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!

I have no idea... whatever I am, it’s too late.


Nikki63646

Recommended Posts

I’m 37, and I am coming to terms with the fact that I am a trans-woman. But I’m not coming to terms with the fact that I’m too late. 

 

I have a beautiful wife and two gorgeous girls. I realised that there was more to my story because of my wife’s late trans friend, but only I knew.

 

i was raped when I was 11, but even before this, I had very feminine feelings. My inner woman is eager to surface but I will not confuse my children. Also, my wife has PND quite bad and after the death of her best friend, I fear for her too. He depressive state is worse than mine- either that or I value life much more.

 

i am a girl inside and I have a serious “Purging” problem. I’m in the closet and I love my inner person, but I don’t love my outta.

 

What am am I doing? What do I need to do? I’m so afraid of loosing my wife and girls, so too I’m afraid of who I really am.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hello Nikki and welcome.  You are not alone.  I'm sorry to read you were violated when you were young. (hugs)  The first place I recommend to coming to acceptance is speaking with a therapist to help you understand and work this into your life. I was never one for therapy but I found it to be enlightening and extremely helpful.  Eventually you will need to speak with your wife and a counselor will assist you here as well.  Your fear is real but getting to understand it and over it is an important step in healing and moving forward.   Please join in the conversation.  We're all here to support each other.  

 

Cheers, Jani    

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Welcome Nikki, Don't ever think it is too late in life to realize. I just finally realized I was really a woman last year at the age of 53. Yeah I have had clues but finally put them together.

 

As Jani suggested. find a therapist with experience with Transgender people.They can help with both your TG and may even give you insight on helping your wife with her PND.

 

Also remember we have a wide diversity of people on here. While we are not professional counselors we can give some real world info.

 

Kymmie

Link to comment

I am thankful you have replied. Already I feel so welcome. I’m just really interested in how others have dealt with wife and kids or husband. I’m sure I would have every bit of courage to move forward had it not been for them. I’m sure I know what I want. I would like to know how bad my situation is from another point of view but I guess that will be a professional level counsellor.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

At some point you will need to speak to your spouse.  You know them best as to how they may react.  When you speak with a counselor they will not tell you who you are but assist you in sussing out where you are in the process.  They will help by bringing clarity to your mind by questioning your statements and motivations to help you determine what your best step is to proceed.  This could be nothing, to beginning transition as well as every possible step in between.   Remember that gender is a spectrum and we all fit somewhere.  You will discover your place.  

 

Being in the UK you have to go through the NHS GIC which I recommend signing up for despite the long queue.  In the meantime, if you have resources you can go the private route.  

 

Jani

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hi Nikki, welcome.  Amazing intro! Your life story sounds closer to mine than anyone's I've read about here on the TP forums.  I'm glad you're coming to terms with it.  It took me 56 years to do that so congrats.  I wish you the best on your journey...whatever that path you take.

 

Warmest Regards,

Susan R?

Link to comment
16 hours ago, Nikki63646 said:

i am a girl inside and I have a serious “Purging” problem. I’m in the closet and I love my inner person, but I don’t love my outta.

 

What am am I doing? What do I need to do? I’m so afraid of loosing my wife and girls, so too I’m afraid of who I really am.

Hi Nikki, pleased to meet you. :)  That you already know there's more to your story will help. Loving your inner person is a wonderful acknowledgement, but being authentic on the outside can be SO hard! You said that your wife had a late Trans friend and so knowing she has accepted someone else may make it easier for her to accept you too.  Counselling is a very important first step though so I would encourage you to start there and just see what unfolds!

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

I’m married also with 2 kids and the fear of losing them is what has kept me from following through with a first time therapy appointment.  It’s scary, but I feel like I am getting closer.  This site is a huge support for me. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I understand the fear but you don't know they will react.  You have to ask would you want to live out your life being unhappy.  Would you be a better parent and spouse/friend if you moved forward?  Things to consider. 

 

Link to comment
  • Admin

I can't say anything the others have not mentioned other than the oldest person to receive Gender Confirmation Surgery was in her 80's, and I was in my 60's when I fully came out ten years ago.  As to children, my youngest is 40 this year, and as long as I have money when they do not, they still come around to get an advance on their inheritances from me.

Link to comment

Hi, Nickki!  Just read your posts from February.  It's completely normal to be concerned about how to proceed with your spouse and kids. 

 

I made it a point to prepare for coming out with care and careful preparation. It's not something I wanted to just "blurt out", nor was it something I wanted to simply "have a conversation" about.  So, I did lots and lots of reading, and ultimately found that the book "How to Understand Your Gender: A Practical Guide for Exploring Who You Are" (Alex Iantaffi and Meg-John Barker; published in 2017) offered what I was looking for: a series of exercises that allow you to write (and draw) your thoughts and feelings about many aspects of gender.  This allowed me to have an in-depth conversation with my spouse, where I could show what I'd been working through and why I was having this conversation. This helped that important day go relatively smoothly for me -- but equally important has been keeping our lines of communication open between us since then, so that we can share our concerns and answer questions as I continue this journey.

 

For coming out to our adult daughter (age 26), I chose a different approach.  She lives and works in a foreign country now, so I chose to wait until she returned home for a family visit.  I then shared a reasonably short, page-and-a-half personal letter with her (with my spouse present). It was mostly a non-event; our daughter is progressive and supportive of all gender orientations, so she had few questions.

 

Coming out to my loved ones was, for me,  a tremendous relief and a lifting of the torment that had been keeping me depressed, worried, and frankly, grumpy to those same loved ones. It was, for me, a very positive step forward.

 

Of course, the above approach reflects who I am, and what you ultimately do needs to fit your own preferences for communicating with your loved ones.  But I do wish you the best in taking the steps necessary to move forward when you're ready. 

 

Astrid

Link to comment

I am 52, i have always felt like a female on the inside, i have always fought the feelings to a point, it didn't help that my dad beat me for what he called me being a sissy constantly. I remember dreading going through puberty and growing hair everywhere. when i started getting hair on my legs, i started shaving them/armpits and i have ever since.I experimented with a couple boys when i was 12 or 13. I started crossdressing at that time. I was very confused. I didnt know what exactly was going on. I tried doing the guy thing, i married my first love, she didnt accept it. I spent 12 years with her. I tried dating a few more times but something still wasnt right. I have not been with anybody in 20 years, i guess i was trying to come to terms about it. So i made my first appointment for this week to start transitioning. I am scared, i dont want to be judged, but i know i want and need to do this.

 

Edited by Charlize
edited what the word filter would have removed
Link to comment

I will come out when i cant hide it any more. Friends and family already knew about crossdressing to a point, but i dont know how they will react with this

 

Link to comment

Hi, Rachele!

 

I'm glad to hear that you're taking those first steps.  Sounds like it's time (very similar to my own experience, where I couldn't keep everything internally anymore). I know that, for me, once I made known what I was going through to others I trusted, it was like a huge weight was lifted.  

 

Please keep us posted on how things go for you in the coming week(s).  We're all here to support each other.

 

Astrid

Link to comment

Hey Rachele..I know how you feel. I  55 and just start my transition..I am scared I making a big mistake. My sis knew I was Cd for the time we were young, but she never said anything to me until I came out 3yrs ago. I have not told my mom about my plans, because like I mention before I think I am making a  big mistake.  But this place is really helping me see the good in my decision but I still wake up thinking  WHY AM STILL ATTARCTIVE TO WOMEN.  Sorry Nikki for you situation..My stuff is nothing compared to want yr going through, but everyone is right..Find me, talk your wife and figure out the best plan.  Be Proud and  stay strong 

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   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 119 Guests (See full list)

    • VickySGV
    • Evelyn J
    • Petra Jane
    • Ashley0616
    • KymmieL
    • awkward-yet-sweet
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

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

    • Total Members
      12,059
    • Most Online
      8,356

    FelixThePickleMan
    Newest Member
    FelixThePickleMan
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Aelia
      Aelia
      (22 years old)
    2. Just-Jenny-finally
      Just-Jenny-finally
      (65 years old)
    3. KelcieK
      KelcieK
      (50 years old)
    4. Krimson Kya
      Krimson Kya
      (35 years old)
    5. Robin
      Robin
      (56 years old)
  • Posts

    • KymmieL
      I have wondered how basic training is for transgender recruits?   Kymmie 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Some of them are us.  I view while logged out sometimes.  But I also know that so much of this forum is public.  I really wish more areas were "members only."  I'm aware that stuff I post here is publicly viewable, so I never post last names, first names of other people, pictures, or give my location.  I tend to think my husband and GF would be displeased at the few things I do post here.... and they may be right.   Our times are pretty uncertain, and it seems to be "fox hunting season" out there. 
    • VickySGV
      Welcome to the Forums Felix, enjoy yourself, but please get the homework done!!
    • VickySGV
      On May 4, the Trans Chorus Of Los Angeles did a whole 90 minutes of music that was all written by Trans composers and all of our singers and musicians were Trans / NB.  Several of the pieces were actually written by our chorus members.  (I was running a $3,500 set of video cameras on the show and am editing the the massive gigabytes they put out today. We had several guest artists either on stage or who contributed material.  One of the artists was Wrabel who wrote the song The Village which he has dedicated to the Trans Community and describes a young Trans child and the problems they had in their village.  The other MAJOR Trans Artist was Jennifer Leitham, a Bass Viol and Bass Guitar player who as a young man played with the Big Bands of the 60's and 70's in her male self into Transition, and wrote an autobiographical song entitled Manhood which tells of her love of the men she played with in the bands but her not really fitting as a man. Jennifer has played with the Chorus before and is always good music fun to have around.  Two of our members collaborated on a music and poetry piece simply entitled "I'll - - " which brought some tears with a promise to Trans Young People with the whole chorus shouting "I'll be there for you, I will be there for you" said for Trans Kids.  (We actually had a few Trans kids in the audience to hear it.)  My video editing program has about 40 minutes to go producing the main body of the edited video which has the actual song clips in the right order.  Next to put in the Title slides and the credits.  The stuff I get myself into.   The concert took place at the Renberg Theater which is part of the Los Angeles LGB Center in Hollywood.   
    • FelixThePickleMan
      Hi, I'm Felix a little trans guy from a small town. My pronouns are he/they and I enjoy music and all wildlife, I doodle on all my homework assignments. I really don't know what to say but, my favourite animal is a cow, my favourite musical genre is country, I play electric bass & acoustic guitar as well as the ukulele a little bit of piano and drums (hand drums and drum sets). I like things of all sorts and I like food, a lot. My favourite meal is French fries and a good steak. My Personal Record for dead-lifting is 310 lbs and I like to sprint and play basketball. My mum's a "bit" overbearing but what can you do. I love reading Manga, I'm currently reading Assassination Classroom, I also enjoy reading Stephen King. I plan on joining the Marines after high school and become a k-9 handler.  I think that's all. For now :) 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I didn't use makeup even in my girl form.  And certainly not now in my boy form.  I don't even like sunscreen...it just feels greasy.  I've always disliked putting stuff on myself.  Partly because of the physical feeling, and partly because I don't want to pretend to anybody.    My partners are mostly the same...makeup isn't really a thing for our faith.  But my GF and husband have one particular vanity - covering up gray hair.  IDK if I will feel differently when I start getting some of my own, eventually.
    • Jet McCartney
      I'm ftm but I still wear makeup on occasion to cover up my rosacea. Just primer and sunscreen usually. Sometimes I'll fill in my eyebrows too
    • DonkeySocks
      I think some of "them" are just us. If I log out, I might come in and putter around the forums for a minute before I commit to logging in and reading or participating. That probably shows as a guest visit.
    • DonkeySocks
      I have the Pierre by New York Toy Collective, I think I bought it from a different online store but it is that brand. The size recommendations will say that the four-inch shaft (the small Pierre) is for people 5' tall and under. I am 5'8" and it is fine for me. The larger (regular) Pierre shaft size is way too big to wear regularly, but it is a great packer to have around for gender affirming play at home. So even if you are taller than 5', if you aren't sure and you want something easy to wear, go with the small. It is a silicone packer.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Yes, resilient, for sure.  Ours were elementary/middle school age when their father died.  The girl took it really hard, losing her father.  My husband has been there as friend, counselor, and stepfather.  He was a dear friend of their father, and he has put in a lot of effort to raise them.  The eldest son is now his secretary, aide, and driver at work.   Since I'm young-ish and not their primary parent(s), I have the role of being an older friend to them.  They don't seem to have any issues with my gender.  I'm just Jen, and everybody knows that Jen is a little different.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      If you're looking for a millennial female who might be interested, maybe contact Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez? Y'all might have some things in common, and I think she and her partner are doing the "childless" thing.      Interesting that your wife did concrete work.  My GF spent some time laying concrete for her own projects....while 6 months pregnant.   She's a very stubborn girl.  Probably the exact opposite of the millennial female you're looking for, since she's a mother of 5 (and wished she could have more.)  Interesting how folks can have similar origins, but come to opposite conclusions.  My GF grew up in dire poverty, stealing to eat and take care of her little sister.  As a young adult, she spent several years living in a commune, and was a member of an armed communist political movement.  Now she's probably the most fervent anti-leftist, anti-government person you could ever find.  Experiences really shape who we are.    The lesson I draw from this is that globalism is not the right solution, and even the USA is too large a nation for everybody to agree.  Time to downsize voluntarily, before a civil war does it for us.  Some folks suggest that the USA could become between 4 and 7 different nations.  The way the world is going, I suspect you'll get your "depopulation" wish....but it will come about through war, plagues, and famine. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I made apple pies, since we have apple trees here.  A classic, simple recipe, everything made from scratch.  We can make just about any kind of pie here - pecan, apple, pear, peach, blackberry....    I think the 6-burner stove came from an old diner.  So, technically a restaurant stove, just a small one.  It probably came from an auction, as my partner usually has an eye for deals.    This stove has 8 burners:   https://www.lowes.com/pd/FORNO-48-in-4-32-cu-ft-2-26-cu-ft-Steam-cleaning-Double-Oven-Convection-Gas-Range-Stainless-steel/1003096398?cm_mmc=shp-_-c-_-prd-_-app-_-ggl-_-PLA_APP_186_Cooking-_-1003096398-_-online-_-0-_-0&ds_rl=1286890&gad_source=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIj86BiPj3hQMVeTbUAR2m5wexEAQYASABEgI9tvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds   This one is the one I would love to have...it has 10:   https://www.lowes.com/pd/FORNO-Galiano-Gold-Professional-60-inch-Freestanding-Gas-Range/5013821825?cm_mmc=shp-_-c-_-prd-_-app-_-ggl-_-PLA_APP_186_Cooking-_-5013821825-_-online-_-0-_-0&ds_rl=1286890&gad_source=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIj86BiPj3hQMVeTbUAR2m5wexEAQYDSABEgIt__D_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
    • missyjo
      69 years young dear  winks it's just a number..   transcend it n be fabulous  hugs
    • Lydia_R
    • Lydia_R
      Not to bump this up or anything, but I just want to put one more note on the end of this...   Thank you for allowing me to post this here and thank you for all who have responded.  This step has been a huge help to me on my political journey.  I've made several key decisions in the last few days that allow me to run a better campaign for the next 4 years.  I worked my way off of the streets 20 years ago by writing math and computer programming on paper.  10 years later I was able to buy a house with the software engineering work that I was doing.  Now 20 years after getting off of the streets and having two failed bids for US Representative and likely another failed bid in the next couple weeks, I've come to the point of selling my house to run a very frugal campaign for vice-president (it's a thing even though it is an appointed position) for the next 4 years, all on the money I have earned from that work I did on the streets.   My policy going forward is that I'm not going to ask for money and I'm not going to ask for people's votes.  The vice-presidency is an appointed position.  I'm also not going to run for legislative offices anymore.  I'm simply going to tour the country on my own dime looking for good people and a strong millennial female who sees my logic and would like to be president.   I have reached out to tens of thousands of people on my own dime in the last 7 years.  Famous people, ultra-famous people, business leaders, civil engineers, random people, news people, educators, unions, politicians.  I certainly got less than 5 emails from those efforts.  Actually, I only really remember one person.  He is an educator and we had a good Zoom meeting.   I'm not bitter.  I'm not complaining.  Those of you who have followed me on this site know I like to keep things positive and talk about cooking and living healthy.  I hope that this post doesn't get buried.  I think the title is strong and my message is clear.  I don't want to bog this site down with the details of the whole thing.  I simply want people to know that there is a transwoman working to be vice-president.  Notice that I didn't title this a-transwoman-as-us-respresentative.  My politics are executive level.  I'm a whistleblower, not a complainer.  I aim to educate and inspire.
  • 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...