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!

Girl Slob--


VickySGV

Recommended Posts

  • Admin

I have been going through a period where I am turning into as big a SLOB as I was back in the guy days, and for the same reasons I was a slob then, I don't give a damn!! I was cussing a blue streak with some people on Saturday, and I rarely swear or curse. I am feeling like wearing my most masculine grundgy and maybe not even clean stuff that is not what TG dreams are made of for when you become post. I did not wear make-up at all today and did not care one bit if I was correctly gendered and for a bit hoped someone would so I could sneer at them. I guess I am going through some minor depression, but I am thinking of all I have been through to look and think as I am at the minute. It seems nuts. It is not regret of any sort, but its a reality on par with some of my pre-trans* days as "him:,

I wish I knew why I am grumpy, and it may be I need some IRL hugs, but I wish I knew.

Link to comment
Guest Kenna Dixon

Vicky, I've slipped into the same mode. But it's not depression in my case. I can attribute it to the fact that I have a part-time job in a very male-oriented environment. Since I otherwise work at home, I lost the motivation and got stuck in neutral.

However, I'm on the verge of being able to give up the job in favor of some computer work that's beginning to pay off.

So just this week I've found a small salon and asked the stylist/owner specifically to help me recover and sustain my feminine mojo. That's a luxury I haven't given myself in about four years. And tomorrow I'll be meeting with the director of a local hospice program who's desperate for part-time volunteer assistance to keep the office organized. Unless I sense that the atmosphere is hostile to transgender people (highly unlikely), that will be another opportunity to re-energize the real "me".

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Vicky please remember you are a winner. You are sober and living beyond any dream you've had. Being down can come and go as unfortunately can our joy and the newness of being ourselves. Fortunately we have an HP to help.

I know i need a meeting. It's one reason i'm looking forward to being home.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Here is a big hug from me Vicky. We have to work so hard for so long I think it is only natural that some part of us demands a break once in awhile. I've had times a little like that though am nit post-op and the barriers to that is the source of most of my down times. For me there is also te realization that though I am far more than I ever dreamed I could be I have also maximized what I could do. This is what I am left with like it or not. Kind of like knowing the limits to all the secret big dreams. I didn't think I would ever get this far but secretly dreamed of being more . Instead of looking at working toward something the time came to look at my lim itations. That was depressing. I think for us who transitioned later the old habits sometimes push back too.

It helps me to work on something productive then-I'm catching up on 10 years of neglected projects around here and it will take at least a year to catch up. I keep reminding myself of how much better it really is and get tough with myself. But that is what works for me and what I have to do. I tend to just get worse if I pamper myself or give in but for some people just backing off ad being good to themselves helps.

It will pass. That I'm sure of. And when it does the Vicky that you have worked so hard to realize will still be there al ready and waiting to embrace life again once you are recharged. Even strong people need to take a break sometimes.

Hugs

Johnny

Link to comment
Guest noeleena

Hi,

Vicky,

Do you have some health issues That may be catching up with you from years long ago ,some times its internal and your not aware of that, are there any meds your on now that could be effecting you , .what else have you noticed about your self that may be a trigger, and of cause when did you have your blood tests done some time ago, maybe be there could be an issue underlieing in how you are feeling,

Your a year under me , and try this how well do you know your body it could just be a simple detail and find that and then you can work out what needs to be done or changed ,

I would look at your meds side of thinges just a thought,

may be nothing ,, i would look at meds dose rates concistincy effective and over how long a period ,Iv worked with meds over many years and seen a few things happen both good and bad and sorting them and in how they work and side effects ,

Any way worth looking at if nothing else peace of mind, email me if you need to,,

...noeleena...

Link to comment

So what if you are feeling lazy now and again.

On the other hand its been my observation that a large portion of MTF tend to become somewhat affected during transition doing things to fit social role or how they look. After some years the affectations slowly fall by the wayside. For example a friend a friend when she started to transition would only wear dresses and went really "girly" dropping her interest in cars and customizing them, selling her jeep for something more appropriate. A few years later she had gotten much more casual in her dress mostly wearing jeans and one day shows up in a jeep and starts telling me all the stuff she had done to it.

So maybe some of that going on. In any case no big deal, kinda par for the course in my view.

Link to comment
  • Admin

Thank you all, I think Drea has nailed what is really going on here. It was two years ago that I got my notice that my GCS date was being moved forward by three months, and at the time I was just a bit over a year of being Full Time, which even though I had eased into for over half a year, I was still butting my head against folks who did not see me as being "girl" even with the changes I could see by then. Surprise, surprise, but now that I am closing in on being two years post-op, the same damn folks still do not see the <censored> differences and my surgical status is irrelevant to them since they are close family members. It is these folks who have been in my life pretty heavily for a couple of weeks, and I have realized that a couple of my old behaviors which I thought I had buried with HIS corpse are coming back to haunt me. I wish those behaviors had been customizing automobiles, but these are a little darker involving how I let people in my family control me and my time, and the negatives I let them dump on me. Now that the shock and novelty has worn off of them, it is their business-as-usual, because they only needed to change in very tiny ways compared to what I had to. That crap has got to stop, and I am working on it.

Another element of this is that I am up to four invitations for wedding's and a few more people I have come to know announcing their engagements that will probably be wedding invitations in a while. All of these have involve super cute pictures of the couples who look soooooo happy together. The weddings will be next Spring and will mean some travel time involved which should be a nice, since I do like to travel. but lets face it, this is about couples, the youngest being 7 years younger than me, and I am single with no prospects of changing that status. I am still friends with my Ex, but the intimacy we had years ago is dead and we know it cannot be revived. When our marriage broke up I knew that for many reasons that I was not going to seek a committed couple relationship again in my life and up until now that has been my life that has simply happened. Seeing lovebirds though, looking so darn happy and cute is hard and hurts, I just do not see a change coming that way in my life, as it has been.

I am still happier with the "me" of today, but I feel like I did back in my early 20's when my friends then were getting married. The fact that the weddings I do want to go to would not have been possible back then, and possibly would have horrified me then, does not change my being able to see the beauty in the people and their relationships. Yes, all but one of them involves at least one "T" person as the partner. The other is a lesbian couple. This has awakened an old old old dream that to me still seems to have no chance of coming true. (Is it therapist time??)

Noeleena: I am having a few minor allergy problems, and the allergy meds are not helping, but I have been on them for years at this time, and the rest of my health stuff is the best it has been in years!!. Thank you for the thoughts though.

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   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 129 Guests (See full list)

    • April Marie
    • Betty K
    • Heather Shay
    • Petra Jane
  • 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
    • 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 
    • Willow
      So, we left for lunch in our Taos, talked and went to the dealer and came home with the Cadillac.  
    • Betty K
      I have just finished reading the Cass Review, all 380-odd pages of it, and am totally open to questions including via DM if anyone wants more information on it
    • Abigail Genevieve
      What season are you?  If you don't know, look around on the internet. Or ask a girl friend..  Maybe someone here is even a color consultant?   And there are guides on figure-flattering clothes for all shapes that you should look into.    Abby
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Just know that your kids will probably turn out OK, in spite of the chaos.  One of my partners was widowed in her very early 30s, left with 3 kids.  They're teens now, and one graduated a year ago and is working, but still living at home.  A few bumps in the road, but the three are turning into responsible young adults.  It is amazing how resilient kids can be.  They should be able to handle your changes as well.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Had my time with my 2 long friends I was in the Army with.We went through the photo books and talked memories.They also found about the guy that bullied and sexually assaulted me.He is in prison,sexually assaulted and raped 2 women off base.Doing a 40 year sentence for this and was dishonorable discharged
  • 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...