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!

questioning my gender


The Void Crow

Recommended Posts

 

Hey folks,

 

I'm new to all this stuff, so I'd like to lay out my situation and see if I can get any advice or thoughts. Sorry if I use the wrong terms or anything.

So I'm 25 AMAB, and have always harboured a mild curiosity as to what things would be like as a woman, and for the better part of the past decade I've liked to wear women's clothing in private.

 

I'm a very laid-back person, so I never really put too much thought into why - I knew I liked doing it, so I did it. But over the past couple of weeks I've been giving serious thought to the idea, and I'm beginning to think that rather than just being cis with a bit of a thing for crossdressing, I might be trans (or possibly genderfluid). Now I'm constantly thinking of what it would be like to transition. But a lot of the hallmarks of being trans don't quite line up for me - I'm pretty content with being a man. I don't have a problem with my pronouns. Socially I get along fine with both guys and girls.

 

The thing is, if I am trans then I wouldn't be happy just considering myself female - I'd have to at least get on hormones. The physical would have to go some way towards matching the mental, so to speak. I wouldn't want to present myself (and/or identify myself) as a woman until I feel that I resemble one.

 

The issue I'm having is that I don't know if I'd actually prefer being a woman, or I merely like the *idea* of it. Whether it's something I want to make a reality, or just a flight of fancy. I don't want to present myself as female without transitioning, but I also can't take steps towards transitioning until I know how it feels to present as female. And until I know for sure that I want to transition, I wouldn't want to tell my family or friends any of this (apart from a very close few). I guess the obvious answer to that is therapy?

 

I'm just worried that I'll regret it if I go ahead with it. I know that "it's not just a phase" is a common refrain, but I can't help but think that I'd be sacrificing my physical self (not to mention quite a bit of money, time and energy) on a leap of faith that I'll find the end result to be worth it.

 

Sorry for the essay, but there's a lot to unpack for me.

 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Well, my advice to you is to get on the NHS waiting list as soon as possible. While I don't live in the UK myself, I have friends there and it's my understanding that it takes a while. You can always cancel if you change your mind. When you actually get to the doctors, you're going to get evaluated by a gender therapist.

Secondly, cis people fantasize about being the opposite gender approximately zero times. If you fantasize at all about being a different gender than the one the doctors gave you at birth, there's a very good chance that you are not cis.

Next, the biggest thing to remember is that along with gender dysphoria, there's gender euphoria. My dysphoria wasn't really focused and it got all muddled up with my cornucopia of other issues. The euphoria though was pure and absolute. When I was presenting female with clothes, prosthetics and a wig (thanks alopecia) I felt amazing. That was enough to get me to go ahead and see where this transitioning thing leads.

So. Try things out. Experiment with your identity. See what feels right and go with that. If you're trans, great! If you feel like you land on NB or gender-fluid, that's great too. This is all about making yourself comfortable in your own skin and the only person who knows what that's going to take is you.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment

 

Hi Jackie, thanks so much for your reply.

 

I've only done a preliminary amount of research, but from the looks of it, the waiting times for the NHS are 4+ years to even have an initial assessment, and then it can take as long as a year between each subsequent assessment until they're happy. And their criteria for what is considered "trans enough" seems quite strict. You must experience dysphoria significant enough to impact your mental health, and have lived as your preferred gender for at least a year.

 

Given I don't really experience dysphoria at the moment, and I'm not willing to live as a woman until I at least begin transitioning, it doesn't look on the cards for me. I'm not sure what the procedure is for going private, but I imagine the waiting times and criteria for treatment are much, much more reasonable. The money to pay for that is something I can worry about down the line, if I decide that I'm sure that I do want to transition.

 

Feel free to correct anything I've gotten wrong, but that's my take from what I've read so far.

 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

No, that's pretty much what my friend told me. Outside the NHS you can get in faster, but you're going to pay out your backside.

 

That said, you'd be surprised what you can accomplish with prosthetics and makeup.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment

The thing is (at least at the moment), I'm not okay with the idea of living as a female without treatment.

 

That being said, I have a hell of a lot of introspection to do yet, so you never know.

 

My plan at the moment is to call a trans helpline to try to get more of a handle on what I'm feeling and maybe get some advice, and then try to talk to a couple of friends about it. I've already told two of my closest friends, both of which are cis. But I know a couple who are genderfluid, and another whose best friend is trans, so when I feel confident enough in my feelings to talk to them, I will.

 

After that, I'll look into therapy to hopefully find out where I am along the gender spectrum and what I want to do about my physical self.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Sounds like a good plan. Explore. Talk to people. Talk to a gender therapist. Learn yourself.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@The Void Crow welcome. I see you've met Jackie. She is a wonderful person and gives great advice. I wanted you to know there are a bunch here who want to welcome you. 

Heather

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
2 hours ago, The Void Crow said:

The issue I'm having is that I don't know if I'd actually prefer being a woman, or I merely like the *idea* of it. Whether it's something I want to make a reality, or just a flight of fancy.

Welcome @The Void Crow Nice to meet you. That is one of the most difficult questions to figure out. I debated this with myself for decades. I eventually took a few steps into the world as a women in my early 20’s and decided it felt right for me to transition but decided the time was just not right. The costs back then were not only financially encumbering with no insurance support but my life was headed in a completely different direction with work and college. I spent the next next two decades in denial of that reality. It finally it came to a head at age 56.

 

My point is that you can get some great advice from professionals, friends, and family and that may help you to begin to understand yourself and see your life from another perspective. However, until you test the waters by ‘experiencing and experimenting’ what it might be like out there in the real world as a woman, you might continue denying your own truth.

 

You mentioned you’re not willing to live as a woman until I at least begin transitioning but hopefully you have had opportunity to see if you feel more natural, authentic and free when presenting as a women socially. My twenty years of denial and a couple trigger events got me to re-evaluate my life and finally see my truth. Accepting myself as trans helped me and has many others and made it easier to take the next step needed. Many of us here tested the waters socially before doing anything medically. And as @Jackie C. pointed out above, There are so many ways to make yourself presentable as a woman without the need for beginning your medical transition.

 

Thank you for joining us and sharing..your journey is important to all of us here.

 

Warmest Regards,

Susan R🌷

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...
On 12/2/2021 at 1:38 PM, Jackie C. said:

Secondly, cis people fantasize about being the opposite gender approximately zero times. If you fantasize at all about being a different gender than the one the doctors gave you at birth, there's a very good chance that you are not cis.

Really?  I thought everyone was at least a little curious.  I have been fantasizing about it for at least 25 years which means I haven't been cis since around puberty.  I never thought of myself as not being cis until literally this week.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
1 hour ago, CJ0819 said:

Really?  I thought everyone was at least a little curious.  I have been fantasizing about it for at least 25 years which means I haven't been cis since around puberty.  I never thought of myself as not being cis until literally this week.

 

See? I thought much the same thing. It turns out that, "only yourself," is not an appropriate sample size for scientific research. I would have loved to get that notification sooner. I spent (and still spend) a LOT of time assuming that my experience was typical when it really, REALLY wasn't (and isn't).

 

Try it with friends: "Hey Jake (you know a Jake, right?), about how many times a week do you fantasize about being a woman while you masturbate?" The answers will shock you. Only good friends though. Not the friends who will punch you for talking about what you fantasize about when you masturbate. Obviously.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment

I'm a little bit older (a lot!) but consider my starting point in terms of coming out as similar to yours.  That was 2 years ago. I'm in the UK and paid a counsellor specialising in Gender and Sexuality for a few sessions to help me understand where I was in my Gender journey. 

 

While it is entirely up to you, and I know others who haven't or won't present in public as female until they've started medical treatment, please don't discount the option to spend time as a woman or even somewhere in between before you commit to anything further.

 

I spend about 50% of my time as a woman. I don't consider it "dressing up", nor a prelude to spending more time as a woman. I just need to be a woman some of the time. Maybe in future this will change, maybe just an occasional period as a woman will be enough, or I will need to spend more/full time as a woman. But for now this is enough. Ideally my time as a woman would be in its entirety with a full body change, but I'm realistic - that can't happen - the science to perform an entire temporary change is just not there (yet). And I don't think I would be satisfied with Gender affirmation surgery as it stands - unless I could have a uterus etc, and my bone structure altered to that of a genetic female it wouldn't be enough for me. 

 

So I now recognise that I am absolutely transgender and always have been, but I'm happy enough experiencing being both a man and a woman as far as that can happen in a genderfluid way, When I'm in my male aspect, I'm never really just a man, and when I'm in my female aspect I am never just a woman. It would be much simpler if I could just say I've always been a woman and I need to change my body permanently, but then I often wish I were not a transgender person at all and live in blissful ignorance of personal gender identity issues - as do most of the population.

 

 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
On 12/2/2021 at 1:53 PM, The Void Crow said:

 

I don't want to present myself as female without transitioning, but I also can't take steps towards transitioning until I know how it feels to present as female.

 

 

Hi, @The Void Crow!

 

Someone above suggested therapy and I wholeheartedly endorse that suggestion.

 

You could try not living as female, but temporarily presenting as female.  Granted, your presentation will not be 100% as you would prefer it, without HRT, but the exercise isn't to fool other people.  It is to see how you feel about it.  There will, of course, be fear, but it might be less than you think.  More important, what else do you feel?

 

Pick a town where you are not known, and go there.  Dress in presentable, but not gaudy, women's clothes.  No sequined ball gowns.  Dress like your mother might.  Wear makeup.  (Get someone to help you if necessary.)  Even an hour or two is likely to tell you a lot about whether this is the path for you.

 

You are describing a classic chicken-and-egg trap that will make you stuck.  This is a way to sneak out of the trap.

 

Good luck with your journey!

 

Regards,

Kathy

Link to comment
9 hours ago, Niamh said:

I spend about 50% of my time as a woman. I don't consider it "dressing up", nor a prelude to spending more time as a woman. I just need to be a woman some of the time. Maybe in future this will change, maybe just an occasional period as a woman will be enough, or I will need to spend more/full time as a woman. But for now this is enough. Ideally my time as a woman would be in its entirety with a full body change, but I'm realistic - that can't happen - the science to perform an entire temporary change is just not there (yet). And I don't think I would be satisfied with Gender affirmation surgery as it stands - unless I could have a uterus etc, and my bone structure altered to that of a genetic female it wouldn't be enough for me. 

 

So I now recognise that I am absolutely transgender and always have been, but I'm happy enough experiencing being both a man and a woman as far as that can happen in a genderfluid way, When I'm in my male aspect, I'm never really just a man, and when I'm in my female aspect I am never just a woman.

 

 

When I read this I almost thought of just copying this straight into my profile.....

Link to comment

@The Void Crow I'm late to the party, but everyone's advice is sound. Even if you are unsure at the moment get on the NHS waiting list. It takes ages to move thought the system, but you can either have free or fast, not both!

Ask yourself why this is something you keep coming back to.

I also thought I would want to be on HRT and have all those benefits prior to transitioning, but in the end, being myself mattered more than whether or not I looked like the perfect mental image I had of myself. You don't have to go all in just yet, as others have said, find a safe space at an event or somewhere you are unknown and just spend some time interacting as a woman, my first time out was on an empty forest walk, then I spent a weekend as myself at a Pride event, though I steered clear of the parade, it was the one day I knew for a fact I would have no hassles no matter how bad I looked. The sheer calmness and naturalness once I got past my nerves was what made me notice just how off centre my life has been living as a male. Good luck!

Link to comment

I felt similarly about transitioning in that I didn't want to present as a woman before being on HRT. Many people online (especially from the UK) and people in real life around my age thought that should be a prerequisite but for me it was a deal breaker. For much of my life it was the standard procedure so was on the list of Reasons I Couldn't Possibly Be Trans. 

 

Took a long time to realize that if you go to sleep every night hoping somehow tomorrow you'd be a woman means you're trans. 

 

HRT takes so long for almost everyone that you have plenty of months to decide it's not for you. I was one of the lucky ones who got such immediate mental relief that I realized quickly there was no going back.  

 

So I currently go about mostly-work-from-home life in clothes from the women's section sometimes paired with things from the old life (hard to immediately have things appropriate for every occasion and season) and sometimes a bit of makeup and always my two years worth of hair growth so who knows who notices the difference and who doesn't, but so far so good. 

Link to comment

I understand the idea that one need's to be well into transition before beginning to express the female inside, but waiting only denies the woman trying to get out.  Like Niamh, I am part-time.  I'm not doing HRT, nor have undergone any other forms of feminization, but I have discovered that I can be the woman I want to be without those things.  Please understand, that I would never disparage anyone that needs to transition fully and if that is your path, you should pursue it.  My main point is that if you wait to express the woman inside you until that "magic" physical transformation takes place, you may be waiting a very long time. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
14 hours ago, Niamh said:

 

I spend about 50% of my time as a woman. I don't consider it "dressing up"

Before i went full time, started hormones or did any of the medical or legal steps "necessary" i would go into the world as a woman.  I shopped, went to meetings and simply tried to see if i could live as a female and how that might feel.  Each trip was followed by changing back before seeing my family.  In time i knew that i had to make a choice.  Being here helped.  I saw others were successful.  It took time but i have managed to be myself as a woman and while doing that have also accepted the male in me that i will always live with.  In mob opinion transition does not begin with the first day of HRT.  Instead i found it a process over time that years later i'm still living.  Fortunately i'm finding peace with myself and the world around me.

The decision is yours but regardless we've got you back.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

Hey folks,

Sorry for the protracted silence. A bit of an update:

I took all of your excellent advice and experiences on board, and decided that I'm willing to consider presenting as female pre-transition - as said, to think otherwise is a perpetual loop.

 

I've now talked to several friends, and basically all of them had the same response - surprise, followed by supportiveness and a listening ear. One of my friends got me in contact with a trans friend of hers, who I'd met a couple of times but never really talked to outside of a group environment. She was very supportive as one would imagine, and we had a prolonged discussion about my feelings and her experiences. She said she'd always picked up on a bit of a trans vibe with me, which was a surprise (I don't think I present particularly feminine), but I'd be lying if I didn't say it was nice to hear.

 

Talking about it, even if it's just trivialities like what my aesthetic would be, or spitballing names, helps a little towards solidifying the "dream", if that makes sense. I guess kind of like how people find keeping a diary helps to process their thoughts.

 

I bought some more women's clothes - tops, jeans, shapewear etc., and seeing myself in the mirror had me very pleasantly surprised by the results (having a very slender upper body might have plagued me when I worked manual labour, but it's now looking like a godsend).

 

I then got in contact with a therapist and had a couple of sessions, and though we got on well, she seemed at a bit of a loss regarding how she could help me in my current situation.

 

I couldn't describe my feelings in any amount of detail - all I could say was that I feel more comfortable thinking of myself as female, which obviously isn't much for us to work with. I'm not comfortable with presenting myself as female outside of the privacy of my room (I don't want those I live with to know yet), which severely limits my ability to explore my feelings. Which, of course, is the kind of thing I need to do to get a better grip of why I feel the way I do and how I want to proceed.

So I need to find a way to explore things further, and in my therapist's experience that only happens when the pain of presenting as your assigned gender - or the desire to present as the opposite - overrides your fears.

 

But seeing as I'm "fine" with being presenting as my birth gender and I'm a very laid-back person (in my therapist's words, "remarkably grounded even in this state of flux"), I don't see that being much of a motivating factor. With that in mind, I then essentially put a moratorium on further sessions until such a time as I find a way to explore those feelings and get a better understanding of them.

So I guess I'm just asking for any advice as to how I might do that without those I live with knowing?

 

The options I've come up with aren't ideal, but are essentially

- Playing more female characters when I roleplay (I play a fair amount of D&D-type games), seeing as people would then be interacting with me as a female

- Packing a bag of my "feminine" clothes, and when hanging out with someone I'm comfortable with in private, changing into them upon arrival.

 

Thanks again for all your help.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Welcome and I'm glad you are open to the suggestions of some experienced and well-meaning folks here already. I'm glad you are here now.

Heather

Link to comment

Hi void crow, your options don't have to be anyone else's ideal, simply work for you where you are right now. It was dressing up as my female character at a D&D one shot that broke the dam of my defences, after interacting and being treated as a woman all night I knew I didnt want to change. Only one person that was in the group knows what they did for me yet though lol!

Link to comment

Hello Void Crow! 

I've been having similar thoughts myself, but for different reasons. I'm AFAB, but I don't want to be a woman or a man, so it's hard to really pin down what I felt and how I saw myself. And for me, trans is a big umbrella term that means "not cis," but everyone has a different opinion on it and they're free to. 

What helped me and what I think could potentially help you; pin down what you don't want. This helps you narrow down what you DO want, and gives you some guidelines for yourself. And the most important thing is DO YOUR RESEARCH. Look at credited sources and research things like hormone therapy, surgery, look up gender terms if you feel you need to (I did and someone on here was very kind in providing me with a handy guide), and look at the pros and cons. 

Thinking about what you want to look like physically can help you narrow down what you would need to do in terms of more serious things like hormones and surgery. But be totally sure in your decision, and don't feel bad if it feels like a slow process.

I've been thinking about this stuff for seven or eight months and I still don't have everything figured out! And that's okay. Go slow, don't push yourself too hard or too fast, and learn about stuff. 

Remember that it's not a race, and remember that life is full of phases. Everyone goes through phases even if they don't think they do! Humans are never in a state of permanence because we learn and grow and change over time. Even if you decide to not do anything, which you're more than free to, don't feel bad or beat yourself up. Your feelings matter and it's important that you be yourself.

Good luck, and be yourself!

Link to comment
  • 4 weeks later...

I decided to continue this topic and not start a new one. I have just joined this site. Recently for a couple of years I have been questioning my gender. I have always been more masculine than feminine. Last year I thought I might be transgender. I told my parents and I don’t think they were quite sure about it all. I have had other problems in my life like mainly medical so my parents were like let’s get them out of the way first. I didn’t actually think about it for months but more recently it’s just popped up again and now I think it would be so much easier to just not have a gender. I feel like I don’t want to be a man but I feel I don’t fit in as a women either. Like when I wear dresses or anything girly it just feels wrong. I do prefer Male clothing and get comfort out of that. I have not been offended when I have been called sir or buddy or mister. 

 

I mean my parents have always been supportive in everything that I have done but I think they just don’t know how to go about this. I don’t know how to tell them how I feel. My dad doesn’t believe in there being more than two genders. 

 

 

Link to comment

Hey, @Charlie89

I'm sorry about your dad and I'm sorry you're struggling. I questioned and tried out different identities for a while until I realized I was agender because I realized I didn't feel like I had a gender at all. There's lot of different identities so doing your research and even trying some out in safe spaces could be a good step. 

I would also recommend figuring out what you don't want, as this can help you narrow down how you're feeling and can make things less overwhelming. 

In your parents' case, I'm not sure how to handle it. I'm still figuring out how to handle mine, especially my mother, who doesn't understand what I'm feeling or going through. My dad has an attitude of "It is what it is," which has been calming, but I can't get them to switch pronouns yet. 

I hope this helps, and welcome to Trans Pulse.

Link to comment

Thanks yeah it is hard. My mum and dad are a completely different generation. My mum has never liked the way I dress anyway and my dad believes there is only two genders and he jokes about people identifying as toothbrushes or whatever. I just laugh but I hate it really. Yeah I have just been researching the heck out of everything. I have researched a lot! I do sort of know that I don’t want breasts but that is a tough topic since I would love to get rid of them by I know my mum wouldn’t approve. Thanks for replying. I hope you can get your parents to switch pronouns 

Link to comment

Hi @Charlie89 pleased to meet you :)  There will always be folks who are resistent to learning anything beyond what they were taught growing up in school, after all ignorance is bliss and it's a big wide world, but being a different generation doesn't mean that they won't eventually get it if they truly want to support you. Sol has given some good advice, knowing what you are NOT can be just as useful!

Do you have access to an LGBT+ friendly group that would let you explore your sense of self in a safe space? You would certainly need to see a counsellor prior to any medical interventions being okayed, so perhaps that would also be an option for you. 

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

    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Jamey-Heather
    • mattie22
    • Heather Shay
    • Dannie250
    • SamC
    • Petra Jane
    • Adrianna Danielle
    • awkward-yet-sweet
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,014
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Quillian
    Newest Member
    Quillian
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. l.demiurge
      l.demiurge
  • Posts

    • Abigail Genevieve
      Lunch was at Cabaret, still free.  The place was quiet: it was the sort of place you took a business client to impress them, and the few other people were in business suits.  Most of the legal profession was there.   She told him of the morning's frustrations, breaking her own rule about confidentiality.  She asked Karen how the branding was going, and Karen had snapped back that she had not started on it yet - they had all these proposals.  Taylor had explained that it was important, for the two o'clock meeting, and Karen told her to do it herself.  Karen pointed out that Taylor could not touch her - her uncle was on the Board and her brother was VP of Manufacturing.  Nor would the two computer guys go out to the plant - they were playing some kind of MMORPG and simply not available. If she wanted the pictures, she should go.  Mary prayed an Ave Maria, but both she and Brenda were racing to get the proposal out. The client wanted it Friday for review.   She didn't bring up what Mrs. McCarthy had told her.  She wasn't sure how to approach it.  She thought of telling her of a 'something more comfortable' she had bought in case he ever DID show up at her door. It was in the bottom drawer of her dresser, ready to go.  Instead she talked about moving to a place with a garage.  Several of the abandoned houses had one, and they had been maintained well with China cash.   Bob had finally realized that when he was introduced as Bob, Taylor's boyfriend, that was just how things were done here. Other people had introduced each other in terms of family relationships, which were strong.  Long before you found out anything else about someone, you knew how they were related.  Family kept people from leaving Millville.    "What is the real name of this town, anyway?"   She laughed.  "I am trying to find that out.  It's 'Welcome to Millvale' when you come into town from the north, and 'Welcome to Millville' on the south.  I have counted two other variants."   "What a town. Roosevelt is like that, with the families, but there is only one spelling."  
    • Ashley0616
      Nothing wrong with that. I'm glad that you found what makes you happy! Just curious what does your wife think? If it's too personal I understand.
    • Ashley0616
    • Ashley0616
      – According to a recent survey, the most popular name for a dog is Max. Other popular names include Molly, Sam, Zach, and Maggie.
    • Ashley0616
    • Ashley0616
      Either new environment/ not potty trained
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Bob was on his way home from the dojo and he "just happened" to driver by her place. It was 10:30.  Her light was still on.  He knew exactly where she was sitting.  He saw her in his mind.   A fierce wave of desire that took his breath away suddenly showed up. All he had to do was stop, get out of the car, walk to the door and knock.  She would answer, glad to see him.  She would know why he was there and what he wanted. She would invite him in, maybe get him something to drink, disappear for a moment and return in "something more comfortable."  She would lead him back. Oh, joy.   And never, ever speak to him again afterwards.  Or she would not let him in but be angry about it.  In no way, emotionally, physically, mentally or spiritually, was she ready for this, and he knew it, if he was honest with himself, and she knew he knew it.  She would look upon it as another assault and their relationship would be irretrievably broken.  He would have to leave town. It would devastate her. It would devastate him.    He fought himself.  He was frozen to his seat as his reason and his body fought. He was twenty four years old, a full-blooded male with normal desires; he had just worked out and he was ready.  All he had to do now was open the car door. No one would know. He held his hands, one in the other, to keep one from moving, against his reason and will, to open that door.  He did not want to be a slave of his desires.   He looked across the street.  Mrs. McCarthy, sister of his landlord, was peeking though her window.  She knew his car.  Everyone in town would know by noon the next day if he got out of the car.  Taylor did not need that, either, and she would know, if he came to the door now, what a selfish thing it would be: in his own eyes, in the eyes of Taylor, in the eyes of the town, and worst of all, in the eyes of God.   He sat there a moment longer.  He was, as he reflected, entering into her sufferings in a small way that she would be made whole, healthy and happy: what he wanted more than anything.  But this hurt.  Why had all this come on her?  He asked God again, but there was only silence. He drove home in that silence. He chided himself for even going on her street and for driving on it other nights.  He would stop that, he told himself.   ------------------------------------------   The next morning Taylor went out to her car to go to work.  Mrs. McCarthy met her before she got to it. "I thought you were going to get lucky last night, dearie," she said. Taylor was puzzled. "Why, what do you mean?" "That young fellow - you know, Bob - he's been driving around here, going up and down the street some nights, not stopping.  Well, last night he parked and sat in his car for a while.   I think he was staring at your window.  I think he was trying to get up the courage to knock on the door. I was rooting for him.   But then he drove away.  Faint heart never won fair lady, as they say. What a shame. You two are a lovely couple.  Well, have a good day!" "Thank you, Mrs. McCarthy."  Taylor knew Bob extremely well and knew what had been going through his mind.  She was more than grateful he had not gotten out of the car. Better for him, better for her, better for everybody.  Surgery "down there" sooner than later.  This was driving the poor boy crazy. It was driving her crazy, too.  But she had a lot to work through. Surgery "up here" she said, pointing to her head.  She woke up her therapist on the way to work.  They were still talking when she pulled into her designated parking spot.  That was a perk that had happened yesterday.  She took a deep breath and headed into work. It would be another wild day.
    • Ashley0616
      bittersweet: especially : pleasure accompanied by suffering or regret
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I'm thinking about some interactions yesterday I did, while presenting as male but acting as female, that were far better than I did when I was presenting as male and acting as male.  #girlunderhood. I do a crappy job at acting as male and I am giving it up.  I am not talking about feminine gestures or presentation but just relating as a woman.  People don't realize I am doing it but it is a whole lot easier to do.   You don't just put on a dress and BOOM you are a girl.  You are a girl and you put on a dress.  Or not. Whether I am in jeans or a skirt (I wish, wife would have lots to say) I am a girl.  I don't need $250 in makeup and heels and hose and all that.  I don't need surgery. Honey, I have arrived.  Now I have to work out how that best works in my life, causing the minimal damage and creating the maximum good, but I have more working room.   Oh, and I am still pissed off at everyone and everything. #Contradictory.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      @Willow it is certainly possible that my husband planned it. Placing me in the path of an opportunity....he certainly does things like that. GF has done some work for the company as an outside consultant, so I'm sure the company owner knows what potential resources are around.    It could also have just happened randomly. He has taken me to work with him before, just because he likes to have me around. I remember one time that I fell asleep with my head in his lap, and he held a meeting with his subordinates without waking me and making me move.  The company culture is family oriented and relaxed.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      The photo is great.  Software is phenomenal but it also is sort of a promise of things to come. Years ago this sort of thing took a photographer and Photoshop and all sorts of things and you would say, "I can look like THIS??"   Me, I am a duck.  That's from my driver's license.  Just kidding.
    • MaeBe
      I lucked into that picture. I took like 10 before that, which appropriately make me look like a donkey. ;)   Thank you so much for the compliment!
    • Mmindy
      You're welcome Sally,   Hugs,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Mmindy
      This is a great analogy. The statement is true as it relates to the tree. The analogy fits because we as a LGBTQIA community are stronger when we stand together. It also work here on Transgender Pulse Forums. The support I feel from so many others has made me comfortable with my stance, because I'm in a beautiful forest of friends. So when I'm out alone and confronted. I can respond and act like the single tree in the field, surviving whatever comes my way. My roots reach back and communicate with others like me.    Standing Strong,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Ashley0616
  • 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...