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How do you decide to transition


miz miranda

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I couldn't find a similar discussion, so I thought i would ask. I'm someone whose dysphoria surfaced late in life. With the help of therapy and self reflection, I accept myself as transgender. I'm stuck in a tug of way with myself about whether I should transition. I  don't know that I could prosper full time but I can't seem to close the door on the idea either. It seem like I should 'need' to transition but I don't feel that way. I'm 68 and worried about the investment (time & money), my ability to allow myself to override the social conditioning of being a male, the impact on those I love; pretty the same things I assume everyone confronts.

 

I'm doing research and try experiments to see what feels right and they often do. A big party of my therapy was learning to accept and love myself. I have made considerable progress and do want to see how life feels. I have learned some very good coping techniques for dysphoria, which helps but does not prevent it.

 

Fundamentally, was there a tipping point, or a moment of truth that pushed the decision? I would appreciate anything that you could share on your process to chose transition, be it advice, your experiences or resources. I have discussed and she suggested talking with others who have experienced this choice.

 

Thanks in advance.

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You are asking about the single most difficult thing in the whole transgender journey.  We get so used to telling ourselves "No, you can't" that we lose sight of the possibility of "Yes, you can."

 

I was 61, I think, when this came to a head.  I knew I was miserable as I was, pretending to be a man.  I knew I could do it, because I had done if all my life, but I also knew that it was getting more and more painful to carry on like that.

 

The deciding point for me came when I tried to visualize how my life would be if I was still untransitioned when I moved into a nursing home at age 85.  And I realized that I would not be able to handle that. 

 

That was the point at which I decided that I had to do it.  I came out to my wife and started my transition process.

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I'll start by pointing out that transition doesn't necessarily have to be an all-or-nothing matter. That fact has been helpful for me:

 

I've known for a long time that if I had a magic button I could press to instantly become a cis gal, I'd hit that button no hesitation. Since I can't do that and I'm instead stuck with mundane "realistic" transition choices, I've had a lot of concern and worry about what kind of results might be possible for me, given both financial limits and limits of current medical science. If I could see a crystal ball preview of my post-transition self, I have no idea whether or not I would decide I was comfortable socially transitioning and going full-time with the result.

 

So what I've been doing is just taking it one step at a time. I have no idea whether I'll ever go full-time or get records changed. There are surgeries I think I'd probably like to have, but even if money weren't an issue, I don't know whether I will actually choose to. But in the meantime, I've been going for whatever changes I do know I want, or reversible changes that I at least know I want to try.

 

So for example, before I was sure I was even trans at all,  I grew my hair out, got earrings, and started allowing myself some of the feminine-feeling mannerisms and preferences that I normally would've self-censored and not allowed for myself. And now that I know I'm trans, but not sure how far I want to go (or even can go) in transition: All of the changes from HRT are things that I either knew I wanted (even if I were to stay in guy mode) or were at least reversible things I wasn't sure if I wanted, but wanted to try. So I started HRT, not knowing whether I will socially transition, but knowing I at least wanted to go this far, and knowing I can discontinue it if I choose, and the only permanent effects are ones I'm not concerned about anyway.

 

At least, that's how I've been approaching my transition so far.

 

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In my mind, honestly is always the best way to live.  For me, it came down to continuing to live a lie; that lie being that I was okay being a guy, or living the truth, which was that I needed to transition to be who I needed to be.  I am not okay living a lie.  I was never okay as a guy, though I could for the most part manage my dysphoria.  I never really fit in as a guy in so many ways.

 

I didn't discover this until after I started transitioning, but I was angry at having to live that lie for so long.  I had been a very angry person most of my life and I never knew why.  As I began the process, I found the anger to be largely gone.  Yes, I have moments of anger, but not this monkey on my back which used to exist in a constant state of repressed agitation.

 

It took me doing a lot of what Karl Jeung called "Shadow Work" to get ready for transition.  I had to find those parts of myself I had repressed and integrate them into myself in a healthy, mature and positive way.  At the same time, the choice to transition was kind of the culmination of my Shadow Work, being a huge part of myself I had repressed to meet the expectations of my family, friends, faith, and society.  I decided that if they ought to want me to be honest and if they didn't then maybe their love, loyalty, friendship, etc. was not really all that honest and true to begin with.  Friends and family ought to want the real authentic person, and not a facade of what they want you to be.

 

I would ask you then, to consider:  If you're really honest with yourself, and if you really want to be honest with those around you, who are you really?  Are you a gender dysphoric struggling male?  That's okay if it is who you really are.  Are someone who would blossom and grow through transition to be authentically you?  That's okay too.  Be who you are honestly.

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Like @KathyLauren, I started my transition in my early 60s. It took a long time and lots of therapy before I even admitted to myself that I needed to transition. There were, shall we say, outside factors.

 

I can say that my earliest memories are wanting to be a girl, and in my teens there was a lot pressure put on me about the issue. In fact, in the 1970s (when I was a teen) there wasn't even a word for being trans, and my late father had a huge fear of me being, as he put it, "a pansy."  As a result, I was in a deep state of denial. It took two failed marriages, a sreies of "buy and purge" cycles followed by years of counseling and therapy for me to begin to transition.

 

I don't think there was any set point; I've always known down deep I am a woman. It just took a long time and lots of work to summon the courage to begin to act on it.

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I could say ditto, ditto, ditto, … to everything expressed her. Early childhood struggles with my identity. Trying hard to “come across” as a man all my life, joining the military, getting married, taking on the role of father, blocking any feminine feelings that were struggling to surface. Of course people have a sixth sense when you’re trying to hide something. It makes them probe and poke for weakness, so I was always defensive. In private when I was totally alone I would always allow the feminine to emerge, not that I had any desire to suppress it at that point. But when I knew that family or friends were going to intrude on my solitude I pushed the feminine down like I was trying to drown it in the bathtub.

 

Then COVID happened and I found myself at home in my room alone for long spells and I found I enjoyed my own female company and I really didn’t want to separate myself from it anymore and I made the decision that it was too much work to go back and besides how could I face myself if I kept trying to drown this person I loved. So I painted my nails and wore them around the house and one of my daughters noticed and did a double take and I sat down and explained what was going on to my family, my wife and three daughters. They were immediately accepting for which I am very grateful and it helped explain some of the behavior issues I had when they were growing up.

 

I called around at some lgbtq clinics and found one that was reasonably priced and paid them a visit and explained what was going on and the prescribed E and T-blockers and atorvastatin without questions or hesitation. Then I switched insurance over to Kaiser as soon as I could and talked with their gender pathways department, got a tracheal shave, got an official letter, and am in the pipeline for surgery.

 

The mindset after 18 months on HRT is shifting from acceptance of my identity, no longer fighting it, to being comfortable with others suspecting and knowing, to actively wanting others to see or hear less of the male and more of the female.  I'm slowly peeling back the layers to reveal the real me. I stopped wearing a ball cap everywhere I go this week, and I'm enjoying getting compliments on my hair from bank tellers and other people I meet.  
 

I'm active in leadership in toastmasters as an area director visiting clubs and evaluating them against standards and helping them put programs in place to improve and strengthen their leadership skills and membership development.  I'll be giving a seminar on the need for planning at the club level at the toastmasters leadership institute for the district (Oregon and Washington ) in December. So far no one has flat out said I don’t belong, though a couple of folks are a bit passive aggressive toward the concept. Toastmasters voted to amend their bylaws to include a phrase that includes anti-transgender in the list of things considered discriminatory. So that helps a great deal.

 

Testosterone has carved certain features into my face over the last 60+ years and I’m hoping that FFS might help with that. I have asked Kaiser for an appointment to explore that in more depth. 

 

The challenge for me now is how to advance my transition and bring others along with me on my journey, knowing that there will be some ambushes possibly waiting for me. I have reached out to a trans friend in the area, meeting her for lunch tomorrow as a matter of fact, to talk about how to safely move forward with social transitioning.


Hope this helps?

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I feel like there were a bunch of things that added up to it, but probably the thing that finally did it was flipping FaceApp, gender swap let me see a version of myself outside, and I suddenly knew I had to finally be whatever approximation of that after so many decades of denial and repression.  The combination of that and worrying about dying as a man (early covid days) cracked this egg.

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10 hours ago, Aggie1 said:

could say ditto, ditto, ditto, … to everything expressed her. Early childhood struggles with my identity. Trying hard to “come across” as a man all my life, joining the military, getting married, taking on the role of father, blocking any feminine feelings that were struggling to surface. Of course people have a sixth sense when you’re trying to hide something. It makes them probe and poke for weakness, so I was always defensive. In private when I was totally alone I would always allow the feminine to emerge, not that I had any desire to suppress it at that point. But when I knew that family or friends were going to intrude on my solitude I pushed the feminine down like I was trying to drown it in the bathtub.

Good morning,

 

I too, will start off my saying ditto, ditto, ditto...

 

I knew I was different when my mother was pregnant with my two youngest siblings. I always wanted to care for and nurture them. I was 12 years old when the youngest came home, and I didn't want to miss a thing in his life. Then I was convinced that I must be the best Boy Scout and Man Up to the real life ahead of me. I still maintained a "Baby Whisperer" status, able to calm, and nurture any baby having a bad time.  I always knew I was a girl, now woman inside, and going to therapy for a late in life, end of life session brought that out, and I've never looked back. I wasn't trying to end my life. My essential tremors had gotten to the point I thought I may have Alzheimer. My new care team did a great job with identifying my issues, and continued therapy brought me here to deal with transition. 

 

I'm also relived that total strangers can write what they think is their own individual story about being transgender, and then have so many of us reply hands down. DITTO, DITTO, DITTO.

 

Hugs, and best wishes to you all,

 

Mindy🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋

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“Baby Whisperer”❤️ @Mmindy
 

@miz miranda
In my case, dysphoria occurred early and constant.  For so long, it seemed every “door” to dealing with it was closed to me.   So I alternately numbed myself, or, made strong efforts to make peace with my birth assigned gender.

 
Then a few years ago, the doors to transitioning seemed to be open.  
I made a commitment decision to keep walking unrelenting through them, holding only a faith that it was the right thing at the right time for me.  

 

Nearly 4 years into this journey chapter, I saw a miraculous sign on a highway that felt to me it was right to proceed (and also  right that I had waited) 🌈🌈.
Since then, things MOVED ahead. 


It IS a huge investment of time, money, and energy.  Sacrifices happen.  Relationships and everything else in life changes. 
Its probably a one-way ticket with no refunds, once you’re past a certain point. 

Today I have zero remorse from transitioning , and joy in being alive.  

Hope the same for you, no matter what is right for your life. 

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"I feel like there were a bunch of things that added up to it, but probably the thing that finally did it was flipping FaceApp, gender swap let me see a version of myself outside, and I suddenly knew I had to finally be whatever approximation of that after so many decades of denial and repression."

 

Rhonda, I had the exact same reaction.   I actually burst out in tears at the sight of the "real me".

 

But.......I sit here at 60, with a host of endocrine and other medical problems that might preclude medical transition, and I just keep wondering if it's worth completely upending the apple cart to achieve the true me.   The struggle continues......

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Hiya @Miz Miranda,

 

My transition was slow (at least from my perspective). Stephie was born on 11/10/2018. But, she was for one confused. The confusion here was not about my gender identity. I had no doubt that I was a woman. My first worry was telling my partner. How would she take it. She was confused, disbelief, and doubts, but the one thing she did not do was to reject me. This was mid-spring time, by July 16  I officially started my transition by coming out to my therapist. By this time she was supporting me learning, but some doubts remained. So what made me decide to transition This gender therapist that I saw twice, who actually practiced couples sexual therapy. The one thing she did was have me do was write how I would feel going out dressed as a woman, but with obvious male body. I decide to weighted pros and cons list. Each item receive a numerical value as to how important they were and was given a number for 1 to 10. 10 being the most important. This was how it worked out for me.ProPros&Cons of Presenting as a Woman.odtPros&Cons of Presenting as a Woman.odts&Cons of Presenting as a Woman.odt

 

The the pros won out from the cons 46 - 38. That's when I knew I would have to transition if wanted a felt life being reflective by what was in the inside. These were both cognitive, emotional, and behavioral. My life overall has never been better and so while I still have issues, most not connected to gender identity, the real deal is I am a woman, trans if you wish because of the original sex determination on my birth certificate and the conflict between my gender. 

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Just now, StephieGurl said:

Hiya @Miz Miranda,

 

My transition was slow (at least from my perspective). Stephie was born on 11/10/2018. But, she was for one confused. The confusion here was not about my gender identity. I had no doubt that I was a woman. My first worry was telling my partner. How would she take it. She was confused, disbelief, and doubts, but the one thing she did not do was to reject me. This was mid-spring time, by July 16  I officially started my transition by coming out to my therapist. By this time she was supporting me learning, but some doubts remained. So what made me decide to transition This gender therapist that I saw twice, who actually practiced couples sexual therapy. The one thing she did was have me do was write how I would feel going out dressed as a woman, but with obvious male body. I decide to weighted pros and cons list. Each item receive a numerical value as to how important they were and was given a number for 1 to 10. 10 being the most important. This was how it worked out for of Presenting as a of Presenting as a Woman.odts&Cons of Presenting as a Woman.odt

 

The the pros won out from the cons 46 - 38. That's when I knew I would have to transition if wanted a felt life being reflective by what was in the inside. These were both cognitive, emotional, and behavioral. My life overall has never been better and so while I still have issues, most not connected to gender identity, the real deal is I am a woman, trans if you wish because of the original sex determination on my birth certificate and the conflict between my gender. 

Link didn't work.

 

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I'm another ditto,ditto, ditto in my early sixties after my wife's death  a grief counselor got my long held secret out of me and eventually got me to a gender therapist. We spent many many sessions slowly peeling the onion away from my fears. Eventually very slowly changing my appearance doing little things at first under dressing to ladies underwear, clear nail varnish. But when HRT started to have noticeable effects my daughter new something was up and she confronted me about it.  That was the best thing that happenned not that she fully understood but she was  willing to support me if this was what I chose to do. Well now 71 and socially transitioned full time I am trully happy and have been told by my doctors that GCS may now be possible do to improved medical condition. I wish I had been born a girl but these last years living as a woman I would not trade for anything.

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It amazes me that there are so many who transition so late in life. I feel there is more services available to us today. And there is far less gatekeeping going on except for genitals, but some of us are working on it. My concern for now is the elderly population. I have volunteered to talk in the phone. I am just there for them to talk about whatever might be bothering them, or something good to share. My first assignment should come in. Advocacy and gender care have been my desire since I became Stephie

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I made the decision just a few months ago.  It was a tough decision, but it came down to a simple concept for me.  It was simply that other people are doing it and they seem to be doing fine.  The desire is there.  No question about that.  There is the fear about coming out to people.  The fear of looking odd.  The fear of surgeries going awry.  The fear of discrimination.  The fear of rejection.

 

When I came out last week, I experienced the joy of acceptance.  It was easier for me to envision failure than success.  I was caught a little off guard.  Ultimately, I'm out now, so there is nothing to hide and that feels pretty good.

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Hi @miz miranda, for me there were a few crucial points on the way, but probably the deciding one was breaking up with my wife just over two years ago. I was distraught enough that, living alone about 1500kms from her, I considered suicide, and then this astonishing thought came into my head: “If I die I’ll never experience what it’s like to live as a woman.” And suddenly that thought of transitioning, which had always seemed just a crazy fantasy, suddenly didn’t seem so crazy — not as crazy as suicide, anyway.

 

Since then I have proceeded in stop-start fashion. First I researched what it would take to transition to my satisfaction, what it would cost, how much time it would require. I decided it was possible and that I deeply wanted to do it, but I still feared rushing into it. So I left the decision for a year or so while I recovered from the shock of losing my marriage and tried to build up strength and resolve for the journey ahead. Then another turning point happened: having never gone out in public dressed female except after dark, I stayed up all night on New Year’s Eve 2021 and was out having coffee in broad daylight on New Years Day 2022, and no-one hassled me or looked askance at me or even seemed much to notice me. Then I spent all day at a gallery and went home to the friend’s place where I was staying and hung out with him and his kids and I felt GREAT. And I don’t think I’ve looked back since then. 

 

In April I moved again (the third time since 2020) to a big city about two hours from where I used to live with my ex-wife. I came here both because I have family here and because it seemed a good place to transition. In May, as soon as I’d found a job and an apartment, I started HRT. I had already come out to close friends and family by then, and next I just started going out as often as possible dressed female — to cafes, to the park, to clothes shops, on dates; it didn’t matter, so long as I was practicing being out in public. And every single outing felt good and healing and fun and inspiring. I joined a trans support group and made friends and went out with them and felt even better. But I still appeared male about 75% of the time, until now...

 

A bit over a week ago I took time off work. I am a disability carer, and I decided my mental health was not stable enough for me to be able to help others’ mental health. Still presenting male at work meant I had fallen back on old masculine survival tactics to deal with my male client’s “behaviours of concern”, and my dysphoria had skyrocketed. Meanwhile, the more feminine and better I felt in my private life, the more horrific it was to keep presenting male at work in general. So, after a few days of rest, it struck me: maybe the best thing I can get out of this R&R period is to go full-time. After all, this has been my plan for two years now, and, while I’m not quite where I hoped to be physically, I still feel wonderful every time I’m in public presenting female and I virtually never get kickback or abuse; in fact I get a tonne of encouragement. So I’ve been full-time for four days now, and while I reserve the right to lapse back into boy mode if I deem it wise or necessary, I feel so happy I don’t think that’s going to happen. 

 

I am younger than you — I just turned 49 — but I am hyper-aware that my clock is ticking. I’m an artist with many projects constantly on the go; I was also studying until a little over a month ago. But I’ve realised that my most important project is myself. Transitioning is my number one priority. Nothing brings me more joy than the feeling that I am progressing on this journey. I started sessions with a gender therapist in early 2021, laser hair removal a few months later, electrolysis a few months after that. I am having a consultation for hair transplants tomorrow and beginning trans voice training in a little over a week. It’s a huge investment of money and time, but I know I’m on the right track. I don’t know if I have ever been happier, even though I often feel heartbreaking grief that I left it so long. Oh, and my ex-wife and I are now best friends. Our relationship is better than it’s ever been, as we both agree.

 

I hope this helps, Miz Miranda. I wish you all the best, whatever you decide. I love my life now, but I had to hit rock bottom to get where I am.

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I want to thank each of you for sharing your stories,advice and most importantly your support. Even though I don't have a path decided, I feel better about the struggle as important of my self acknowledgement.

 

This has really helped me.

 

 

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On 11/4/2022 at 3:17 PM, miz miranda said:

I couldn't find a similar discussion, so I thought i would ask. I'm someone whose dysphoria surfaced late in life. With the help of therapy and self reflection, I accept myself as transgender. I'm stuck in a tug of way with myself about whether I should transition. I  don't know that I could prosper full time but I can't seem to close the door on the idea either. It seem like I should 'need' to transition but I don't feel that way. I'm 68 and worried about the investment (time & money), my ability to allow myself to override the social conditioning of being a male, the impact on those I love; pretty the same things I assume everyone confronts.

 

I'm doing research and try experiments to see what feels right and they often do. A big party of my therapy was learning to accept and love myself. I have made considerable progress and do want to see how life feels. I have learned some very good coping techniques for dysphoria, which helps but does not prevent it.

 

Fundamentally, was there a tipping point, or a moment of truth that pushed the decision? I would appreciate anything that you could share on your process to chose transition, be it advice, your experiences or resources. I have discussed and she suggested talking with others who have experienced this choice.

 

Thanks in advance.

hmm.. this is ultimately something only you can answer for yourself, but i have to agree that knowledge is power. i think it's wise that you're taking your time to research it, and gather other people's experiences to help you contemplate what is truly best for you, as well. 

 

for me, i've only just very recently begun to come out, and pursue transition. i'm 31 now. i've known that i felt this way since i was maybe 7 or 8. i was very sheltered, homeschooled out in the country with only the family tribe for experiences to draw on, so to speak. i didn't know that others out there felt like me, that there were things people were even able to consider doing to acknowledge themselves, or feel any better in their own unique circumstances. 

 

there are a great many reasons i kept buried for so long, none the least of which involved a great deal of safety, and stability. ultimately, i decided that i have been geared toward survival for so long, and i would very much like to live, to truly  thrive instead, before my time on this Earth is done. it feels late in the game to start this journey at 31, but who knows how much longer we all have? i hope to enjoy a great many more years living as my true self. even just the acknowledgment of who i am with the people i love has given me so much confidence and joy and empowerment, even when they do not like my life choices. i feel as though at least i am showing our relationship, and the love i have for them respect by putting my self on the table. if they choose to walk away, i will respect that as much as i would like their respect, even if i can't have it. it just feels good. it feels right to me. 

 

i really look forward to transition, and seeing where this journey takes me. but, im still early in the game. i've already decided that if my doctors say T or any of the surgery i wish to pursue are not healthy, viable options (considering any other health concerns, asthma, blood pressure, cholesterol), then i may not pursue some of it as actively as i'd hoped. i am also sure i'll face financial obstacles, and things may take a different turn as i continue because of that, too. but im going to go forward, and find out. you know? 

 

i wish you all the very best in discovering your path, and what is best for you. i would also encourage you to seek in person groups near you, if you can. this forum has been really amazing, and i am so glad for it, but i will also say that something about discussing it in person with more people who know what you're going through is another piece of the puzzle i think you should experience. 

 

very kind regards,

Sage

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    • MAN8791
      SIGHTLINES   I worship at the point of a gun On Friday nights and Sunday mornings. I pray for peace under the watchful eye of hired men With guns holstered on their hips Who laugh with us Eat with us Pray with us -      Dear God, not tonight      Not this morning      Not my friends      Please, not on my watch And I'm fully aware of the irony of the statement Because too often, our ancestors were forced to pray At the point of a gun because they said the wrong prayers In the wrong languages Loved the wrong person Identified the wrong way But today, I do so of my own free will. When I leave, I say thank you -      That it wasn't tonight      It wasn't this morning      It didn't happen while I sang      It wasn't my friends Because this week the guns stayed silent. But next week and next week and weeks afterward Could be the week that guns point in, not out And I can't will myself to believe it could never happen here because      Someone tried to bomb my Temple,       Someone set it on fire,      Someone shot up the clinic where I go for healthcare      Someone shot up the club my friends danced at So when I pray, I offer a wish to the universe That guns be melted into musical instruments and works of art. If someone wishes to shoot me, They will have to beat works of art into tools for the hand Before they can become instruments of war again.
    • MaeBe
      This is important for us all to keep really close to our hearts, especially as we go through a doubting phase or anxiety wave. I always go to the joy I have found being who I am, a person that does not conform with my birth assignment and the gender I defaulted to for many years. That places me under the trans umbrella and I need to feel comfortable and confident about that.   I am so glad you were able to deal with this person and others that confronted you with grace and poise. It seems like this person targeted your session specifically, they didn't want anything from it but to be a thorn in your side. I highly doubt she was there to expand her worldview. It is hard when your goal is to get through the content and someone wants to make the session a dialogue with them only. Challenges to our worldviews are important, they help us shape and define our beings, but that doesn't mean we have to deal with gatekeeping and hate.   I wish there was more content like your session available out there. I understand recording such content is a touchy subject, with the speakers and audience being general targets, but gosh it would be nice. I volunteered at the Time to Thrive event for HRC and got to sit in a few sessions, both as a moderator and a couple just as a participant, and it was very energizing. Thank you for being out there any speaking your truth, @Sally Stone!
    • Ivy
      There are all kinds of us. My situation at the time enabled me to begin living full time as a woman, and get onto hormones.  I realize everyone doesn't have that option - or want it. I also realize there are people who would consider me not truly transgender because I haven't had the surgery, and probably never will. Whatever…
    • Vidanjali
      Yeah. Trans folk still cannot update or renew FL drivers licenses. Florida part of the lawsuit against updated trans student Title IX protections. Florida suing Biden admin over ban on discrimination in healthcare based on gender.  Despite injunctions for individuals of some things including trans youth healthcare and using affirmed pronouns in school, bans still in place. The list goes on. Honestly I have stopped keeping up with news as much as I used to for the good of my mental health. Peace, y'all.  
    • Sally Stone
      Post 14 “I’m not Trans Enough”   I have mentioned in other posts my affiliation with the Keystone Conference in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.  For several years, I facilitated a conference workshop titled “Making the Most of Part-time Womanhood.”  Each time I ran the workshop, it was standing room only, so I know for a fact, the idea resonates with many.   When I originally planned the workshop the target audience was geared towards girls like me, those who weren’t planning permanent transition.  I also expected to attract girls who may have been on the path to permanent transition but because of timing or life circumstances couldn’t.  What I didn’t expect as part of my attracted audience were hecklers and naysayers.  Thankfully, I only had to deal with a couple of those, but it only takes one to ruin everybody’s day.   Sadly, there exists a radical fringe that has permeated our community from the beginning.  The fringe mindset holds to the idea that being a trans woman means you were born a woman trapped in a man’s body, and the only recourse is to live as a woman fulltime.  Anything or anyone not fully aligned with this idea, is a threat to real trans women.  Apparently, my lifestyle choice, and my workshop were just the kind of threats that needed to be eliminated.   I was several minutes into the workshop, had just given a short overview of what I was going to cover when one person told me I should make certain everyone in attendance knew that I wasn’t speaking on behalf of trans women, that instead, I should be quite clear that I was speaking as a crossdresser.  The comment caught me off guard initially, but I rallied pretty quickly and tried to remind this person that the term transgender was an umbrella term that covered a wide spectrum.    Of course, she wanted to argue the point and went on to point out that since I was not going to live my life as a woman on a fulltime basis, I couldn’t be transgender, and then adding cruelty to her rhetoric, she reminded me and my audience that I was nothing more than a man in a dress.    I’m pretty non-confrontational most of the time, but her comments really pushed my buttons.  I could feel my defensive hackles raising and I knew I had to be careful not to stoop to her level.  So, instead of any stinging retorts, and believe me, I was thinking of many, I took the high road and as politely as I could, informed her that if she continued to disrupt the workshop, I would have her removed.  She responded by telling me she was going to report me and my workshop to the conference organizers.  I told her reporting me was her prerogative, and actually encouraged her to do it immediately as a way of getting her out of the room.   She didn’t take the bait and stayed for the entire workshop.  Thankfully, there were no further outbursts, but she used all sorts of overt body language to show her displeasure with my blasphemous views.  When the workshop ended, she cornered me and continued to berate me, insisting I was a simple crossdresser that tended to make real trans women look bad.  I wanted to just let things go, but her cruel comments had pushed me too far, so I reported her to the conference staff.  I figured if she had targeted my workshop, it was likely she would target others.  Conference officers informed her that her views were outdated, bigoted, and not in keeping with the conference’s commitment to inclusiveness.  She was reminded that by persisting in voicing those kinds of views and being disruptive, she wouldn’t be welcome at the conference.   I facilitated this particular workshop for four-years, and thankfully, this was the only serious confrontation I experienced.  However, there were others that espoused similar views, only they didn’t raise their disagreements to a confrontational level.  It bothers me immensely that some within our own community, would seek to marginalize another trans person.  Of course, I’m not naïve enough to think our community would be any different than society as a whole.  Sadly, there will always be some (only a few, thankfully) who inflate their sense of self-worth by putting down others.   It's difficult enough dealing with a general population that doesn’t understand us, but when we are attacked by our own, it tends to hurt even more, and it can cause us to question ourselves.  Ultimately, we cannot let others tell us who we are, and certainly, we cannot let them decide if we are trans enough.  Being transgender is being transgender, period.  Yes, we can be different, but we must remember there is no measurement that ranks how trans we are.   Hugs,   Sally
    • MaeBe
      I read the postulation as: “what if <insert social media company> was charged by government agencies or congress to create algorithms to identify, collect information on, and for reporting on LGBTQ+ people? So as to target them for “reasons”.”   This would be infringement of a few protections in the Constitution & Bill of Rights, but given government’s history with shady surveillance practices we wouldn’t know anything about it until it was likely in use. Probably in the realm of a suspense novel, but we know algorithms used for suggesting content already can identify people’s proclivities—even when they don’t have a clue themselves. So the tech is there, it’s just the dark room conspiracy that would be missing. 
    • MaeBe
      How insidious would it be for them to take it easy on the LGB as a strategy to try to create a fracture between the TQ+? There’s enough of the “drop the T” nonsense out there that they could leverage.   I’m happy the FLA folx are getting some reprieve though!
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