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Good Things In Life


Guest Zabrak

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Guest CharliTo

...get a room u two :3.... lol.

my good thing life...is... hm.... whoa, i might have to think hard on this one actually. lol

okay, i can say that this forum is definitely one good thing too :3

...and maybe facebook.

...and my friends.

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Guest Donna Jean
Outing to my best guy friend tomorrow - he hasn't seen me in three-four months. Should be interesting!

Lizzy

Good luck, Sweetie.....

All my thoughts will be with you for this....

Interesting = understatement

****BIGG HUGGS****

Donna Jean

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Guest OneOutOfnOne

I am in all sorts of limbo right now: gender limbo, relationship limbo, country-of-residence limbo, education limbo, career limbo, possibly more.

So what's my good thing? I just realized that it would be hilarious to rename a certain part of my anatomy the 'limbo stick'.

Also, I'm good at bad jokes again. This skill is very important to me, and I was quite concerned when I seemed to have lost it for most of the last year.

Also, one hundred posts?

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Guest Jackson

Bad jokes are very important. If there were no bad jokes, how would we know the good jokes were good?

I'm just happy because I just finished my final exam for my fourth semester in my grad school program. I have three weeks off, but I have enough work to do for school though. I have five more semesters to go and then graduation in December 2010. So I'm almost half-way through my program.

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Guest Naomi Stardust

i finally got my referral to a gender specialist, only a week late but i don't care! it's here

will make an appointment monday morning :D

i'm happy, that's odd

i'm still nervous about the future

but those feelings are not in control

:D :D :D

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Hmm, good things in life. Well, despite not feeling too good about a lot of things recently, I do know that I have a supporting family as well as friends, who all just want to help me out. I just need to try and stay positive ^_^

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I had a home invasion/raid by my ex and her family with a moving truck coming for her stuff - a phone call with only a five minute warning - they didn't want any witnesses - they didn't take too much that they had no right o and if I can't get any of it back it is a low price to be rid of them.

I have decided to view this as they have settled - when they left I found her wedding band on my night stand - looks like its finally over, I hope!

Why is this a good thing?

Because my wonderful friedns here PMed and called me and cheered me up.

My mother took me to dinner and did not make a mention of my transsexuality either way so there was no tensin, just caring and comfort, just what I needed - there is that silver lining again!

Love ya,

Sally

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Guest Donna Jean
I have decided to view this as they have settled - when they left I found her wedding band on my night stand - looks like its finally over, I hope!

Why is this a good thing?

Because my wonderful friedns here PMed and called me and cheered me up.

My mother took me to dinner and did not make a mention of my transsexuality either way so there was no tensin, just caring and comfort, just what I needed - there is that silver lining again!

Love ya,

Sally

Wonderful things, indeed, Sally! You're finally getting a resolution to the marriage thing and I do know how much you want to get out from under that! Good for you, Sweetheart!

My good thing is that I got "Ladied" twice this weekend ....and I'm feeling awesome!....lol

Unstopable now!

Donna Jean

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Guest mia 1
Because my wonderful Friends here PMed and called me and cheered me up.

My mother took me to dinner and did not make a mention of my trans sexuality either way so there was no tensin, just caring and comfort, just what I needed - there is that silver lining again!

Love ya,

Sally

Sally,Way to turn a potentially depressing and angry situation into a positive forward step.

My good thing is I came out to my best friend and his wife and there were tears of joy from them and a one hour phone conversation from Florida....

And Also D.J. is passing now and ready for the LADIE"S ROOM :D

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Guest Zabrak

Well....I got some more extra money today. Also go a bunch of stuff in order. Have to send in one more thing and then my name change papers should come in. Then I can start changing all my bank/school/exc over to it.

Been feeling really laid back this weekend. Going to go work out and make some food now.

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Guest RainBird

I'm going out to town for tea this evening then catching up with a few friends afterwards. :)

BTW a tourist who approached me on Thirsday night adressed me as 'miss' when he asked me a question. It didn't even bother him when he heard my voice either, I thought that was really cool! :)

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Guest OneOutOfnOne

I started writing a piece for orchestra yesterday. This is going to be something big, I haven't composed in too long.

In addition, I found a place to live next year: it's a house with five-bedrooms and an impressively large kitchen, and all of us living there next year like the same music. It's official, I guess it's back to the USA for a while.

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hmm.. well i've been picking up a lot more shifts at work, which is definitely a good thing... because in this society, money is necessary :rolleyes: but it also means that i have almost zero social life and am barely able to be active on the forums... take the good with the bad i guess *shrugs* :)

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Guest Donna Jean
my first appointment with a gender specialist is today at one!! :D :D :D

OMG, Naomi!

Now THAT is truly wonderful news! Good luck Honey...let it all out....

It scared me at first, but once I started talking, I couldn't shut up!!

Now I look forward to it every week! My therapist probably says "Oh God, there she goes again!"...lol

But now I'm letting out half a century of stuff! (Sounds like a long time when you say it that way!)

This is great news, Sweetheart! I'm really so happy for you! Let us know how it went....OK?

**BIGG HUGG ****

Donna Jean

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my first appointment with a gender specialist is today at one!! :D :D :D

That makes me very happy too! :D

Work has been coming in very slowly for me this year so I took a very small wedding for Saturday, just a few hours - today I got a call to shoot a dance competition with 102 performances - jus speculations, but parents buy that sort of thing - so I am going to start it off, my assistant will shoot while I am away at the wedding and I'll come back to finish it up. Everything for sale on the Internet and I am plitting the profits with my assistant - it could be nothing or it could be a gold mine!

People have found my studio's number! :lol:

Love ya,

Sally

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Lots of good thing happened today :D

I had another appointment with the psychologist who I've been talking to about this gender stuff, which was good. On top of that, I got a referral from her to an endocrinologist so I can start taking a testosterone blocker :D

And then after that I went shopping and now have some new clothes to wear. So yay! Good stuff for me today ^_^

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Guest Jackson

I feel like I've been a stranger since I've been so busy with real life lately. I've collected a bunch of good things in the last week:

1. The federal government owes me a refund big enough to cover my total top surgery and then some. That'll be scheduled some time this winter. I can't be taking time off from my reenacting season.

2. I aced my fourth semester in grad school and in about six semesters weeks (eight weeks real life) I'll be half-way done.

3. I survived the appraisal on my house which included fixing and painting the porch and installing a stair banister (looks really good for a first-timer). The appraiser is the same kind of crazy as me and half of the appraisal we were talking about the government.

2. I spent two days (yesterday and the day before) having a mini-vacation: an overnight camping trip into the 1880's in a cabin with no electricity, no running water in the middle of nowhere. I got up yesterday morning from sleeping in front of a fire to hear owls and sand hill cranes. We went riding and kicked up deer, turkey, and coyote.

Whew. A busy eight days if I do say so myself.

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A very good thing is that my friend Jackson is back and having a run of good luck! :)

I got through yesterday and no way today could possibly be as bad, could it?

Love ya,

Sally

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Guest Leigh

the other day, i was feeling crappy. and i walked outside and there was this huge double rainbow...i considered it a gift from the gay gods...lol. made me smile.

peace&love

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I got two new kitties from an animal shelter a week ago, they seem to hide all day and come out at night, my friend calls them the vampire kitties from outer space :lol: , the woman from the shelter called the other day and was pleased they were doing so good.

Paula.

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  • Posts

    • Cynthia Slowan
      Hi Ivy!  Thanks so much! 💗Cynthia                      
    • RaineOnYourParade
      As a guy with a mom constantly throwing around "she/her", I feel you.   I think trans people in general hold ourselves to an impossible standard to be more girly or manly. There are some people who look or act a lot like the opposite gender, even if they're completely comfortable in their AGAB. That thought helps comfort me sometimes. If being a man was a set of boxes to check off (beyond the obvious chromosome things), I'm sure there'd be plenty of cis guys that would suddenly find themselves no longer being guys. It can be hard when it feels like evidence is stacked against you, but you don't have to be a certain way to turn into a guy. Some people will make it sound that way, but you're already a guy, regardless of how you look or act. After all, men don't look or act one way.   Moving on from that, your mom'll probably (unfortunately) be an issue until you're able to put some distance between yourself and her. Finding a good group of people that support you and your identity can help some -- even if you can't stop her from misgendering you, the more people that you find that respect you can sometimes make it easier to drown out that voice.   I wish you the best of luck <3
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Dang, this post started a loooooong time ago :o   I'm not the most masculine guy, and I would be way too terrified to talk about any desire to be a boy tbh. Everyone said I was girl, I was told I had girl parts, all that, so I figured there was no other option, even if I wanted to be a boy. So, I basically masked the few remaining "signs" I would have after taking away some stereotypical guy things. I was a bit of a tomboy, but I didn't mind wearing fem clothing, and I was seen as just that -- a bit of a boyish girl.   Though, one internalized sign I did have and never talked about was my obsession with Mulan. A girl who got to go and be a guy. She got to hang out with the guys, eat and sleep with the guys, act like a guy, learn the same things the guys in the movie did. I thought every girl would be jealous of that... apparently not, lol 
    • RaineOnYourParade
      It depends what you consider "rich". "Rich" as in there's plenty going on in there? Yeah, sure. Doesn't mean it's high quality junk. There's a lot of complicated stuff I'm still working on sorting out, so even if I've got a lot in my inner life, it's such a mess that it looks more like a hoarder's den than the nice, temple-like space a "rich inner life" makes me think of.     Then I'm definitely doing something wrong with thinking haha 😅 My brain is physically incapable of not thinking about something. I can focus on one thing if I try really hard or if it's a specific interest of mine, but I have to keep thinking on it, otherwise my brain just starts jumping around. If I leave my brain alone, it sometimes jumps to some stuff that kinda scares me, so I don't think my thoughts will ever go to silence     Great minds think alike, I suppose! :D
    • Ivy
      I will add, Sometimes it's just a look of recognition from a woman, say like in a coffeeshop, store, etc. that helps me feel like I do belong.  I don't get that recognition from men anymore - and don't miss it.
    • Ivy
      I wanted to say this too. One thing that is hard for trans women is not having had the girl's socialization growing up.  A lot of the time we just don't know how to act, and that shows. For myself, sometimes I hold back maybe more than I should out of fear of seeming "creepy." Acceptance varies.  Some women are quite accepting, others less so.  I usually wait to be invited to participate.  I don't want to push myself on anybody.   These days I don't have much interaction with men anyway.  Perhaps my seeing men as "other" gets picked up on by women.  I don't know.  I seem to fall back on "it's complicated."   I think when you understand what women go through in this patriarchal society it helps to understand better.  As trans women, we do get some of this as well, but most of us didn't have to grow up with it. Over time, and even pre-transition, I've developed a very feminist view of our society.  (Also raising 6 daughters helped a bit.)  But that is a whole other subject.
    • Vidanjali
      I spend time reflecting on this too. I do so in terms of transcending mind. I study Vedanta, mystical yoga philosophy, under guru's guidance. The mind-body complex is spoken of where "mind" is further parsed as ego, mind, intellect, unconscious all interacting with each other. It is said that one's real Self is soul and from a transcendent point of view, soul is not individualized, but One. It is through the illusion of ignorance we experience a world of multiplicity. Soul reflected through conditioned mind projects our seemingly subjective experience. When our unconscious is steeped in negative impressions, the ego is inflated. That inflated ego influences intellect which is the faculty of discernment, reasoning, and will, to direct the mind to project the negativity it believes is true. Negative experience of the world creates further negative impressions in the unconscious and thus a vicious cycle occurs. But likewise we are able to exert self-effort to control the mind, break that cycle and plant seeds of positivity in the unconscious by doing good practices in many ways.    It is said that mind is the cause of bondage and release. My guru once said if your thinking lead to more and more thinking, then there is something wrong with your thinking. But if your thoughts lead to thoughtlessness, then you are on the right track. That is, one can do many things with the mind - make the mind one-pointed, make the mind distracted, or make the mind so still that it negates itself. That is a taste of bliss.   So, do I have a rich inner life? I would say I do. But that was not a given; I aspire for it. It requires persistent effort and patience. And the term "rich" is not literal. Lord Jesus said, blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. By this, "poor" is also not meant literally. Poor in spirit is the state of cessation of ego and attachment - there is no "me" or "mine". In that state the kingdom which is Absolute Bliss is attained.
    • Ivy
      Welcome Cynthia
    • Sally Stone
      Post 11 “The Move West”    I mentioned in previous posts how many of the places I lived impacted my comfort level, and from my perspective, living in New Jersey was the perfect location for a trans woman.  However, other factors, such as property taxes and living costs, meant my wife and I couldn’t comfortable retire there.  Additionally, my wife wanted to live closer to our kids, and I couldn’t deny her that desire, especially since she dutifully followed me around the globe during my military and flying career.  Because the boys both lived on the “left” coast, we were going to retire somewhere in the western half of the United States.    Searching for places to retire, we wanted a locale that was easy on taxes and benefitted retirees.  However, I was ever vigilant for a place that was going to be trans friendly.  We actually passed on many places because, based on the research I did, they were not considered good locales for alternative lifestyles.  The internet has its issues, but there are numerous LGBTQ resources that helped us make an informed decision.  Despite the research we did, you really can’t know if you are going to be comfortable somewhere until you’ve actually lived there.   The plan was to select a location, and move when I retired.  However, the demand for real estate in New Jersey put our house in high-demand, and our real estate agent suggested we sell as soon as possible to take advantage of the market.  We put the house up for sale and it sold in under 15-days.  Suddenly, we had to find a new place to live, so instead of waiting until I stopped working, we relocated immediately.    Nevada had always come up as a great retirement location.  There was no state tax, and the cost of living was much lower than any of the other places we had on our list.  Surprisingly, many of the larger Nevada municipalities scored high as LGBTQ locations.  Las Vegas got the best LGBTQ ratings but we didn’t want to live in such a large city.  However, both Carson City and Reno looked like acceptable alternatives.  We chose the Reno area, although the house we bought is about 50-mile away from the city.   In the back of my mind, I kept wondering if the research I had done about Reno being LGBTQ friendly was accurate.  Clearly, I had assumed some risk here, since the research results didn’t specifically address the transgender community.  Adding to my anxiety, I couldn’t find any local trans groups, and the Reno LGBTQ community center’s transgender page hadn’t been refreshed in several years.  The only way for me to know for sure what things would be like for me, was to put myself out there.    Sally’s first day in Reno would be a June Saturday morning.  The plan was to do some shopping and find a place to eat lunch.  I started my day by stopping at Starbucks for coffee.  It was a pleasant surprise to greeted so openly by the staff, and this seemed a first positive sign.  Then it was off to the mall.  I shopped at a few of the department stores, and strolled through the mall proper.  It was a busy Saturday, with lots of people out and about, but I never noticed an odd or disparaging look, nor did I encounter a personal interaction that wasn’t anything but pleasant and cordial.  After the mall, I stopped at PF Chang’s for lunch.  Since I was alone, I asked the hostess if I could get food at the bar.  The young lady tending the bar that day was so sweet, and we immediately became friends.  The next thing I knew, I was being introduced to other servers, and became the center of their attention.  They raved about my outfit and the boots I was wearing.  Talk about feeling special.    So, my first day as Sally was awesome, and since that first outing, I have never had an uncomfortable moment in Reno.  I have also noticed several trans women in my travels, so obviously there is a population here.  It kind of surprises me there isn’t an active social group, but then maybe the women I’ve encountered have settled into society here, and don’t need it.  I don’t actually need a trans specific social group either.  My wife is my BFF, and she and I get out together often enough that I don’t feel lonely or alone.   I bet there are other girls out there; however, who are still in the closet, or perhaps don’t know how much fun Reno is.  For those girls, I have considered starting a social group.  In fact, I have already coordinated a “girl’s” weekend for this coming September.  The plan is to spend the weekend enjoying all Reno has to offer, but centered around a Saturday evening concert.  It should be lots of fun, and I’m looking forward to it.  The challenge is getting the word out.  I probably need to coordinate with the local LGBTQ center to help spread the word.   Turns out Reno is a fun place to live even though I am trans.  The people Sally has met have all been very friendly, but I can’t imagine it being any other way, since Sally is also friendly, and based on my interaction with others, very likeable as well.  I think I’m living proof that when you are open, friendly, have a positive attitude, and smile a lot, people respond in kind, even when they might know, or have a hint you weren’t born the gender you are presenting.    One could assume that my positive social experiences have just been dumb luck, but when I consider how long I have been out as Sally, it can’t just be luck.  I know in my heart, that I am doing something right, that my female personality resonates in a way that ensures I am accepted as the woman I am trying to be.   Hugs,   Sally
    • Ivy
    • Betty K
      I’m not saying that situation will change for you — how could I know? — but I can say it changed for me. I am frequently astonished at how differently I behave since transitioning, how much more relaxed and free and confident I am, and how much of my behaviour seems — to me and to others — genuinely feminine. It can happen.
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • MaeBe
      The behaviors you mention are all socialized, they’re not natal. The women all lived lives where this behavior is expected and they learned. That’s not to say every person aligns with societal “norms” or does it well, this situation was a microcosm. I think I understand where your head is at and I’m confident nothing I wrote is news to you, but look at it this way: do what brings you joy and the rest will follow. At the end it seems like you got in the way of your own joy, the others were including you be it through politeness or acceptance, and only when the Self got in the way did the interaction change.
    • Ladypcnj
      Here are some safety tips whenever going out: 1. Make sure your cellphone is fully charged, and don't forget to bring the charger with you. 2. Tell a trusted friend or family member who is accepting about where you're going to be (if you're traveling alone). 3. Bring along a trusted friend or someone else that is in the community, go together, and afterwards leave the place together. 4. Be aware of your surroundings.
    • Mirrabooka
      I’m posting this here because maybe it is a sign that I dislike my natal self in some ways that I hadn’t thought of before.   A situation happened yesterday which ended up giving me a good ol’ reality check. It left me feeling quite deflated. As a result, once again, I’m questioning my place on the trans rainbow spectrum. It’s not so much that I feel like an imposter, but rather, I feel like an alien.   Our oldest daughter is a single mom and her daughter, our granddaughter, is going on seven. They had a special event at her school yesterday; it was Special Person’s Day, where parents or significant others were invited to participate in some out-of-class activities in the last hour with the students. Since our daughter was working, my wife and I were glad to attend in her place and our granddaughter was thrilled to see us.   My wife isn’t disabled, but she’s not especially capable of doing physical stuff. So, it was always going to be me holding onto the tug-of-war rope with half a dozen mothers against the kids, just as it was to get in the rock/paper/scissors comp where the loser went to the back of the line and the winner had to sprint madly along the line to mee the next contestant. It was nice to be doing something amongst a group of lovely women, not that they knew that I was emulating them. There was some small talk and a bit of gentle banter with these strangers, and it felt nice; I felt included. Of course, these women were just being good humans and not actually including me as one of them. Not that I expected them to do so.   Then we went to the art room and waited outside until the previous group finished up. I became observant during this time, not ogling the ladies amongst the throng at all, but just taking in their hairstyles and clothing choices and the spontaneous, intuitive conversations between them. I started to get a sinking feeling. I was nothing like them, not just in appearance, but in womanly ways. Once inside and assisting the kids, I found it impossible to interact with any of the mothers at all. It’s as if I could see their large pink auras all intermingling, and here was I with my tiny blue (purple at best) aura tied to an anvil and unable to think of myself as anything but an outlier. I almost felt embarrassed to have long hair.   It doesn’t matter how womanly I feel inside, or what feminine mannerisms automatically happen, or how I might display myself to keep my inner woman happy – I am missing the naturality of it all. And that's what gave me the feeling of being deflated.   Just had to get this off my chest.    
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