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!

Is it normal?


ShawnaLeigh

Recommended Posts

For those who don’t know.  Real quick.  I had my first gender therapy session yesterday afternoon

I had Super anxiety before hand.  
I cried about an hour before and basically all through the session.  I cried myself into exhaustion.  
I feel a huge weight lifted but recognize I have a have long hard and very scary road still to travel.  
It is normal to be THIS emotional over something like this?!?

I cried all night long.  Soaked two pillows.  One of our little dogs woke me early this morning licking the tears off my face.  I was crying in my sleep. 
Now I feel ashamed over this. Probably residual male conditioning.  It wasn’t out n out balling or making a scene but soft silent tears that would not stop flowing.  I’ve kept it hidden.  As I have always done.  I’m well conditioned hiding my feelings and fears for over 50 years. But I am concerned I’m broken.  
I tore something open and can’t control it now.  
It truly bothers me because I am a positive person.  I love life.  
I like being happy.  I don’t feel sad.  But I feel raw if I were the stick a label on it 
 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Oh, have you cried so hard no sound came out yet? That was both a terrible day and kind neat because I learned I could do a new thing.

 

And yes. Totally normal. You're shedding a lifetime of suppressed pain. It's like ripping off a scab to let the pus out. It's going to hurt a little, but you feel SO much better when it's done. Of course you still have a mess to clean up, but it's better than the infection. Wow, quality... if gross... metaphor there.

 

Hugs! 

Link to comment

Ok yes. A little gross.  Lol

But metaphor taken.  
 

I have been self analyzing myself for a very long time.  Cheaper then pro therapy.  Though maybe not as accurate. Lol

I understand a lifetime of repressed feelings.  Fears.  Shame.  Confusion.  Ignorance even.  I remain a naive person on purpose most likely because dealing with the reality and what the world is can be overwhelming feeling like I do.
So I honestly “get it”.  
I suppose I wasn’t prepared for the out pour.  The soul being ripped open by my own doing.  
Like I mentioned.  Male conditioning is so ingrained that it forces its own opinions too.  
I know it’s a step.  It’s a process.  What I didn’t know is just how much pain and hurt I was truly in.  
Im afraid.  
Not for my physical self but my mental state is at war.  The protective male shell is trying to suppress the women I am inside. I have to let it because O am not out.  Fear s  to ill controls me. 
Baby steps I know. 
Id rather be flying.  

Link to comment

I can relate. The first person I told was my GP. The nurse had to take my BP a few times prior to getting int to see the doc, it was through the roof. 
 

For my first therapist visit, my hands so sweaty, I couldn’t stop fidgeting and I did not have a drop of moisture in my mouth. She had to poke and pry, in a good way, to get me to start talking. I didn’t really open up emotionally that session; but, on the way home I was sobbing like crazy. I had to drive around until I stopped and cleaned myself up, before going home. 
 

Then a few days later I talked to my wife, I cried for hours, during and after. Those full body wrenching sobs. At one point I curled into a ball and sobbed for about 30 minutes straight. 
 

It’s like Jackie said, I took the years worth of unexpressed emotions and just let it break the damn. 
 

Now, my emotions still get the better of me, but I’m okay with that and letting them out at the time lessens how much of a mess I am. I don’t cry as long or quite as hard.  I also tend to feel better sooner when letting them out instead of holding them and letting them stew. 
 

iSo, you can see you’re not alone, pretty normal to have emotions, even really strong ones. 
 

*hugs*
 

Sara
 

 

Link to comment

I can really relate to being reduced to the point of blubbering like a little child. And to a certain degree, that is what I am in some ways - after years of being repressed, denying myself and hiding myself even from myself, it's like freeing a child from life in a locked closet.

The best part is that the pain and sadness is accompanied by a sense of discovery, wonderment and even joy at being freed.

At this point it doesn't make the sadness go away yet, but through all the tears there is a light ahead shining through the dark forest. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

But it's better. I found that once I was out, the "male shell" broke apart pretty quick. All those little behaviors that I forced myself to do to fit in... gone. Part of that is probably the emotional flow from the hormones. It went from "sip" to "drink from the firehose." I feel magnificent.

 

There was crying too. I seem to be more bubbly than weepy. Sometimes that's frustrating. You just want to have a good cry but can't.

 

Still, the important thing is to let all the toxic crap drip out. Then you can start to heal the hole in your soul.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • 4 weeks later...

Im still new to therapy myself but it I understand the feeling, after coming out to my therapist I just kind of walked around in a daze going over what I said and how I felt for the next couple of days.

Link to comment
  • Admin

In a spoken word piece I did on stage in concert with my Chorus,  I described Trans people as having rivers inside of us that have carved out caverns where we hide to protect ourselves, and while that process may take years and years, the river must break free from the cave and wash us out of our safe dark places into the world's light for others to at last see and know or it drowns us completely. 

 

The piece took just 59 seconds (I was given 60 seconds) but I had people after the curtain call come up and say that that was how it felt to them, and others who said they at last had gotten an insight into our Pre Coming Out  lives.  That was four years ago, so you can see the idea has been in my mind for longer than that time.  Letting our lives and anxieties out and into the world does bring tears and other emotions.  As male there were only a few basic colors in the crayon box today its a huge box of colors I have no name for yet.

 

P.S. It's ok to tear up reading that too.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   5 Members, 0 Anonymous, 174 Guests (See full list)

    • Karen Carey
    • Ivy
    • Betty K
    • April Marie
    • SamC
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      768k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,016
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Missing_in_action
    Newest Member
    Missing_in_action
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Bowie Ellis
      Bowie Ellis
      (19 years old)
    2. Damien Mcknight
      Damien Mcknight
      (18 years old)
    3. JJ
      JJ
      (77 years old)
    4. KathyLauren
      KathyLauren
      (70 years old)
    5. memyselfandwe
      memyselfandwe
      (44 years old)
  • Posts

    • April Marie
      In those dimensions, not even Sophia Loren could hold a candle to me. A Goddess....in my own mind. lol
    • Sally Stone
      So, just imagine how spectacularly beautiful you'd be in four-dimensions April.
    • Ivy
      That does sound hard to keep up with.  I use patches, changed twice a week.  But I have to have my phone set to remind me.  I just don't think about it.
    • April Marie
      Oh, I am drop-dead gorgeous in a totally different dimension @Sally Stone! :-)
    • Sally Stone
      Ladies, each of your comments makes me realize my decision to share my journey was a good one.  Before committing, I worried that my storyline wouldn't be of interest to anyone. I'm so glad I'm striking a chord with many of you.
    • Ivy
    • LC
      I am sorry to hear that. It just means something better is in your future!
    • Sally Stone
      How we look in photographs isn't really anything we can control.  I've actually searched for answers and there are lots of good explanations out there like this one:   https://www.foxbackdrop.com/blogs/news/beautiful-photogenic-reasons-tricks-foxbackdrop#:~:text=Based on the light-creation,angular faces are usually photogenic.   The simplest explanation is a picture captures our image two-dimensionally when in real-life, we are seen three-dimensionally.  A person can be beautiful or handsome in real life but the two-dimensional image can be way different.  So, for those of us that don't think we look good in a picture, fear not.  We are much better looking in three-dimensions.  
    • LC
      This is your journey and no one here will judge you or bully you. This is a very accepting, non-judgemental place and you can process at your own speed. Having said all welcome Violet, we are glad you found us. I know we all look forward to hearing from you.
    • Willow
      Good morning    I should not have said about sleeping in, now I have to go in 2 ½ hours earlier.  Oh well at least I. Off tomorrow and Monday, I think.as of now, hope I didn’t just jinx that too.     Hot today high 80s dropping quickly and rain to the 60s for a couple of days then more normal 70s.  It just depends on which way the wind blows. Off the gulf, hotter, off the ocean, cooler, out of the north rain and when they all converge, look out.  That’s today.   i made a pot of coffee but I think most of it is going to waste.  My wife went back to bed and I’m not good with coffee when I’m hot, and I am. That’s my fault, I was 4 days.late with my E again.  I just st have a really hard time keeping on a 10 day schedule.  And my reminders aren’t helping..   now I’m going to peak by tomorrow since it isn’t all absorbed in one day, I’ll hold fairly steady but if I’m late again I’ll drop well below my target yet again.     Im down in the valley, the valley so low But I see my true love, at the top of the hill i climb the mountain, but she is not there for she has gone back down, to the valley below   I didn’t come up with a refrain and with that I’m calling the guys with the padded cells. lol   Willow    
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Finding a few pictures from a trip to Thailand I went to 10 years ago.They were pictures taken with Katois aka ladyboys.It was cool to meet them and planning to go back next year.A couple of them saw I am transgender too.
    • April Marie
      Congratulations and Happy Anniversary!!!! A beautiful milestone.    I hope to see you tonight...I just have to stay awake long enough!!
    • Mirrabooka
      It's funny with photos isn't it, how we think we look in them vs. how we actually do look in them! I'm hopeless at smiling and I have to try really hard not to frown or look like a zombie. I'm never sure how I come across to others.   I had a moment late last night when my eldest daughter facetimed my wife for some now forgotten reason, and when I was handed the tablet and talking to her, I was fixated on my image in the corner. My hair was wild at the time, I was a bit tipsy and all I saw was a woman! I have no idea what she saw in that context. I'll probably never know.
    • KathyLauren
      I hope to see you on the Zoom meeting tonight, April.  I might be late, since I am doing lights and sound for a play that opened last night.  I was home before ten last night, so I think I'll be able to make it.   Today is an anniversary for me.  Seven years ago today, I stood up at the weekly community kaffeeklatsch as <deadname> and announced that henceforth I would be Kathy.  It went as well as I could have imagined: there were some surprised looks, but no hostility and lots of support.  A whole layer of stress disappeared that day and has never come back.  (There have been other stresses, but that one is gone.)  I have been me full-time ever since that moment.
    • Mirrabooka
      This is a scarily accurate description of what I feel!   I hope I don't sound too schmaltzy by saying this, but I remember when I signed up to this forum last year, during the sign-up process the question is asked, "Why do you want to join TransPulse?" to which I wrote, "Looking for a home where I can freely write about my issues and interact with similar people."    I think I just found one. ❤️
  • 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...