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!

Life after transitioning to full time.


DonnaBall

Recommended Posts

I have not done this yet but I am going to assume that I will lose most of my friends after I start living full time as a woman. I am retired and age 74 and don't have any family that I am close to, which probably makes things a little easier rejection wise. 

 

Presently my day consists of spending most of the day while my wife is present and going out for our daily exercise walk or bike ride and maybe a shopping trip together. Our 3 meals are together too and then settling down for the evening watching TV after dinner.  It's a simple life but not boring. 

 

Once our planned separation occurs I will be on my own.  I can still do the same things alone to get out of the house but it's all those times at home that I am alone that is my concern. 

 

How have others in my same situation dealt with the aloneness?  I have tried to cope in the past when I have tried this before during two other separations but ended up getting depressed and came back to my wife. 

 

I really don't want this to happen again like it has in the past.  There is a transgender support group in my town that I will join but right now that is an unknown, and that can only keep you so busy.  I also plan on seeing a counselor with aTG specialty to cope, but I am really interested in how others have handled their situation to keep busy. 

 

What is your experience with getting involved in cis groups at a church or any other organization.  Were you able to make new friends by getting involved in hobby activities? 

 

Donna

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hello Donna.  First I am sorry to hear you will be separating.  But I assume that you are a resilient person who will find your way.  Connecting with a TG group is a good start.  But eventually you will want to branch out to meet with others.  I don't do the "church thing" any longer but I've read it can be a good source of companionship, camaraderie, and possibly support if you find the right organization.  I understand UCC tend to be accepting.  My wife still works and is up early so my day is mine.  I look to presentations at local libraries, independent theaters and museums.  You need to not fear striking up a conversation as what you are looking for will present itself in the places you least expect it.   I think making new friends can be hard as we age so we have to make a concerted effort. 

 

All my best to you, 

Jani

Link to comment
  • Admin

Hello, Donna.  I think Jani has some great suggestions and pointers.  I know several people here and IRL who have found very accepting churches and synagogues.  Most cities and larger towns have senior groups that don't or wouldn't discriminate.  As for friends, if yours would so easily cast you aside when you transition, then they weren't really friends to begin with and you should find others.  It has been my experience since transitioning that people are accepting, especially when I have been friendly and approachable and willing to answer questions.  But I've also found that most people don't ask intrusive questions.  It is more about how you act towards others than it is what gender you present as.

 

I have volunteered as a museum docent and have found it to be a rewarding & enriching experience.  While I was nervous about meeting the public in the beginning, it has turned out to be a non-issue.  To museum visitors of all ages, I am just the volunteer lady who knows all about the exhibits, and that's all that has mattered.  Not one person has ever "clocked" me to my knowledge, and I've been seen by tens of thousands over my 7 years there.  Volunteering has also allowed me to make new friends.  So you might give that a try too, if it works out for you.

 

HUGS

 

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
3 hours ago, DonnaBall said:

How have others in my same situation dealt with the aloneness? 

Hi Donna, my wife and I are empty nesters.  Since the kids grew up and now spend the majority of time focusing on their own families, we find we have more free time to meet other people.  What’s different now is that we are trying to meet new people together who are accepting of us as a lesbian couple.  Of course, we’ve lost a few so-called “friends” that knew me and my wife pre-transition but have gained many more since going full time.

 

Recently, in the last 4-5 months, we’ve started looking for a church together instead of attending separate churches.  After getting involved at the church, we are finally starting to get to know a few individuals.  They are not yet good friends More like regular acquaintances at this point but as we get more involved, I’m hoping that may change.  Time will tell.

 

We are also volunteering for a popular organization that allows us to choose how many hours we want to work and what type of work will fit us best.  I have found it’s a great place to meet new people.  The friends (volunteers) we’ve met are (so far) very accepting and in the same ‘life stage’ as my wife and I.  I’m not sure if volunteering is everyone’s cup of tea but it has been a blessing in our life over the past 4 months.

 

Since the beginning of the year (2019) we have been attending several wonderful Trans and LGBTQ support groups in the Seattle area.  This was a great move for us especially early in our transition together.  We aren’t in as great of need as we were but we still enjoy attending and getting together with friends from group afterwards.  I have met some friends in these groups that will likely be around for a long long time.  I think will be a great start for you once your separation starts.  You may find a few others at group in a very similar boat as yourself.  It does help to talk with others about your struggles and triumphs.

 

My Best,

Susan R?

 

 

Link to comment
  • Admin

I am two years younger than you and single for close to 30 years but have so much to do, including moderating this place, that I am not at home much on some days, and it is never a dull moment.  Any volunteer work that a woman your age would do is there for you to do.  When you are giving people help they need, they see the helper and get over the Trans woman pretty darn fast.  That's what @Carolyn Marie is talking about, people in a museum may be looking for old fossils but we aren't the ones they are paying attention to.  I have a friend who volunteers at a local cancer hospital and reads books to both children and even adult patients who love it and do not even see her as Trans.  There where you live, I think there is an LGBT Center looking for help in a number of areas. 

Link to comment

Thank you so much everyone for your answers.  I am very encouraged and amenable to your suggestions.  I have done volunteer work before at a hospital and at church so I know about how you can make friends that way. 

I was wondering how do you handle the transgender part of joining a volunteer organization.  Do you remain stealth if you can?  Do you come out to them and see if they still want you? 

Donna

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
59 minutes ago, DonnaBall said:

I was wondering how do you handle the transgender part of joining a volunteer organization.  Do you remain stealth if you can?  Do you come out to them and see if they still want you? 

I can’t speak for anyone else here but I was very lucky and already ‘out and full time’ when I signed up.  The process was pretty straight forward.  
 

A good friend of mine is part of the organization we volunteer at located here in the Seattle area.  She mentioned to my current director that she knew two people (my wife & I) that were interested in doing volunteer work.  My friend did mention upfront that I was a trans woman and the director said to her, “oh, she’ll have no problems with that here”.  
 

So our friend told us to apply, I filled out and emailed the PDF paperwork and the director later that week came to our home to interview us.  The interview went great and we were signed on after background checks, of course.  It’s been the best experience ever since.  My wife works in a school helping children struggling with school and I am in training right now to volunteer at a long term transitional housing center for at-risk youth. Some are homeless, neglected, LGTBQ, addicts of all kinds, and a few are criminals.  They asked where I’d like to work and they’ve been working with the administration to set up a station there.  It’s going to be hard work but I’m up for the challenge.

 

These volunteer organizations (at least in my area) are just looking for good people.  The staff and other volunteers there couldn’t care less about me being trans. If volunteering sounds like something you’re interested in, by all means talk to someone in charge there and be honest with them upfront.  If they’re stand-offish in anyway then try another non-profit group.  They’re everywhere.  Much of my director’s job and her assistant’s daily tasks revolve around cultivating and recruiting.  They’re almost always looking for new people.

 

Hope that sort of explains the process a little,

Susan R?

Link to comment
  • Admin
1 hour ago, DonnaBall said:

I was wondering how do you handle the transgender part of joining a volunteer organization.  Do you remain stealth if you can?  Do you come out to them and see if they still want you? 

 

I personally just ask if they need help with no elaboration on my gender status.  I can give fingerprints and my law enforcement background before I retired left a heavy trail on my Criminal Investigation background check that has my former name on it, but also no arrests for anything that would prevent me from working with children or disabled adults.  All that comes to them is my clean record (not even a ticket in 30 years) and the lack of a flag is all they get that way.  It is simply a non-issue if they find out, and some consider it an asset if they do.  I know some people who are too upfront about being Trans and it gets them booted because the job description does not REQUIRE a Trans person and they make it seem like its the basis of the job to be done.  They talk themselves out of the job.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
2 hours ago, DonnaBall said:

Do you remain stealth if you can?

I want to elaborate on one important detail regarding keeping stealth for a volunteer position if you have previously changed your name...especially from a name change that would automatically out you.  In my case, my dead name would have been what outed me as trans with the admin even before the background check process started. After the initial interview with the director I went in for getting screened and I was asked to write down all previous aliases and variations I’ve ever used.  I had to list my male dead name along with my current female name.  So keeping stealth for me was never really a possibility.  This may not yet be an issue for you Donna until you’re out and presenting full time but I thought you might want to know.

 

Susan R?

Link to comment

I can not speak from a single Transgender perspective right now as I am just starting my transition and I am still with my wife as well. For now.   But I have been through three other divorces and the loneliness is a hard crushing thing to deal with once you are back to your apartment/house/room from being out there working, living life,  and being busy.  Its the internal home life that is the hardest part when you separate and divorce. The interruption of your comfortable safe zone.  Your "home".  

When you move on it will be all different.  Yes that seems stupid to say but think about it.  What you knew is gone or mostly gone.  It will seem empty and cold but you have to just live your life day by day.  Don't worry about next week or next month or the holidays.  Live it day by day and try your best to just be you.  Joining a forum like this is extremely helpful as we all understand and know where you are at.  We can fill that void to an extent with our friendship and conversation.  Our love and understanding of what it is like to be a trans person going out on your own.

I know this is not the most up beat posting.  I am sorry if it seems harsh. But its the real deal that I lived through three times.  You just have to work slowly through the pain of your loss and the loneliness.  Focus on what needs to be done and do it as you are it now.  If you don't know ask and learn.  You have to become a survivor and tell yourself you can do this and try your best to be strong.  Even when you are alone. 

Yes at times it can flood you with emotions and fear and a desire to run back to what is comfortable.  Most times just back into a life or situation that is truly not healthy or what you want/need but don't know anything different.  Or into another relationship that may not be right for you to fill all the old gaps.  So you go back and settle into what was comfortable over and over one way or the other.  I did this, hence the three divorces. 

Time will make it better.  I promise.

Does it heal all wounds.  NO, I can not preach that, but it does make it livable again and even happy.

Good Luck.

Link to comment

Wow! You girls are all so fantastic.  I really appreciate your answers and am so encouraged and you are giving me the strength to go ahead with my decision. 

 

Shawna, I appreciate your honesty and I do agree that I will have to push on and get through those periods of loneliness.  I have been preparing for this by reading books on being alone and being single.  A really good book is "Feeling Good" by David Burns. 

 

I can't go into everything but from the books I have learned that feeling lonely is about believing that if you are alone you are not loved and that's not true.  You have been loved, but it's not necessary to be loved, it's just the world tells you that you have to be loved. 

 

There are many people that are not alone and their partner does not love them and they are stuck in the relationship so the two do not necessarily go together. Also there are many advantages to living alone. 

 

Right now 45% of Americans are single and some do quite well so that's something to keep in mind when you are feeling low.  At my age there are many widows. 

 

Again, thanks everyone, especially the volunteers who are giving their time and talent to do good in the world. 

 

Donna

 

 

Link to comment

DonnaBall, I am glad you took that a I intended and did not take offense.  I felt like a jerk being so cold and logical about it all.  I had to force myself into that mind set quite a few times.  I never could get passed the emotions of it all but I was able to focus my energies to making a better life slowly.  I made so many mistake too.  I learned form them.  Some I did not.  But I survived and now I am living.  

I have a huge situation coming towards me and it may be my biggest test of all.  Divorce due to being trans.  Not in a good place financially and scared for my future as well. 

But one day at a time. right.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hey @DonnaBall! First off, don't be so quick to write your friends off. I didn't lose any of mine. Even the ones I was sure were going to bail on me. Secondly, I went out and made some more friends. I don't know what sort of hobbies your pursue, but I go out once a week to do hobby stuff and I go to the gym five days a week. I've made a bunch of new friends in both places.

 

At home, Susan and I are still married and plan to be for some time, but she spends most of her time at work (she works for an evil witch). Granted, I'm an only child and good at being alone, but I fill my days with productive activities. Today for example, I plan to wash the bedding, work on my YA novel and make pot-pies from scratch for dinner. There will likely be a break for lunch and maybe an encouraging word or two posted here if the opportunity presents itself. It doesn't sound like much, but it's a full, busy day.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I too have wondered about the life after the big D. While I am planning on moving afterwards. It may be thrice as hard, being alone, transgender and at a new position. Loneliness is really nothing new to me. I have no real friends. I have spent many a day alone.

 

I however will be taking my motorcycle with me when I do move. So that may keep me occupied some. May help me meet people, however being trans riding a Harley may be a problem. But there will be plenty of new roads not traveled to explore. New places to see.

 

Kymmie

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   2 Members, 0 Anonymous, 118 Guests (See full list)

    • Roach
    • MaryEllen
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

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

    • Total Members
      12,060
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Vivelacors
    Newest Member
    Vivelacors
    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...