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!

The Kindness Thread


Lydia_R

Recommended Posts

Being on this site and in my early transition, I find myself focusing on kindness.  Being kind to myself especially.  Accepting of my desires and goals.  Sometimes transitioning seems like total insanity, but the one thing I know is that I want this.  There is no why.

 

I just have this fantasy about my future self.  It's something to work towards.  To give motion to my life.  I made progress last week.  Things are coming along.  I wore my red Star Trek dress yesterday and I'm wearing my black skirt and rust colored ribbed sweater today.  I'm feeling good.  I've developed a better body shaving routine this week.  My new job has got me in a more regular weekday/weekend routine.  I'm shaving my upper body on Friday evening and my lower body on Saturday morning.  Smooth!  I got my initial blood work done to start HRT.  Making an appointment with the transgender medical doctor for the first time now.  Scoping out the electrolysis shops.  It appears there is a selection in Portland!  Go figure!

 

There is no why, only kindness...

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

Being on this site and in my early transition, I find myself focusing on kindness.  Being kind to myself especially.

This is important Lydia.  The old adage about loving oneself before you can love others is true.  We need to take care of ourselves and treat ourselves kindly.  With our minds free we can think of others.

 

It seems like life is going well and you have settled into a nice routine.  Best of luck on finding a good electrologist.  If the first one doesn't click, try another.  And don't fear the pain.  Its not a lifetimes worth.

 

 Hugs, 
Jani

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
9 hours ago, Lydia_R said:

I just have this fantasy about my future self.  It's something to work towards.  To give motion to my life.  I made progress last week.  Things are coming along.

 

I got my initial blood work done to start HRT.  Making an appointment with the transgender medical doctor for the first time now.  Scoping out the electrolysis shops.

Hi @Lydia_R! That’s the nice thing about transition, It all about doing what we thought always just a fantasy earlier in our lives and making it a reality. I’ve said it here before…it’s a very exciting time in your transition. I’m sure in a few years you’ll be looking back at this time and smiling about all your breakthroughs and milestones achieved. But becoming your true self is in itself the greatest reward. That will pay dividends every morning when you wake up.

 

It seems you’re doing some very good things for yourself, making some progress forward in your transition and know that you deserve it. Don’t let anyone discourage you. Just be you and like you say…Be kind to yourself.

 

*Hugs*

Susan R🌷

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...
On 4/4/2022 at 5:07 AM, Susan R said:

Hi @Lydia_R! That’s the nice thing about transition, It all about doing what we thought always just a fantasy earlier in our lives and making it a reality. I’ve said it here before…it’s a very exciting time in your transition. I’m sure in a few years you’ll be looking back at this time and smiling about all your breakthroughs and milestones achieved. But becoming your true self is in itself the greatest reward. That will pay dividends every morning when you wake up.

 

It seems you’re doing some very good things for yourself, making some progress forward in your transition and know that you deserve it. Don’t let anyone discourage you. Just be you and like you say…Be kind to yourself.

 

*Hugs*

Susan R🌷

So true 

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

The seed thought I had about the title of this thread has to do with my language and how I relate to others.  I'm not too happy with the way I've been communicating on this board.  It has to do with an intellectual superiority attitude that I think I inherited from both of my parents.  I've had some hard won battles in my life that I'm proud of and want to share.  But I get the feeling that talking about these things turns people off.  Like talking about how I lost 60 pounds and that I weigh 135.  That was insanely difficult to do.  Intellectually, I want other people to know that it is possible and share some of the tactics I used in my battle.

 

But for a lot of people, doing something like that is practically impossible.  I think "it's never too late" is a terrible phrase.  Some things are just downright impossible, especially when you get older and time works against you.

 

"...and when we were wrong promptly admitted it."  The one concept that I've taken from AA, is this idea of inventory.  For me, I realize that I have an elitist attitude and that it isolates me.  And I realize that changing it could be quite difficult.  Experience has shown me that this could be a 5-10 year journey to solve this problem.

 

Part of me is scared about opening up and allowing more people into my life.  I kind of enjoy the beginning of Superman II now.  "Even on Krypton there were these antisocial elements."

 

I want to be more kind to others and I know there is more to it than holding the door open for them.  I like my alone time, but I want to have dinner parties in the future.  It's something I think is worth working on. 

Link to comment
26 minutes ago, Lydia_R said:

I want to be more kind to others and I know there is more to it than holding the door open for them. 

 

So true.  As has often been said, the true character of someone is how they act when they think no one else is looking.

Being intentionally kind, not just to friends and work colleagues, but to strangers (not just wait staff in restaurants and sales assistants in stores, but to others who look and perhaps believe differently from us) is rewarding for all. But it can be hard to do.   There's a ton of material in the form of online resources and books on the subject of intentional kindness.  I'll be the first to admit that I could benefit from a refresher about kindness.  Kindness often results in a win-win for all, and that is something we need a lot more of in these times.

 

Hugs,

 

Astrid

Link to comment

The problem I'm struggling with here is Pride, which is certainly on topic in this forum.  I've spent the last week being very upset about the last post that I made.  I came to the idea that talking about this is a bit of a taboo subject.

 

I spent the last week visiting my aunt.  She literally cured herself of cancer.  She had a large tumor (50 years ago) and the doctors were discussing with her about how to cut it out and the radiation and all that.  She decided not to do any of that and then she took an intensive holistic healing course.  She changed her diet and lifestyle and the tumor just went away.

 

And her whole life revolves around that.  She's of course proud of that and when I am with her, it is always the main topic of conversation, partially because I am interested in it too.  And in my life, I have how I educated myself into an engineering career while living on the streets and my thing with losing 30% of my body weight.

 

I'm proud of my success.  The things I learned are what I know about and want to share with people.  They are a source of pride.  And there is the saying that "Pride cometh before the fall."  It can be hard to listen to someone who is really prideful talk about something.  And I've been getting super sensitive about it lately.

 

It can be a thing of sounding like you are better than someone else.  And it has elements of competitiveness.  And brings up the idea of Show Don't Tell.  Is the solution to just not bring it up?  I do understand that the best way for me to be more social would be to show more interest in other people by asking questions.  And I am, TOTALLY interested in other people.  I want to hear their stories and I feel that people in general don't share enough intimate details about their lives.

 

I do realize that I can come on strong.  I tend to do that musically too.  I'm fairly ashamed of how loud I used to play back in high school.  I aim to be more sensitive, which brings us back to Pride.  How sensitive should I be?  Is it my business what others think of me?  It certainly does affect me.  If I am always turning people off and driving them away from me, it'll likely start affecting what kind of work I can get which comes back to money, which is vitally important.  We are social creatures.  We all use language.

 

I do have a way of overthinking things.  "Intellectual superiority" was a poor choice of words.  I'm certainly intellectual though.  Lately I've been wanting to buy a textbook on social economics.  I'm interested in how the environments we live in affect our behaviors.

 

Thanks for your thoughtful post Astrid.  "intentional kindness" is a good keyword to research.  I'm also interested in what others have to say about Pride and how that relates to kindness.

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
41 minutes ago, Lydia_R said:

It can be a thing of sounding like you are better than someone else.

The someone else you are proud of being better than is you, yesterday.

Link to comment

Yes, competition with yourself is the only way to go.

 

It can be bad to beat people over the head with a message, but the flip side can be not saying anything of substance.

Link to comment

The search that I'm doing now is "hard to talk with a prideful person."  And that brings up the subject of arrogance.  For me, I've been telling this story of how I educated myself while I was on the streets for almost two decades.  I've been very proud of that and perhaps rightfully so.  I didn't reach much of a state of humility while I was on the streets.

 

But after a couple decades, I've become a broken record about it.  Ultimately I'm just like millions of other people who got an education.

 

It can be hard to talk with my aunt.  She plays the roll of authority on healthy living.  How can I justify baking scones to her?  I made these fresh scones with blueberries from my yard for the first time last week and it was about the coolest thing ever.  You simply have not experienced a scone unless you've gotten one fresh out of the oven.  But that isn't health food.  She is my family and I realize how similar I am to her with my pride issues.  It can be taxing talking with her as I know it can be taxing talking with me.  Her health journey has shaped her life like how my street education shaped mine.  It's what we know, love and talk about.

 

Anyway.  The family aspect of it is interesting.

 

In that search, I see this:

 

Quote

Arrogance creates interpersonal distance and is defined by the Cambridge dictionary as "the quality of being unpleasantly proud and behaving as if you are more important than, or know more than, other people.”

 

"upleasantly proud"  I think is what I'm getting at with my posts this week.  I think it would be fun to make an Unpleasantville movie that is the opposite of Pleasantville.  It's not that my pride isn't justified or that I don't have good things to say about the subjects I talk about.  But I realize that the way I can talk brings out that "know it all" feeling in the same way that I get when talking with my aunt.  My experience is that this can be a tough habit to break.  Hence the 5-10 year journey that I mentioned previously.  How do I go about changing a behavior like this?  Simply keeping my mouth shut doesn't really do anything to solve the problem.

 

It's the Show Don't Tell thing.  People have to unwrap these things themselves.  No one wants an authority telling them how to be.  And it's the old dog and the new trick.  Woof!

Link to comment

And then a search for "how to overcome arrogance" comes up with: Treat yourself and others with greater kindness.  And that certainly gets back to my original thought with this thread.

Link to comment

Hi Lydia, Hope you don't mind if I chime in here. I recently (today) wanted to define just who is Rachel. So in my logical way I made a list. It was rather extensive but the was an immediate pattern that stood out. Most of the things that I had high on my list just simply equate to being kind. Words like supportive, caring, helpful, and friendly. These seem like great attributes that i wish to strive for but they are all just blunt instruments that are unwieldly unless guided by wisdom and compassion. Kindness flows from compassion. With out compassion I do not see how I can be the things that I want to be as Rachel.  I found compassion defined as the following in a google search:

 

 

Compassion literally means “to suffer together.” Among emotion researchers, it is defined as the feeling that arises when you are confronted with another's suffering and feel motivated to relieve that suffering.

 

 

To me I see the essence of femininity as love. Having a love of my self and a love for others. As I transition new aspects of myself are emerging. It is my hope and desire that Rachel is a much better person, more loving, caring, supportive, and nurturing then R@#$ (dead name). What a unique opportunity I see before me. I am doing more than just changing my gender. I am becoming the best possible version of myself that I can be. 

 

Just my 2 cents on the topic.

 

~Rachel

 

Link to comment
6 hours ago, CD Rachel said:

To me I see the essence of femininity as love. Having a love of my self and a love for others. As I transition new aspects of myself are emerging. It is my hope and desire that Rachel is a much better person, more loving, caring, supportive, and nurturing then R@#$ (dead name). What a unique opportunity I see before me. I am doing more than just changing my gender. I am becoming the best possible version of myself that I can be.

How valuable are these words? They could save the world.

Bless you, @CD Rachel.

💜

Davie

Link to comment

i recognized early things that could ease social transition is simply smiling more and being kind.

We get occupied with passing and politics, but in the end most people remember how you made them feel.

I lived a life of invisibility and attempted neutrality of just ghosting myself, but in trying to be the best Me, that had to end and I have to be proactive in the practice in character development.

Mostly I was afraid of projecting kindness out of fear of rejection. I had to get over that fear right away.

In the end, it's about fear, and I think most trans people wake up and face all kinds of fear every day. 

"Using honey instead of vinegar" is the old saying. Dopamine and Oxytocin are not to be underestimated. If people can associate you with feeling good, this can even supercede the rational frontal lobe, and most people like to feel good, and feel good helping others feel good. 

 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@stveee so well said. Thank you - I really needed to read this, this morning.

Link to comment
5 hours ago, Heather Shay said:

@stveee so well said. Thank you - I really needed to read this, this morning.

Ditto on this from Heather Shay. Well said and I wholly agree.

— Davie

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
On 4/3/2022 at 7:09 PM, Lydia_R said:

Being on this site and in my early transition, I find myself focusing on kindness.  Being kind to myself especially.  Accepting of my desires and goals.  Sometimes transitioning seems like total insanity, but the one thing I know is that I want this.  There is no why.

 

I just have this fantasy about my future self.  It's something to work towards.  To give motion to my life.  I made progress last week.  Things are coming along.  I wore my red Star Trek dress yesterday and I'm wearing my black skirt and rust colored ribbed sweater today.  I'm feeling good.  I've developed a better body shaving routine this week.  My new job has got me in a more regular weekday/weekend routine.  I'm shaving my upper body on Friday evening and my lower body on Saturday morning.  Smooth!  I got my initial blood work done to start HRT.  Making an appointment with the transgender medical doctor for the first time now.  Scoping out the electrolysis shops.  It appears there is a selection in Portland!  Go figure!

 

There is no why, only kindness...

Wish you success. Kindness and niceness are the beginning of my personal ethical approach when I am dealing with others. Of course, it is an ideal, so can't always say I am nice to everyone all the time. But, when it comes to myself I might overlook myself more than anyone.

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   11 Members, 0 Anonymous, 149 Guests (See full list)

    • April Marie
    • Willow
    • Vidanjali
    • VickySGV
    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • Mmindy
    • Susie
    • Ashley0616
    • Jamey-Heather
    • RaineOnYourParade
    • Abigail Genevieve
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,061
    • 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

    • Vidanjali
      Edit: Latest album is called "Drumless". My bad. The name of their tour is Drummer.
    • Vidanjali
      My gen z cousin & her gf were visiting the last few days. We are a very, very small contingent of queer members of our family & we stick together. She and her gf introduced me to G Flip. They recently attended a concert and said it was the best concert ever. They were playing G Flip in the car and I was impressed by the vocals, the lyrics, the influences, and the percussion (G is also a drummer). I love a nonbinary vocalist (not that we get to hear so many...yet...) because the freedom from gender performance shines forth. I could hear influences from many styles of music I loved in the 90s, but all blended together in a joyfully percussive way. G Flip is rad! I would post a link to some tracks or an album, but there are explicit lyrics which would go against community rules - you can easily search youtube yourself if you're interested; their latest album is called "Drummer". But here is a picture of G who is serving us gorgeous nonbinary vintage Axl Rose!
    • Vidanjali
      Welcome, @MAN8791. I relate to this so much. I'm roughly the same age as you, afab & nonbinary. For decades, I beat myself up for being a "broken" girl/woman. And I tried my darndest for many of those years to perform woman successfully. While outwardly I may have seemed "a success", inwardly the effort and dysphoria caused me so much anxiety, panic, and depression that it eventually became unsustainable. For me, the first step was letting go of identifying as "broken". Next, I allowed myself to be however I am. And very rapidly I felt better - in fact, initially I felt ecstatic. The door was open for me to really learn about self-love and therefore love itself. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, the counter space in the kitchenette is pretty Limited. But also cost, and usefulness. I guess she is mostly right, and it isn't really important.
    • Vidanjali
      "The Health and Human Services Grants Regulation (HHS Grants Rule) Final Rule protects LGBTQI+ people by clarifying and reaffirming the prohibition on discrimination on the basis of sex – including sexual orientation and gender identity – in specific health and human services programs, consistent with the Supreme Court decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, 590 U.S. 644 (2020)."   https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2024/04/30/hhs-issues-final-rule-prevent-discrimination-health-and-human-services-grant.html
    • Vidanjali
      Wasn't sure whether to post this in the "uplifting news" or "news" forum. This bill is pro-LGBTQ+, albeit 30 some odd years too late with 100s of thousands of lives lost throughout the AIDS crisis. The upshot is that ol' Ron has actually done some good for the community. That's really...something...although I doubt he sees it that way. And most importantly, greater access to screening and care will save many lives.   https://ncpa.org/newsroom/qam/2024/05/01/floridas-governor-signs-bill-expand-hiv-care  
    • Vidanjali
      "The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) updated the federal workplace guidelines after a quarter of a century to protect pronouns, bathrooms and abortion."   https://thehill.com/business/4631184-updated-federal-workplace-eeoc-guidelines-protect-pronouns-bathrooms-abortion/    
    • MAN8791
      Both of my parents were raised in WASP-ish families. What was or wasn't appropriate, with an emphasise on superficial appropriateness (conformity) was verbally beaten into me the second I hit puberty.   Which is really sad as I think back, and was bewildering at the time. I remember being really free to be expressive how I wanted to and then once I started puberty, all of that freedom disappeared and I didn't understand, at all.
    • MAN8791
      I'm doing "beans and rice" for dinner tonight, but it's Punjabi style red bean curry and saffron rice, and I always have an appetizer tray of cut vegetables and dip (seasoned yogurt to go with the theme) on the table.  Might grab a package of naan from the store on the way home, or just make a pan of very american biscuits to go with.
    • MAN8791
      I'm volunteering both days of our Pride Festival (signing other volunteers in, lol).    Taking my two younger kids (oldest is way too cool for school, lol) to a family friendly pride festival, and then turning them loose at the city wide event while I listen to music. They're old enough to experiment with independence and the festival is in a controlled enough space they can feel like they're getting away from me without being *that* far away. My middle is newly out as LGBTQ+ and has been practicing their makeup look for a couple weeks already (age 14) <3 
    • Ashley0616
      Well today was mostly sleeping so far. I woke up at around 0600 and made sure my oldest was ready for school. I came back down on the computer chair and next thing I knew it was 0953. I went through speech therapy for myself. Next thing I realize it's 1300 and apparently went to sleep again. I knew I slept last night but whew apparently not enough. 
    • MAN8791
      Jeans, grey henley, heathered grey blazer with elbow patches, split sole jazz sneakers. Blazer is one of my favorite wardrobe pieces and it's warm but super windy today so perfect sort of day for it 
    • MAN8791
      Fragile is my word of the day. More intense dysphoria than my baseline normal, feeling emotionally on edge. Also ignoring a piece of therapy homework that's actually going to be beautiful when it's done (I'm doing an art piece exploring emotions around the name I was given at birth).
    • MAN8791
      Got accosted in a grocery store parking lot this morning by someone out on a petition drive (in my state, citizens can gather petition signatures to advance ballot measures; I'm always a little cautious about encountering petition drives "in the wild" because unless it's an issue that's been talked about *a lot* it can also be used as a way to just gather voter information).   ANYWAY, the person with the clipboard is presumable cis male and aggressive and I'm AFAB, genderfluid, dressed pretty androgenously this morning and this guy hollars across the parking lot asking "young lady" if I'm a registered voter.   Informed him I'm neither young nor a lady (guy was at least a decade younger than me, maybe more) and wasn't interested in the petition anyway.   "Oh, so I guess you're just offended then."   "YEP!"  
    • Vidanjali
      Welcome @FelixThePickleMan! I admire your ambition to become a K9 handler. Working dogs are fascinating and outstanding. 
  • 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...