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!

Transition Compromises


Saoirse 2

Recommended Posts

I've posted a few times before, so some of you may know some of my personal struggles. I am trying to pause my physical transition either temporarily or perhaps permanently.

 

By that I mean:

-stop or move to microdosing E, guided by my endocrinologist.

- stop plans for any surgeries.

- continue with hair removal

- continue to change my appearance and style (hair and clothes) toward the feminine spectrum, but no further than my wife can tolerate.

- vocal training is continuing as well.

 

I am hoping my therapist can help me focus on the positive affirming aspects of the above and find balance and peace. I hope I can assuage my dysphoria in this way.

 

Has anyone else chosen this path?

 

Did it work for you?

 

What is your best advice?

 

Love,

 

Nimue

Link to comment

I think most us older trans women have paused, purged, denied, and compromised at some point. I buried my true self 20 years ago to keep my children during a difficult divorce. I think you can cope for awhile, but “she” always come back home carrying a suitcase of regret.

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

Has anyone else chosen this path?

Like you, and many other transitioning people who are married. I'm proceeding in a very slow, but honest open transition with my wife minimally resisting my move down the androgyny scale, to femininity.

 

I hope you're able to work things out with you spouse, and care team.

 

Hugs,

 

Mindy??️‍⚧️?

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
1 hour ago, Erica Gabriel said:

I think you can cope for awhile, but “she” always come back home carrying a suitcase of regret.

I agree, and also purged several times to stay married. This time however the suitcase is unpacked and we're honestly talking about which closet and dresser her things belong in.

 

Mindy??️‍⚧️?

Link to comment
14 hours ago, Nimue said:

Has anyone else chosen this path?

I've mostly been bargaining with myself, but I've denied myself before.

14 hours ago, Nimue said:

Did it work for you?

For a while, but she/I always returned.

14 hours ago, Nimue said:

What is your best advice?

Be honest to your wife and - above all -  to yourself.

 

There's no right or wrong choices here. Only choices, and hard ones I might add. Ask yourself if that, what you described above is enough for you. Can you live like that? Can you both be happy in such a marriage?

 

My thoughts on this matter is that no one asked to be transgender. Nobody ever told me how to lead a life with this. After denying, bargaining and despairing with myself, I've come to accept myself after almost 40 years and now I have some hard decisions to make (HRT, GRS and such). However, these decisions are mine alone. I make them and I carry the responsibility.

 

Unfortunately, we all need to figure it out ourselves.

 

Strength and courage to you dear!

Helena

Link to comment

@Nimue Hi! I posted to another sort of similar post, this one seems to shed more light on things. 

 Not this specific path, I haven't started steps 1-3 yet, my 1st endo appt isn't until Feb. In step 4 you mentioned, "... no further than my wife can tolerate." To this one, yes I have. She didn't tolerate any femme in my appearance, I tried, but as earlier posted was quickly going back to a dark place. Presently we both tolerate androgynous for the short term.

   There are people here far more experienced than I who recommended couple therapy sessions with the gender therapist. I wish I could say it worked, but my wife wouldn't go when I said it wouldn't make my transgenderness go away. Hopefully your wife will be more receptive. 

 

Hugs!

Delcina

Link to comment

In some respects my situation has similarities and others it does not.

 

Let's look at what may be a significant difference - I get very little dysphoria about my male body. The only area which upsets me is that of body hair. I hate it, but I hate it on everyone, male or female so I'm not sure this is really a gender specific dysphoria. So I'm comfortable spending time as my male self.

 

But I do NEED to spend time as my female self. I NEED to experience being a woman, and while I have ruled out physical surgery as I wish to be able to spend time in both male and female aspects I have not ruled out HRT. 

 

I guess I am lucky in that my wife tolerates/accepts me spending time as a woman although I doubt she will ever voluntarily support that aspect of me. But apart from time constraints (I am limited to around 3 days per week as Niamh) there are no constraints on how I behave, speak, what I wear and where I go when I am in my female aspect.  I will never go back to being hairy and permanent hair removal has been mentioned to my wife. While she fails to understand why I would go through the pain voluntarily she has not blocked electrolysis as an option.

 

So - yes I think I can live OK with this regime. There will be times I will go away for up to a week as Niamh and this is accepted. However my wife is adamant that we will not go anywhere together outside of the home  while I am being a woman except in an emergency (there have been a couple of those).

 

But if I had significant dysphoria - I really don't know if this would work for me.

Link to comment

Nimue,

 

I have found happiness expressing my femininity only part of the time.  While it has made it easier for my wife to accept, it was a personal decision.  Expressing my feminine side this way works for me and I'm content.  Ultimately, your happiness and level of contentment may not be the same as mine, so you'll just have to explore your options to see if you can be happy without transitioning fully.  Each of us is different, which means we all don't need to follow the same transitional path. I'm confident you will find your own path.  I wish you success and happiness no matter what path you choose.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I have "transitioned" but have certainly not had every possible surgery.  While i live on as a woman i also work on a farm doing what i have always done.  Often these things are not considered "feminine".  I think we all find our path.  Rather than think of compromise i prefer to think we do what is right for us at the time.  I know that that may well change in time.  

There is no "finish line".

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...
On 11/17/2021 at 8:24 PM, Nimue said:

Has anyone else chosen this path?

 

Did it work for you?

 

What is your best advice?

Hi Nimue!

To answer your questions:

- Yes

- So far, but still a work in progress

- Not sure I should give advice but to say I am following pretty close to the track you are on, and for the same reasons, and you also received a great deal of experience from the others who answered you, and I think they all provide a great perspective.

I am doing what I can to continue to embrace my transfeminine identity within the limits of my relationship and "restrictions".  The good days tend to outweigh the bad but I am only about 2 years into this ... I know its going to be a long road both for myself and my wife but I try to keep an optimistic attitude and celebrate small "victories".

 

Therapy is a VERY important part of my well being and I am continuing that, though just recently my original therapist moved away and I am just starting with a new one.

 

I've been running "silent" here on TP for a while, but the Forum is a great place to at least stay connected, and I have a good connection with several of the Members I can always talk with on PM.  It helps.


Wishing you all the Best ...


Deep breaths ... one step at a time ❤️

Kay

Link to comment

I couldn't stop if I tried.  My dysphoria had gotten to the point that just the thought of not being able to live as a woman mad me almost suicidal. I hate every "male" aspect of my being so I'm fast tracking full medical transition. My world supports me but it has also cost me my marriage. We tried counseling. She absolutely wants me to transition but couldn't "transition" into a lesbian and the loss of a male partner left a large hole in her emotionally. We realized we both deserve someone whom we are attracted to and is attracted to us.  Still great friends but that was the price of being my authentic self. I'm lucky that she never wanted me to compromise, doing so probably would have killed me slowly. Everyone has their own journey and their own thresholds for what they are willing to do, or need to do in order to survive and live fully.  

My advice is simple, if these compromises are tolerable for you and you are mentally OK with them the great.  On the flip side, if they are just an attempt to appease your spouse but they are emotionally painful for you then you need to reevaluate why you are compromising.  I've seen a lot of people compromise their transitional goals out of fear they will lose someone but even then, they don't "fix" the relationship. It just stagnates and resentments occur on both sides. Couples therapy helps you both see where things truly stand and why you are deciding to slow down or why you are being asked to slow down.  

I HATE the fact that I've lost my wife, we had an amazing mariage. But we also realised, it wasn't going to survive without resentments. It was out of respect for each other we split. (also why we still love each other and are friends) My life will be harder and sadder without her, but I will also be able to flourish at some point as my authentic self, free to be me without the fear of hurting someone or myself.

Link to comment
3 minutes ago, Bri2020 said:

I couldn't stop if I tried.  My dysphoria had gotten to the point that just the thought of not being able to live as a woman mad me almost suicidal. I hate every "male" aspect of my being so I'm fast tracking full medical transition. My world supports me but it has also cost me my marriage. We tried counseling. She absolutely wants me to transition but couldn't "transition" into a lesbian and the loss of a male partner left a large hole in her emotionally. We realized we both deserve someone whom we are attracted to and is attracted to us.  Still great friends but that was the price of being my authentic self. I'm lucky that she never wanted me to compromise, doing so probably would have killed me slowly. Everyone has their own journey and their own thresholds for what they are willing to do, or need to do in order to survive and live fully.  

My advice is simple, if these compromises are tolerable for you and you are mentally OK with them the great.  On the flip side, if they are just an attempt to appease your spouse but they are emotionally painful for you then you need to reevaluate why you are compromising.  I've seen a lot of people compromise their transitional goals out of fear they will lose someone but even then, they don't "fix" the relationship. It just stagnates and resentments occur on both sides. Couples therapy helps you both see where things truly stand and why you are deciding to slow down or why you are being asked to slow down.  

I HATE the fact that I've lost my wife, we had an amazing mariage. But we also realised, it wasn't going to survive without resentments. It was out of respect for each other we split. (also why we still love each other and are friends) My life will be harder and sadder without her, but I will also be able to flourish at some point as my authentic self, free to be me without the fear of hurting someone or myself.

 Thank you for sharing. I couldn't stop after all; I just couldn't hold out very long for similar reasons to those that you shared. So I decided to just be open with my wife and tell her that I have to proceed.

 

All of this is bewildering to me, since I have been able to plan and control so much of my life up until my dysphoria surfaced. If this were a sporting match, the score is now Dysphoria 10 vs. Nimue 0.

 

I am mostly content to be losing this battle. However, I am not always so resolute and struggle with moments of panic an doubt, yet these moments do pass and I feel more sure each time.

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, 144 Guests (See full list)

    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Ivy
    • MaryEllen
    • Willow
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,024
    • Most Online
      8,356

    JamesyGreen
    Newest Member
    JamesyGreen
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Alscully
      Alscully
      (35 years old)
    2. floruisse
      floruisse
      (40 years old)
    3. Jasmine25
      Jasmine25
      (22 years old)
    4. Trev0rK
      Trev0rK
      (26 years old)
  • Posts

    • Ivy
      It's a plan to basically completely take over the government by the right wing.
    • Ivy
      I'm actually in Asheville tonight.  Some of the people in the support group invited me for dinner after the meeting.  We're going to get together again tomorrow again. It's been nice, 4 trans women and 1 trans man, together ar a restaurant.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I found https://www.project2025.org/policy/   I will have to read it.  I have not.  What is of concern?   The link provided earlier goes back to this forum.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      My parents were life long Democrats. 
    • Ivy
      'Nuff said. Yeah I'm not thrilled with Biden either. There are some conservative ideas I'm good with.  And I do feel that the current Democratic party is too cozy with the bankers and wealthy.  But despite all their talk, when it comes down to it, so are the Republicans.  And it's not the Dems calling for our eradication. Unfortunately, I see this election as existential for trans folks.  
    • Mmindy
      Good evening everyone,   @Birdie your CNA Is ill informed about breast and proper bra fitting.   My wife and I are checking out a campground up in Michigan just a little North of Saginaw, MI. We had a great meal at a local tavern serving delicious perch fillet dinner.   We’re going to check out the Saginaw,MI Bay area for summer time activities for when we come back on occasion. We belong to a camping club call Adventure Outdoors and have free camping at their resorts around Michigan and Ohio.   Hugs,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋    
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I agree.   Biden has been known to switch positions without notice, whether on abortion, Gaza or gay marriage.  Most of what he has done has been via executive order and decision, so it does not carry the force of lasting law and can be easily reversed.  I really do not trust him at all.   Trump says a lot of things.  He switches his position all the time.  Most of what he wants to do will require legislation to accomplish, some of which will simply never become law.  I do not trust him at all.   I'm not sure which is worse for trans people specifically because of this, and the fact that the other issues that surround trans folk which I attempted to isolate this question from, but here I go :) also affect trans people along with everyone else.   In either case trans folk need to be prepared. 
    • Carolyn Marie
      I'm certain that there are some, if not many, but you would be hard pressed to find them willing to speak up on this forum.  There are many trans folk who are conservative, and believe that Biden's non-trans related policies are terrible.  Those include his economic, foreign policy, border security, and environmental policies.  I'm a lifelong Democrat, and even I don't like all of Biden's policies.  It comes down to who would do the most damage to the most people, and the most damage to America as a going democratic nation which has respect for the rule of law.   Carolyn Marie
    • MaeBe
      Thank you for continuing to share your story, Sally!   Willa sounded like a grand friend, I'm sorry for your loss. :(
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Not all conservatives are for Trump.  I am far from thrilled he is running.  Just wanted to make that clear.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Anybody willing to present the case for Trump? Any conservatives out there?
    • MaeBe
      Two words(?): Project 2025   Please provide links to the "political calculus" referred to, I'd be interested to know where this is coming from. It seems odd that anyone would be advocating to vote in a President that has stated that he will try to use the federal government to go after LGBTQ+ people because voting back Biden, that is not doing that, might cause some state legislatures to put forth more discriminatory laws.   LGBTQ+ people are not safe in a MAGA future.
    • Ashley0616
      It's awesome that you have had such a great friend in your life! I could only imagine what losing felt like to you. It's neat that you worked for the airlines. Did you take advantage of the space availability fights? My dad worked for Northwest and always flew every single summer except one where we drove from north Mississippi to Phoenix, AZ. My parents agreed to never do that again lol. 
    • Ashley0616
      The trans community won't be good under Trump at all. Biden is the one who has done more for the trans community than any other presidents. Last time Trump was in office he was at an LGBTQ rally and his support went quickly away from us because the majority of the voters are anti trans. He is going to get rid of our rights and also come after the rest of LGBTQ.  I don't know where you heard we would be better under Trump.    Trump unveils sweeping attack on trans rights ahead of 2024 (axios.com)   Trump Promises to Go After Trans People if Re-Elected (vice.com)   Trump promises to ban transgender women from sports if re-elected (nbcnews.com)
    • Sally Stone
      Post 7 “The Pittsburgh Years” When I retired from the Army, we moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania because I had been hired by US Airways to work in their flight training department.  The transition to civilian life was a bit of an adjustment, but I never really looked back.  At the same time, I was excited at the prospect of having more Sally time. But with work and two teenage boys in the house, getting to be Sally was a challenge.    The biggest issue in this regard were my sons, as they didn’t know about my feminine side.  My wife and I discussed, in great detail, whether or not to tell them.  If they had known about Sally, it would have been much easier to actually be Sally when I wanted to.  But I still didn’t know exactly where my transgender journey was going to take me, and this uncertainty was the primary reason my wife and I decided it wasn’t the right time to tell them about Sally.  Except for the convenience it would afford me, we didn’t think it was fair to burdened them with such a sensitive family secret if it wasn’t absolutely necessary.  If at some point things changed and it looked like I might be heading towards transition, my wife and I agreed we would revisit our decision.   Despite having to tiptoe around the boys I was able, with my wife often running interference for me, to significantly increase my girl time.  The nature of my variable work schedule meant that often days off occurred during the week when the boys were in school, and on those days, I took full advantage of the time.  Additionally, I had discovered a new trans friend through a local support group, and my wife, ever and always accommodating, ensured I had time for outings with my new friend.    Willa, my new friend, quickly became my best friend, and after only a short time, she and my wife became quite close as well.  With Willa’s help, I would soon discover that Pittsburgh was a very trans friendly city.  Together, she and I made the town our own.  We attended the theater, the symphony, we went out to dinner regularly, and I think we visited every museum in the city.  With Willa’s support and friendship, I was actually becoming quite the girl about town.    Willa and I had a lot in common.  We loved to shop, we had similar feminine styles, and we had similar views and feelings about being trans.  In fact, our frequent and deep discussions about transgender issues helped me begin to understand my transgender nature.  Having Willa as a springboard for all topics transgender, was probably as effective as regularly visiting a therapist.  I would never discount anyone’s desire to seek professional help, but having an unbiased confidant, can also be an effective method for self-discovery.    Exploring the city as Sally and spending time with Willa was instrumental in helping me understand my transgender nature, and would begin shaping my transgender objective.  My feelings about the kind of girl I was and where I wanted to go began to solidify.  Being out and socializing as Sally in a big city like Pittsburgh, taught me I could express my femininity without issue.  I honestly felt confident I could live my life as a woman; however, remaining completely objective, I just couldn’t see giving up the life I’d built as a man.   At that time, I was being heavily influenced by the concept of the gender binary, which had me thinking I had to choose between being a man or being a woman.  It was Willa who reminded me there were no rules requiring gender identity to be binary.  During one of our deep discussions, she posited the idea of enjoying both genders, something she was doing, and a concept that made a lot of sense to me.  I was already living the life of a part-time woman, so I simply started paying more attention to how that was making me feel.    One characteristic that was dominating my feminine self-expression (and it continues to this day) was that when I was Sally, I was “all in.”  When I became Sally, it was such a complete transformation that I truly felt like a woman.  The feeling was powerful, and if I had to describe it another way, I’d say it was akin to an actor, so into the part, they actually become the character they are portraying.  That was me, and I discovered that this level of depth was extremely fulfilling, and that feeling tended to last long after transitioning back to my male persona.  Part-time womanhood it seemed, was actually working for me.    Eventually, a job change forced me to move away from Pittsburgh, but the enlightenment I experienced while living there has shaped the nature of my bi-gender personality to this day.  Even after leaving, Willa and I remained the best of friends.  We had many more adventures, some of which I will detail in later posts.  Sadly, Willa passed away two-years ago after contracting a prolonged illness.  Her loss was hard to take and I miss her dearly.  However, I have so many fond memories of our times together, and because her support helped shape me, she lives on in my heart.   Hugs,   Sally
  • 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...