly there will always be bullies of some sort...always someone who needs thier self esteem lifted at the expense of others!

XXOO

Donna Jean

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How right you are, Amie.....pathetic!

My own personal bullie would poke a sharp pencil in my leg while I was going down the school stairs or knock the books out of my hands in the hall...

But he overstepped his bullie bounds over the years and is now doing serious time at The Lucasville Correctional Institute here in Ohio.....and my first reaction to that is to say "Good for his sorry self!", but actually it makes me quite sad.....

Unfortunatly there will always be bullies of some sort...always someone who needs thier self esteem lifted at the expense of others!

XXOO

Donna Jean

Ha! Lucasville...that's the big house here in our state.

They had a pretty bad riot in that bad boy once.

Betcha he's the bullyee in there right now, huh?

But yeah, your pretty accurate on the description, Donna Jean.

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I guess my feminine side wasn't that well hidden, I was smaller but not the smallest in my class (boy has that changed) but for some reason there was always one of the tough kids.

You know the ones - they weren't bullies but the bullies never would mess with them - and one of them would always hang around with me enough to scare off the bullies.

Sort of like a big brother protecting his little sister.

I was very lucky, especialy since one of the bullies in my Junior High built a spring loaded pocket knife inshop class and tested it out in gym class, his target had to have stitches but he was OK.

Love ya,

Sally

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I guess my feminine side wasn't that well hidden, I was smaller but not the smallest in my class (boy has that changed) but for some reason there was always one of the tough kids.

You know the ones - they weren't bullies but the bullies never would mess with them - and one of them would always hang around with me enough to scare off the bullies.

Sort of like a big brother protecting his little sister.

I was very lucky, especialy since one of the bullies in my Junior High built a spring loaded pocket knife inshop class and tested it out in gym class, his target had to have stitches but he was OK.

Love ya,

Sally

Wow.

That's a little too much like somethin' from the movie, Bad Boys.

I love that movie though.

Remember that one, with Sean Penn.

LOL.

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Guest Thresa_XD
How right you are, Amie.....pathetic!

My own personal bullie would poke a sharp pencil in my leg while I was going down the school stairs or knock the books out of my hands in the hall...

But he overstepped his bullie bounds over the years and is now doing serious time at The Lucasville Correctional Institute here in Ohio.....and my first reaction to that is to say "Good for his sorry self!", but actually it makes me quite sad.....

Unfortunatly there will always be bullies of some sort...always someone who needs thier self esteem lifted at the expense of others!

XXOO

Donna Jean

Oh my God.

I thought I was the only one who got stabbed by pencils from a bully. In middle school there was a bully who would hang around with his friends to bully and hit me. one day they held me down on my desk and one of them stabbed my hand with the pencil and broke it off in my skin. I still have a black dot under my skin and I think when I pinch the area I feel lead still in there.another time in elementary a girl stabbed my leg and it started to bleed but it wasn't as bad as the hand.

God this brings back bad memories.T_T

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Guest Donna Jean
Kids can be very cruel but it DOES get better when you get older. :)

Right you are, Z....

It does get better.....with time.

Not much consolation for someone who's experiencing it now, I'm afraid...

Time seems so loooooog for younger folks...........and so quick for us older....

But, as usual...Zabrak is right!

Bullies deserve a special place in Hades...right next to wife beaters.....

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Guest Alyssa Leigh

I never was really bullied except for a few times but i was able to turn it around on the bullies doing it, they thought i was sicodic because I always hung around the goth kids and they new if they would mess with me they would have to deal with all of them also. I think its pretty funny when people stand up to the bullies how fast they back down.

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Guest sphere

Wow, haven't been online for quite a while.

Lately I haven't been caring what people think of me at all. At all. So for the past few months, bullying was no worries for me.

I still get people talking smack about me behind my back all the time, but hey, what else is new? If they're not man enough to say it to my face, who gives a care. :)

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      Sorry for the schlocky poetry, feeling a little moody.
    • Sally Stone
      Post 13 “My Compartmentalized Life” In the interest of “full disclosure” I thought I should point out that my part-time life is also a very compartmentalized life.  Long time friends and close family don’t know Sally.  Most of the acquaintances I have made as Sally, have never met my male persona, and only a few close friends, know both personas.  It sounds complicated, I know, but it happens to fit my current transgender lifestyle.  But, how did I get here?   It started years ago when I didn’t know why I felt like a girl.  The only choice I thought I had, was to keep my feelings, and the crossdressing that went along with it, a closely guarded secret.  My Army career forced me to be even more guarded, so the need for secrecy became a habit.  Later, I wanted to emerge from my closet.  I wanted Sally to experience the world but because I still didn’t understand my true transgender nature, I wasn’t ready to share my feminine side with people I knew.    As Sally’s social life expanded, it was only natural that her circle of friends and acquaintances would also expand.  This resulted in a situation where suddenly, I was simultaneously in and out of the closet.  My transgender life had become compartmentalized.  Again, because I didn’t know where my trans journey was taking me, keeping my feminine side a secret from close friends and family, was still the logical choice.  I knew the situation might change if my destination was going to be full transition, but I decided to cross that bridge if or when I came to it.   It would be many more years before I understood completely, my trans nature.  When it became clear to me that I could be happy and fulfilled living my life as a part-time woman, I didn’t have to cross the full transition bridge.  And, because I had become quite adept at keeping my two lives compartmentalized, I saw no benefit to changing things.  I was walking in two completely different worlds.  My male persona had his world with his acquaintances, and Sally had her own world, with her own acquaintances.  For a very long time those two worlds didn’t overlap, but a few years ago, that changed.   Through my New Jersey dinner group, Sally became close with a couple, one trans, the other her spouse.  My wife became good friends with them as well.  We went out together often, and because our friends only knew me as Sally, I always presented to them that way.  That was until one time, when my wife and I had a commitment earlier in the day that made it impossible for me to transform before we were scheduled to meet our friends for dinner.  My first reaction to the situation was to cancel.  I had this overpowering aversion to letting them meet my male persona.  My wife convinced me that my concern was silly.  Still, I was so spring-loaded to maintaining my compartmentalized life, I actually called my friends to ask them if they would be okay meeting my “alter-ego.” As if they would have said no.  It was a ridiculous concern, and of course, they were actually perfectly happy to meet my “other half."    It turned out that letting our friends meet and interact with my male persona wasn’t as terrifying as I had imagined, and since that initial reveal, I have come out the same way to more of Sally’s close friends.  It’s easier now, but still not natural for me.  I’d still rather Sally’s friends interact only with Sally.  I guess all the years of compartmentalizing my two personalities, has formed a habit that I struggle to break.    When it comes to family and longtime friends, they only know my male persona, and based on my current trans lifestyle, I have no plans to introduce Sally to them.  There just isn’t anything about the way I live my life right now, that would make it necessary.  I won’t deny that sometimes, because I’m hiding a big part of my personality, I feel like a bit of a fraud. After all, they aren’t seeing all of the real me. I do sometimes struggle with this conflict.  On the one hand, I want everyone to know the real me but on the other hand, why run the risk of alienating family members or long-time friends when it isn’t absolutely necessary?   Believe it or not, there have been some in the trans community, that have argued I’m not actually trans since I haven’t gone through the ordeal of coming out to family and friends, that I haven’t experienced the one true transgender right-of-passage.  I know it has been way more difficult for those who have had to face the coming out challenge with friends and loved ones, but the level of difficulty one experiences doesn’t define someone’s level of transness.  In a future post, I’ll reflect on an incident when I was called out publicly for not being trans enough, and how it affected my confidence and self-worth.   I do have some family members and longtime friends that I have seriously considered coming out to, and I may follow through at some point. But again, because I am part-time, the timeline for doing so is really up to me and my comfort level, instead of a matter of necessity.           It’s obvious that unlike so many in our community, I haven’t had to “face the music.” I know how gut-wrenching and life changing coming out to close acquaintances can be, so I do consider myself fortunate.  It is important to note that I have not chosen a part-time trans life just to avoid the pain and tribulations of coming out.  Living part-time honestly has to do with not having to choose between one personality over the other, because ultimately, I could never be happy or fulfilled if I had to choose only one.   Yes, my life is seriously compartmentalized, with Sally in one compartment and my male persona in another.  Based on where my trans journey has taken me up to this point, and where it looks like it is headed in the future, I don’t anticipate much of a change. Walking in two worlds is a choice that works for me.  I know I am different, but each of us is, so I don’t think I need to make any apologies for living my life this way.    Hugs,   Sally       
    • MaeBe
      Mourning the Boy   As I sit Pants at the knees The first tear hits Rolls down a slender wrist A wave of loss So profound As I come To mourn the passing Of the boy A boy that once was
    • VickySGV
      This was from my May 2018 Face Book post and a friend of mine IRL asked to use it on a blog spot for the Personal Stories Project which is an effort of love for he and his husband.   From Diversity To Sameness, A PRIDE Meditation    May 21, 2018   It is Pride season again, and on Saturday I was at the Pride event in Long Beach CA to help out the San Gabriel Valley LGBTQ Center which I volunteer at these days. This was the first of several events I will be going to over the next few weeks, and others stretching over the next month or two. One of the people I was with made the comment that “We really are a diverse group here!!” The comment got me thinking, and re-opened my eyes to something that has amazed me in the relatively few years I have recognized that I am part of the LGBTQIA**** (the letters keep adding on) alphabet soup of life that does and will exist. My friend was right about the scope of the diversity that does exist and is on display at Pride events without shame and yes, with PRIDE in what and who each individual really is. To many people Diversity is one of those concepts that ranks up with blasphemy against a deity and the most horrendous of demons the Evil One (human imagination) has ever created. A person who is different is to be hated, feared, shamed and made valueless. The fear of diversity fuels minds to pull away from others, and to protect themselves by taking on feelings of superiority and exclusiveness above the different person. For the most part people with those feelings are good people in many many ways, but the fear and false god of superiority they have created masks that goodness terribly. At Pride events such as the one I was at, the diversity is so intense and so visible that after a moment or two the differences become the sameness of those who participate in them. We celebrate our differences to achieve our sameness and oneness by mentally stripping off the visual differences that at first overload us and can be dizzying to the point of a feeling of sickness for some who fit the pattern I described above. With the sameness we become even more aware of the other person’s humanity, and begin to look for the good elements that we share and find them more readily. Our conversations become how to help each other and take that helpfulness beyond those immediately with us. We reassure ourselves of our value, and explore new ways to add to that value in all ways, not just for ourselves, but those of our fellow humans who fear us and thus hide themselves deeper and deeper from the good that we could share fully. The LGBTQIA**** margin is not the only place where this can be present. The reason for other Pride events such as cultural gatherings of people “othered” and devalued, or even those of persons with what are declared to be disabilities, or mental diversity do the same thing, and people of different margins, as well as those who consider themselves “mainstream” are invited to submerge themselves in those groups by the same process of celebrating the diversity that will create the sameness of humanity. One group though who has suggested that it hold massive “Pride” events does not suggest their pride to be a celebration of diversity within that group, but rather enforced rigidity of an imagined sameness for only that group. Where that has been tried in recent months, there has been universal tragedy in many ways, the least of which has been murder. A celebration of false arrogance and even more false superiority is a hell on earth, and not a thing of pride, only of tears that they are afraid to show. I could have been in this last group believing it’s agenda and set of beliefs, but I was not allowed to be there because of something strange and wonderful in me that I did not accept about my life for over 50 years until it was to celebrate or die with my Gender Dysphoria. Today it is so “ordinary” for me to see inside of the differences in the outsides of people that I forget the lesson I relearned this past week.   Pride and Peace be in your lives.
    • VickySGV
      I for one am actually pleased with how this one played out.  Local issues need to remain local and I am not on the States Rights bandwagon for all cases.  The facts of the matter did not constitute a case or controversy since the plaintiffs did not show actual or immediately impending harm to their children.  Now if the parents can show that the child had developed some type of sleep and eating disorder because they were in a bathroom with a Trans child or are involved in self harm over the idea (which is probably the parent's doing and not the school) then there might be something of a case or controversy for the court to take up.   I have six text books on U.S. Constitutional Law grinning down evilly at me that all say the SCOTUS should avoid this type of case, and shows where they have done it consistently for a couple of centuries. 
    • Ladypcnj
      When I was a kid growing up, I was considered the baby sibling of the family. I was often the last to know of everything, and since I wasn't old enough just yet to stay home by myself, I had to tagged along with my family members who drove their cars, this included going to church. I never knew other religions existed; all I knew was about the teachings of Christianity. It's easy to join a church, but what if things aren't what it appears to be than what is preached? Strange things began going on at the church in which group leaders didn't want the news media to know about it, such as an almost drowning during a baptizing among other things. The preacher/minister began to sense I wanted out of the cult. Followers that was nice to me in the beginning, was now talking behind my back, not encouraging me to find another church that I would feel more spiritually connected to.     
    • Ivy
      An option to opt out is one thing, but removing the content entirely (for everyone) is something different.  I don't think it's beneficial to isolate one's kids from the broader culture since they are going to have to live in it eventually.  If something about it bothers you, you need to explain why.  Pretending it doesn't exist is a disservice to them.   In my (and my ex's) more conservative past, we considered homeschooling.  But we also realized our kids had to live in the broader culture and needed the socialization. Two of my adult children do homeschool now.  I have mixed feelings about that. Another of them is a public school teacher.   I personally would prefer that scarce resources not be diverted from public education.  The current move against public education bothers me.  For many kids it's all they have. 
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