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!

Easier to come out to new acquaintances than old friends


Vidanjali

Recommended Posts

Something I've been thinking about is it seems easier to come out to new people I meet than people I've known for a long time. I actually have not come out to many people at all. But I have from time to time surprised myself at the ease with which I've been able to matter of factly state to a new person, "I'm nonbinary". It seems much more intimidating to come out to someone who's been in my life for a long time because I feel like I'll have so much explaining to do; I want coming out to be a celebration of freedom, but instead I begin to feel so guilty like I'm asking too much when considering asking for full acceptance. It's occurred to me that in my relationships I cannot enjoy the full potential for intimacy because I'm engaged in a relationship as someone who is not being themselves. I'm really sick of performing gender as I become more aware of it. I wrote an email in July to an old friend who lives out of state and came out to her. She just wrote back the other day and although there was some supportive and loving language in her reply, the comment that stuck out was, "but I've always seen you as a very feminine woman and a role model for me" (this goes on the list of things to not say when someone comes out to you as trans). Coming out therefore often comes with all sorts of footnotes explaining the tendency for someone in the closet to overcompensate and the social pressure to perform normative roles. I'd like to feel more confident in myself so that I don't feel crushed by cishet expectations. Thanks for listening. 

Link to comment

personally I don't even mention it to new people, I just introduce myself using my name, but since I am changing it maybe that's just a lucky circumstance I have that you don't?  I do find it much easier to introduce myself to new people than when I try to reintroduce myself to old friends or acquaintances though.  for example I'd been seeing an aesthetician for about a year and she had met me using my deadname and I never brought myself to change it at the salon or correct her until just recently when she left to pursue another career and they assigned me to a new person.  I figured it would be much easier for someone to meet me as Kelly from the get-go rather than try to meet as deadname and then have to retrofit the new info.

 

All that said, I have found some old friends have easier times than others.  some rock it pretty seamlessly and some just have a harder time shifting gears from how they've always known you. just depends on the person.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I agree with you on this. Since I had to go on Medicare, and changed all of my doctors. My first meeting with them and everyone who needs to know. I'm transgender, and will be asking them for help lining up my transition schedule as well as referrals.

 

Hugs,

 

Mindy🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

These days, being five years full-time, I don't even bother mentioning it to new people I meet.  If they figure it out (it ain't rocket science), good for them, but I have already set the lead in not mentioning it, so most act accordingly.

 

It is a little more involved re-meeting people from my past.  I am a member of a group for pilots of the aircraft I flew in the air force.  Every now and then, I will come across someone I flew or worked with.  My favourite tactic is to say nothing.  They all knew that there weren't any female pilots back then, so when they read my dates, most can figure it out.  Occasionally if someone appears confused, I'll PM them, and explain.  The nice thing is that, within the group, my situation is pretty much common knowledge these days.  And yet it has never been mentioned in a group post.  All the reactions I get are positive.

 

Here is how my former CO responded to my PM: "Hello Kathy, your response puts my mind at ease. I could not figure out who you were. Glad to see that your life eventually turned out OK for you. Life is too short to be someone you do not wish to be. Being safe and happy are keys to enjoying life to its max."

Link to comment

I don't bring it up with new new people. There's no reason to. It's not like I'm out dating people so it's non of their business. So far no one has asked me any follow-up questions but if they did I would take it as a red flag that they feel my history is more important than who I am now.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I don't mention it to new people either... mostly. I've broken that rule twice. Once was when a friend came out as trans and I joined her in solidarity. The other was when a woman in a group I'm part of said, "I only know two trans people." Without thinking about it, I said, "Three."

Well, I also tell doctors and employers because it's legal to discriminate against me and refuse medical services where I live. It's easier if I make sure there's not going to be a problem before we proceed.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Its always easier to tell new people you meet (if needed) because they don't have the baggage of familiarity that old friends do.  

Link to comment

I have had TERRIBLE experiences with my old friends so I know what you mean. My high school friends all ignore me these days, just as an example. This is what they do even though, depending on their clique, they keep in contact with each other. I have no idea what's up with this. I also know for a fact that several people from that time in my life are unsafe to talk to about my gender. I remember pointed, unwelcome, offensive, and prejudicial remarks that I just cannot forget right now. I think the saying 'familiarity breeds contempt' has application here because if people from a certain time in our lives can be so unlike us then it's not just necessary, it's actually a blessing, to meet people who don't have a past and only have a present with us.

Link to comment

I don’t mention it to new acquaintances. Old ones prove a bit more difficult because it takes time to explain. I have very few people who I consider as friends but they’ve been pretty easy. I do find that there is only a certain amount of coming out I can do before my emotional tank is drained.

Link to comment
On 1/5/2022 at 11:00 AM, KathyLauren said:

"Hello Kathy, your response puts my mind at ease. I could not figure out who you were. Glad to see that your life eventually turned out OK for you. Life is too short to be someone you do not wish to be. Being safe and happy are keys to enjoying life to its max."

 

That's beautiful!

 

On 1/5/2022 at 11:15 AM, Elizabeth Star said:

...I would take it as a red flag that they feel my history is more important than who I am now.

 

Well put. Your history is history. Who you are now is obviously most relevant and important.

 

On 1/5/2022 at 1:18 PM, Jackie C. said:

Once was when a friend came out as trans and I joined her in solidarity. The other was when a woman in a group I'm part of said, "I only know two trans people." Without thinking about it, I said, "Three."

 

That was your intuition, for sure! You are a good friend and ally!

 

14 hours ago, Artpetal said:

I think the saying 'familiarity breeds contempt' has application here because if people from a certain time in our lives can be so unlike us then it's not just necessary, it's actually a blessing, to meet people who don't have a past and only have a present with us.

 

I was not previously familiar with that saying. I had to give it some thought. That is a sad consequence when it applies - that rather than growing in genuine intimacy with a relation, that closeness and experience would instead give license to carelessness and taking relations for granted, or increasingly microscopic focus on a person's perceived flaws, or identifying the person ever more strongly with some perceived enviable quality thus allowing resentment to fester. These things happen. But, I believe it is better to know the truth about people. Nonetheless, I remain fearful to come out to most people with whom I have established relationships. Thinking about it, I need to contemplate how my not being my true self in relationships may contribute to deterioration or stymying of the relationship. A lot to think about...

 

6 hours ago, Erica Gabriel said:

I do find that there is only a certain amount of coming out I can do before my emotional tank is drained.

 

I get that!!

Link to comment

I see there are distinctions between coming out trans binary and coming out trans nonbinary. Or, rather coming out while transitioning, transitioning only to some small degree, having had transitioned, or not transitioning at all. (Here, by transitioning I mean in physical presentation.) I recently read something by a nonbinary person referring to their transition as a transition away from the gender associated with their sex assigned at birth, rather than a transition toward a particular target gender. This was illuminating for me because previously I thought of transitioning as a nonbinary person as rather ambiguous. So, say you are a trans woman and you are presenting as a woman. It's completely understandable that as part of your presentation you would not be apt to qualify to people that you are trans. But when someone sees me, unless their radar is attuned to being familiar with enby people, they're going to clock me as a binary gender, and most likely as female because I'm afab. Therefore, in order to be acknowledged as nonbinary, I would have to disclose that information. It's a balancing act between dysphoria and the drain on the emotional tank, as @Erica Gabriel put it. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Nonbinary can be tricky. I have a friend. I love them to death and they are on my list of favorite people. However, while they are NB, they present and read as female-typical to me so I'm forever tripping up my pronouns. I don't mean anything by it. I absolutely don't want to hurt them, but my brain is being tricksy because it's seeing a woman despite the fact that I know better.

I suppose it's that there aren't a lot of visual cues that you've met a NB the same way there are with meeting someone on the gender binary. People can look at me and say, "Oh, bright colors, boobs, purse. I am talking to a woman." They could look at someone who identifies as male and say, "Oh, beard, bulge, boring clothes. I'm looking at a man." In our society there isn't really a third option for quick visual short-hand to tell me that I'm looking at someone who identifies as non-binary. We should probably do something about that.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
6 hours ago, Jackie C. said:

In our society there isn't really a third option for quick visual short-hand to tell me that I'm looking at someone who identifies as non-binary. We should probably do something about that.

Well, we all wear bowler hats . . . and there's the secret handshake, of course. Wink, wink.

Davie 

DavieBowlerHat.jpg

Link to comment
6 hours ago, Jackie C. said:

In our society there isn't really a third option for quick visual short-hand to tell me that I'm looking at someone who identifies as non-binary. We should probably do something about that.

Well, we all wear bowler hats . . . and there's the secret handshake, of course. Wink, wink.

Davie 

— I agree it's confusing. We've requested our own planet. Still waiting . . . .

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
8 hours ago, Davie said:

Well, we all wear bowler hats . . . and there's the secret handshake, of course. Wink, wink.

Davie 

— I agree it's confusing. We've requested our own planet. Still waiting . . . .

 

It's not really fair to assume the person in the room with the best fashion sense is NB either. All my non-binary pals have AWESOME clothes, but that by itself is not proof of their gender identity.

 

Hugs!

Link to comment
8 hours ago, Davie said:

I agree it's confusing. We've requested our own planet. Still waiting . . . .

Planet? Request an entire galaxy! Where’s your ambition?

Link to comment
10 hours ago, Davie said:

Well, we all wear bowler hats

DavieBowlerHat.jpg

 

...and mascara on one eye...oh wait, that's an entirely different look, LOL!

image.png.3b7d741302332ef932a45aad6e1696e7.png

 

10 hours ago, Davie said:

We've requested our own planet. Still waiting . . . .

 

HA!

 

17 hours ago, Jackie C. said:

We should probably do something about that.

 

In all seriousness, I think it's greater visibility and education that we need. That way, "nonbinary" will become a normal part of people's lexicon, and those who wish to disclose their identity, or correct instances of misgendering will feel freer to do so. I long for this freedom, and yet I remain 99% closeted. I want to learn to be a better ally to myself; this will likewise make me a better ally to others.

 

1 hour ago, Erica Gabriel said:

Planet? Request an entire galaxy! Where’s your ambition?

 

Yasss, queen! 

 

Link to comment
27 minutes ago, Davie said:

Knowing and loving myself completely would be a galaxy unto itself.

I'd settle for that.

— Davie

 

Amen to that.

Link to comment
11 hours ago, Vidanjali said:

I think it's greater visibility and education that we need. That way, "nonbinary" will become a normal part of people's lexicon, and those who wish to disclose their identity, or correct instances of misgendering will feel freer to do so. I long for this freedom, and yet I remain 99% closeted. I want to learn to be a better ally to myself; this will likewise make me a better ally to others.

 

I have gradually come to the conclusion that, precisely because I am non-binary, and because I was AMAB and started HRT two years ago at 71 and not fifty-five years ago at 18, in typical public settings, despite feminine-leaning attire, most people will continue to assume I am male. People refer to me as "he", and I inwardly cringe.  To most of these strangers, I don't wish to disclose my identify or correct misgendering. So, to them, yes, I too remain closeted. 

 

Important exception:  when I make the acquaintance of other queer people in queer-centric settings, they do not judge me, or assume what I am.  They ask me for my preferred pronouns.  In **that** setting, I can feel most comfortable.  Also, I've had a string of good luck with medical professionals since I came out. They've reacted professionally, asked me for my preferred pronouns (they/them/their), and used them correctly.

 

So, slow but determined progress. Along this journey, I've come to embrace what I wrestled with all those years before I came out to my loved ones and trusted friends:  my non-conforming gender identity.  I truly cherish the happiness that expressing it brings.  My body is changing -- to my joy.  My emotions are heightened, my awareness and sincere interest in others is so much stronger.  My wardrobe is vastly better than the drab stuff I used to wear.  And it is these kinds of positive changes that bring me happiness, enough to endure the binary-based assumptions that I encounter.  

 

Many, many of the concerns of MTF/FTM and non-binary folks are in common. But passing isn't one of them.  We're somewhere other than at either end of the spectrum, and so the presentations we choose can confuse those cis people who assess everyone from a binary assumption.  I really agree, @Vidanjali, that education will be helpful. Right now, the culture wars are inhibiting progress, but I'd like to think that trans and non-binary rights are perhaps 25 years behind the curve of progress made with lesbian and gay rights.  

 

Onward, with determination,

 

Astrid

 

 

 

Link to comment
19 hours ago, Astrid said:

I truly cherish the happiness that expressing it brings. 

 

And it is these kinds of positive changes that bring me happiness, enough to endure the binary-based assumptions that I encounter.  

 

 

 

 

Thank you for these words, Astrid. This is the most important thing. I need to focus on what brings me joy and less about what others think. Much love.

Link to comment

Thanks @Astrid and @Vidanjali

Great discussion. While I don't identify with every point of view you made, it helps me to think about my own situation. I almost think I should feel shame here to say being called a male doesn't bother me, and if someone used a feminine pronoun, that wouldn't bother me either. I do feel a little stuck in the middle of this quandary, but it is true for me. And true is what I'm searching for. I'm also reminded I live in the midst of change as my former self (and clothes) continue to evolve. Trying to keep an open mind as I move forward and wish mainly that judgemental-ism was not part of the choice to present. But perhaps  that's too much to ask for at this point. I can't expect the world to change over night for me, so for now I'm keeping the focus on myself. How can I accept myself best . . . and let the world accept me as it wishes? I'll work on accepting the world as it is for now . . . I can live with the wink and the nod, it's the discrimination, oppression, and violence that I won't abide by. Thanks. 

— Davie

 

 

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, 129 Guests (See full list)

    • MaryEllen
    • Jamey-Heather
    • Ashley0616
    • Lorelei
    • Abigail Genevieve
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

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

    • Total Members
      12,028
    • Most Online
      8,356

    earthpatch
    Newest Member
    earthpatch
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Anyatimenow
      Anyatimenow
      (23 years old)
    2. Aria00
      Aria00
    3. Ava B.
      Ava B.
      (24 years old)
    4. Claire Heshi
      Claire Heshi
    5. CrystalMatthews0426
      CrystalMatthews0426
      (41 years old)
  • Posts

    • Willow
      Mom, I’m home!  What’s for lunch?   Leftover pizza .   ok.    Not exactly our conversation but there is truth in the answer.     @KymmieLsorry you are sick. Feel better soon.   Girl mode, boy mode no mode, not us. Nothing functional for either of us.   anyone here have or had a 10 year old (plus or minus) Caddy, Lincoln or Chrysler?  How was it?  Lots of repairs?  Comfortable seats? Anything positive or negative about it?  I need to replace my 2004 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer, it’s eating $100 dollar bills and needs a couple of thousand dollars worth of work and that doesn’t even fix the check engine code.  Obviously, it isn’t worth putting that kind of money into a 20 year old car with a 174 thousand miles.   Willow
    • Ashley0616
      Oversized pink shirt, pink and black sports bra
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I think you mean the worst possible interpretation of 2025 situation.  Keep in mind that there are those who will distort and downright lie about anything coming from conservatives - I have seen it time and time again.  It's one of the reasons I want to read the thing slowly and carefully.  They want you to be very, very afraid. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Here is where the expectation is that the stereotypical evangelical comes in finger wagging, disapproving and condemning.    Not gonna do that.   You have to work these things out.  Transgender issues put a whole different spin on everything and God understands what we are going through. I have enough trouble over here.  :)
    • Ivy
      You do you. You seem to be in a safe place if we end up with a 2025 situation.  But a lot of us are not.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, my marriage is different.  I'm actually part of a multi-partner marriage.  Like you see in the Book of Genesis.  My husband has four wives...and me.  I was kind of an accident, as our community sets the "reasonable maximum" at four wives, but that's a long story.  Plural marriage is approved in my faith community, with the exception of spiritual leaders, as described in 1 Timothy 3.  We believe that anything that isn't specifically prohibited is permitted.    The purpose of marriage is for people to work together, demonstrate the love of God, and to have children.  My faith believes in exponential reproduction - big families with lots of kids, both as a blessing and with the intention of using the size of our population for political ends.  Being intersex/trans and unable to bear children, I wouldn't have been a good candidate to be somebody's only spouse (the majority of our community tends toward traditional couple marriage).  Since my husband has other partners, I don't have to worry about the childbearing aspect, and I help out with raising our family's kids.  I'm a "bonus parent."    I'm not 100% open about my intersex/trans nature, although my community's leaders are aware of me.  Being transgender isn't condemned, but it is seen as a health problem derived from an imperfect, fallen world and an environment polluted with chemicals.  Since I'm married, I have a safe place to be, and I can live how I need to live.    I firmly believe the advice given in 1 Corinthians 7.  We don't totally own our bodies.  God gets a say, as I believe He created us to be male or female, not something outside the binary.  I don't think that transition without discussion with partners is OK....again, we don't totally own ourselves.  When I started to figure myself out, that was actually the main thing on my mind - will my partners accept me?  How will my position in the family change?  Since my partners don't really have a problem with the mild version of transition that I wanted to do, it has all been good. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Indeed.  While it seems like the majority of LGBTQ+ folks vote for Democrat candidates, not everybody drinks the Kool-Aid.  I'm a registered Independent, since I vote for individuals rather than party.  One of my trans friends is very pro-Trump - wears her MAGA hat and everything.  I find it interesting to see the reactions she gets... folks aren't always as tolerant as they claim to be.  Even on this forum, you get some real flak from Democrat voters....many will insist that the California way is the only way.    In my opinion, "Project 2025" isn't the real problem.  Check out UN "Agenda 2030."   
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      While Biden may be more friendly to trans folks, I'm not a single-issue voter.  I just can't choose a Democrat candidate, as I believe their actions will destroy my community and way of life.  Biden just announced that he wants to significantly increase capital gains taxes.  Maybe he intends to "tax the rich" but that is going to affect everything from land sales to grocery prices to the cost of electricity and even folks' retirement savings, as most companies make a large amount of their profits through investing in the market.  It is absolute lunacy to think that increased cost or reduced profits won't be passed on to the rest of us.  Things are going to get way worse at this rate.    Mostly, I vote in elections for state and local issues, as the national government is about as pleasant as a Porta-Potty in July.  So, either I'll do a write-in vote for president, or I'll check the box for Trump.  Anything but Biden.     
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Interesting...never knew any of this.  Of course, in my girl form I never got breasts, so I never had to worry about it.  A couple of pieces of tape would have been sufficient...      Sounds like fun   It has been interesting for me since I stopped trying to do sex like a girl.  The real surprise was my relationship with my husband, as he has figured me out pretty well. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Women's jeans, soft t-shirt that could go either way, flip-flops. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      They were sitting on the love seat, looking west out over Kansas.  Below them the busy city ran to and fro.   "They called.  My surgery has been rescheduled for May 8.  I need to be there at 5 AM for pre-op.  I start prescriptions and diet change on May 1."   "Okay."  Bob did his not-thinking-about anything look.  Taylor was always amazed that he could  actually be thinking about absolutely nothing. She was always thinking of at least six things.   "How can they be like that?" "What?"  He startled a little.  Contact with reality was reestablished. "Where does the hate come from?  Mrs. McArthur?  She was always polite, but I think she wasn't really.  Somehow she hated me even though there were no indications whatsoever." "Yeah, well, you know they are starting up that plant.  And my company is going ahead with their work there, down n Milliville.   I will have to go down there sometimes." "Oh, Bob." "Maybe I will stop by and ask her." "No." "No.  Cabaret is closed, I have been told.  Your transgender support group has scattered to other places." "What is wrong with those people?" "Same thing as Roosevelt, I guess.  You know all the racial comments against Blacks?  Like that game where our cheerleaders started this insulting cheer, an the opposite team was mostly Black? Teachers stopped it." "I didn't know.  I was staying away from that, remember?" "Yes." "You know all those kids at our church, the ones you called freaks the other day?" "I shouldn't have called them that." "Pastor tells me they are all from all over the Midwest.  These are kids who have been thrown out of their homes and were found on the street.  Other shelters would not take them, so they wound up here." "Not surprising." "I think we could do some good here." "What do you have in mind?" And she told him.
    • EasyE
      You are spot on here ... but also it seems like such a rigged game for the average person that it's hard to invest energy into the political arena -- too much big money controlling too many people/organizations/narratives for the common person to fee; heard...   In general, why we in America accept either candidate is baffling... for all our innovation as a nation, we can't do better than these two bozos?    The problem is, the political arena is such a sham -- again with large money controlling all aspects of the system -- that a common-sense, love-your-neighbor, make-reasonable-compromises, roll-up-your-sleeves-and-get-to-work candidate will never make it anywhere above the local level (if even there)...    Everything is a reality show, and boring ol' decision makers that try to benefit the most people don't generate enough clicks, views and retweets...  I am not sure it is so much about celebrity as it is about party politics at all costs - "my side must always be viewed as right and your side must always be viewed as wrong!" kind of thinking... there is no consensus building anymore because that will get used against you in campaign ads... When Obama took office and then Hilary ran again, it was like all Republicans want to do was to find someone loud enough to put them in their place. Forget issues, forget character, just win a debate and rally the base.    To get back to your original point, not enough of us care about politics ... and in some ways we've become fat, happy and entitled as a nation. The yearning to achieve the "American dream", which drove my parents and their parents before them to work their tails off and sacrifice and save, is now just "give me the American dream for free while I sit here on my phone and watch tiktok..."
    • Abigail Genevieve
      You are in the right place.
    • EasyE
      I am about 5 weeks ahead of you ... best wishes to you! For me it has been subtle changes at most so far (if any) ... but I am also on the "beginner's" level of patch, lol ...    Easy
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Oh, another comment.   I am a conservative evangelical with strong Republican leanings. So is my wife, my friends, my family. I disagree with a good amount of what the Republicans are doing, but there it is.  I understand the mindset, I think, a lot better than those who are outside it do.   When you insult Republicans you insult me, my friends, my family.   People like me can struggle with trans issues.   Please consider that in posting.
  • 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...