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!

Why Is?


LaurenA

Recommended Posts

Why is it that the only time I have the courage to declare myself as who I am is when I've had a drink.  Is it because I can only believe it when I am drunk?  Is it because I'm a coward at heart?  Is it because I'm still not sure.  Damned if I know.  Here I am vacillating between letting the whole idea go of being trans and having SRS.  It's a hell of a dilemma with me.  Talking with my councilor doesn't help.  All she does is support whatever I'm feeling during that session.  Maybe that's why I drink?  To allow myself to accept and have the courage to be who I am?  Hell of a quandary and not one I think I will ever solve.

Link to comment
  • Admin

In chapter 3 of the Big Book of AA, it says that no one likes to admit they are different from other people.  While it is referring to our addictions to alcohol, I found that it also applied to being Trans.   The second element in recovery that I learned was that we could become  "rigorously honest" about the addiction while being sober.  Again, something that also applies to our being Trans.  It can be done but I had to learn it by almost killing myself with a prescription drug and getting sent to Substance Abuse Counselor who actually gave me the Gender Therapy items as I became used to being honest with him.  My first major Coming Out was in a group therapy session for addicts.  After I did that, almost no one spoke and I was afraid they thought I was telling a bad story.  When I saw my Counselor several days later he told me  that he and his colleagues had been hearing the others from the group finally coming to grips with their own REAL addiction problems.  My honesty and openness had given them the courage they needed for their lives.  Talk about shock on my part. My counselor had me go with him to his boss who was an M.D. who on the spot referred me to Endocrinology for HRT and offered me the surgery letters from the two of them. 

 

Maybe your therapist thinks you are being honest about your gender feelings, now to be honest about the drinking issue as well so the whole package of you can be given what you need. 

Link to comment

What Vicky says about addition is so true I drank for over 20 years mostly out frustration about my life and gender issues. Yet it took another 23 years after stopping and living sober before I could over come the fear of my gender issues.The thing that I found that was similiar was the need to become honest with my self about who I was, and that fear of confronting that had paralyzed me most of my life. When I saw a grief therapist after the death of my wife she knew something was going on with me and eventually pried it out of me that I always  felt I should have been born female. Telling another human being even a trained therapist is so hard, and yet it led me to the freedom finally to  start to deal with my issues.I was physically addicted to alcohol and found a way out through AA ,and found a chance to live my life as who I had always felt I should be by getting over my fear of who I new I really was. Don't know if that makes sense but that's my story.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

You are in a tough situation but knowing some of your past burdens, I think you are doing amazingly well. Hang in there and keep fighting. You'll make it. I believe in you.

Link to comment

Hi @LaurenA, it’s nice to meet you. It seems to me that vacillating between SRS and giving up transition entirely is a very all-or-nothing approach. I don’t know your story so I’m not sure if you’re on HRT already, but I presume you’re not presenting  full-time? If that’s the case, maybe there are some more gradual — and less scary — steps you can take than SRS, and by taking those steps and seeing how they make you feel you may know more clearly whether SRS is for you? Personally, I think my upbringing in the 1970s and 80s trained me to see gender in a binary way that I am having to overcome to cope with my transition. After all, transition is a gradual process. It’s not, no matter how much I wish it was, like flicking a switch. 

Link to comment

Hi @Betty K  I grew up in the 1950's where being anything but M/F was considered an abomination.  That attitude controlled my actions for a VERY long time.  It wasn't until I turned 70 that I and admitted I was trans.  Hell, until Christine Jorgesen nobody even knew what trans was or that it could be done.  The opinion in the rural area I was in was the she/he was wrong and against all that was right.  In that atmosphere I learner to hide what I felt and to never let anyone know what I was thinking.  It wasn't until I was  in college in the 70's that I realized who and what I was.  Even then I was afraid to let anyone know.  I hid for the next 50 years.  Covid isolation gave me the time to think about it and the death of both of my wives forced me to look at my life and where I was heading.  Now I'm unsure to take the plunge or not.  I've been on HRT for about 2 years.  I have an appointment next month with a surgeon to get an orchiectomy.  I think what I am feeling is a question of commitment.  I have been hiding so long I wonder at this point in my life I should keep hiding or continue down the path.

Link to comment
14 hours ago, LaurenA said:

Why is it that the only time I have the courage to declare myself as who I am is when I've had a drink.  Is it because I can only believe it when I am drunk?  Is it because I'm a coward at heart?  Is it because I'm still not sure.  Damned if I know.

 

I've also found that I'm more confident in my trans-ness and femininity when I've had at least some amount to drink, too. I never really understood that either. At the very least though, you're clearly not the only one! I've often wondered if it may simply be alcohol's "reduced inhibition" short-circuiting some of that gender-oriented "you can't do that, you can't be that" conditioning and inhibitions we grew up with.

 

Of course, I certainly don't recommend drinking as a way to deal with these things, or to deal with anything. But for what it's worth, I can relate to that particular quandary.

Link to comment

Thanks for your reply @LaurenA, and I think I understand your situation more clearly now, though for me it’s pretty much the opposite. In my case, surgeries seem far less important than being “out” and letting people see who I am. For me, dysphoria mostly arises from maintaining a charade of maleness in order to cope with day-to-day life. Since dropping that charade and going fulltime about three weeks ago I feel SO much better. Of course, at age 49 and only five months on hormones I definitely do not pass, and that fact in itself can be a source of dysphoria. But I found the emotional changes stemming from HRT we’re making me want to burst for as long as I kept presenting male; the disconnect between how I felt on the inside and appeared (and even behaved) on the outside were just too great. That distance is far less now, and I feel much more free to behave naturally since I’m not so hindered by my old male identity.

 

That said, I do understand that questioning of commitment, and I guess if I felt I could be satisfied transitioning in private I might consider that option too. It’s just that I don’t have much choice: I can’t stand being a man on the outside and a woman on the inside. 

 

Btw I fully understand it was even harder in the 50s than in the 70s to be a trans child, and I am in awe of all of you who survived that experience. I cry about my childhood regularly; to me it seems an integral part of the transition process to grieve for what I missed out on. Ironically, the further I go and more certain I am I’m on the right path, the more grief I feel, as I start to understand just how much violence I did to myself by locking myself in the closet all that time. I don’t know what else to say about that except that, to some extent, I feel your pain. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Perhaps some of my drinking issues caused by thecguilt and shame that gender issues caused.  The fact is that addiction took over,  I had dressed and used gay bars as my first forays into the world as myself.  Later as i found sobriety by working the AA program i tried my best to be sober and honest.  At the time gender was beyond my ability to face so i tried to leave those issues behind.  They followed me until one day i went to a women's meeting.  Soon i found a home in AA where i could be honest.  I realized i had always failed in denying my gender issues.  Sobriety actually gave me the strength to live this life of honesty.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment

Thank you @Charlize.  I don't think I'm at that point yet.  I still need the alcohol based courage in order to publicly admit who I am.  I just came out to my hobby based social group (with positive results) but that's as public as I have done.  Even then it was only after a couple drinks.  It's going to be a very long time before I will allow myself to be seen in public as myself while sober. 

 

I just noticed that I used the term "allow myself".  An interesting use of terms.  I guess that indicates my own level of transphobia.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
22 hours ago, LaurenA said:

I guess that indicates my own level of transphobia.

I spoke about that at last nights local remembrance celebration.  I was the only person there who had transition and transphobia was mentioned as existing in "a few".  I had to share as i spoke that it has always been the whole society with only a few exceptions.  I noted that i had always felt there was something wrong with me.  The  bravery that a few drinks gave me never lasted but the need for more never left until i became honest with my "issues".

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment

Hi @LaurenA! A quandary isn't it. The stuff that gave me the liquid courage for a few hours as myself, deep in the closet came to own me, killing me. Then fear of all fears, I couldn't live with, or without it. Some wonderful people offered me what they had, what had been freely given to them. I'd heard their stories, they were alcoholic like me for sure, but unlike me at the time, they were happy & sober. I wanted that, to get it I had to be honest with myself. This honesty gave me the ability to look at what I now know is my transgender femme self. I am out in the world today as the beautiful me that has been waiting decades for the self loathing to be chipped away! I'm fairly sure the only way this has been able to happen is through sobriety.

 

I don't know that you're alcoholic. There's really only one person who knows if your drinking is a problem & is able to do something about it. You see her looking back at you in the mirror every day.

 

Hmmm, all I was going to say was ditto to the beautiful sober ladies who preceded.

 

Love you! Please know you are loved!

Hugs!

Delcina 

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

Late coming back to the party 🙂.    For a long while I thought I had my drinking under control.  I was working so drinking all day was out of the question.  Every once in a while I wouldn't drinking for several days in a row.  On weekends I didn't start drinking until a glass of wine with lunch. Then I got laid off. I started drinking more and more until I was starting the day with a drink.  On New Year's Eve I realized things had gotten out of hand.  I was keeping a spigot gallon container filled with black russians in the fridge.  So I stopped.  Withdrawal wasn't anywhere near as bad as times before but it was still uncomfortable.  So here it is Jan 4th and I haven't had a drink so far.  Eating way too much candy, but no booze.  The challenge I am having is that frequently I tell myself "One shot won't hurt".  Then I have to remind myself what that will eventually lead to.  The want is getting stronger.  How can I deal with it?  I'm getting to the point where I don't think I can stop forever.

 

If part of the definition of being an alcoholic is that it has somehow ruined your life then I'm not.  If it's only that you can't control your drinking then yes I am.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

As Delcina said  only you can decide.  When i went to AA i was a mess!   I've seen worse and i've seen better in recovery.  I've also seen folks die from this disease.  I often have heard that alcoholism is like an elevator.  You can get off at any floor.  It's wonderful to see folks who haven't lost everything reach out for help as they realize they can't stop.  

Pm me if you wish.  There are great meetings of sober trans folks on Zoom.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@LaurenA, I just want to say, congratulations on 4 days sober.  Take one day at a time!

Link to comment

Hi Lauren! Hope you're having a fabulous day! Today if asked I just tell folks & affirm for myself if needed, One's too many & two's never enough. Your definition of being alcoholic sounds correct.

 

Hugs!

Delcina 

Link to comment

Thanks @Delcina B  So far the day has been good.  It's mending day so I'm doing a lot of sewing of buttons and a little patching.  I'm also still building the LEGO Eiffel Tower to become my dining room table centerpiece.  (The person in the picture is NOT me.  He's far too young and good looking.)

LEGO announces tallest-ever set with Eiffel Tower

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

You sound good @LaurenA I like the Eiffel Tower Lego project. Post photo when complete. Please.

Link to comment
On 11/19/2022 at 6:26 PM, LaurenA said:

 I think what I am feeling is a question of commitment.  I have been hiding so long I wonder at this point in my life I should keep hiding or continue down the path.

 

I went back and forth for decades as well, veering from indulging my gender dysphoria in secret to fighting it to fully accepting myself and coming out.

 

I think what I found most disconcerting in later years was that it starting ebbing and flowing on its own, essentially taking the decision out of my hands. I could be in a position of having made the clear-headed decision to live the rest of my life as female, only to find that I suddenly didn't want to. The upside was that I also found myself free of the sense of urgency that drives so many of us. Thankful for that, I've put the issue on the back burner. My wife's support and the clothes are still there if the pendulum swings back, but for now I expect to live the rest of my life accepting who and what I am but without the need to demonstrate it to others.

 

With luck, I will turn 82 in July. Sadly, the possibility of the same thing happening to you later can make your decision now even more complicated. But all we can do is follow our hearts. I think that a lot depends upon how strong the urge is and how much it impacts your life and your sanity. I was fortunate, in that I could control mine without too much difficulty. But I'm stoic by nature.

Link to comment

@Colleen Henderson  I understand.  I think that's part of what's happening to me.  I recently took an important step and came out to a group I'm part of.  I've been on HRT for about 2 years now so I think I've set myself up to never go back.  Plans are for an orchiectomy sometime this spring.  I'm talking to the surgeon in two weeks.  Even so I have few, if any, plans to be in public completely dressed as a woman, for many reasons.

Link to comment
8 minutes ago, LaurenA said:

I've been on HRT for about 2 years now so I think I've set myself up to never go back.  

That's not necessarily a deal-breaker. I was on medically-monitored HRT for at least ten years before stopping estrogen when I had a life-threatening blood clot issue in 2015. I still take an anti-androgen every day. My chest development is greater than that of most older males but not so much so that I can't minimize it when necessary.

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 177 Guests (See full list)

    • Birdie
    • SamC
    • Ivy
    • MaryEllen
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.6k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,033
    • Most Online
      8,356

    ArtavikenGenderflui
    Newest Member
    ArtavikenGenderflui
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Adele Svetova
      Adele Svetova
      (25 years old)
    2. BROOKSGLASS
      BROOKSGLASS
      (34 years old)
    3. FinnyFinsterHH
      FinnyFinsterHH
      (16 years old)
    4. fool4luv
      fool4luv
      (26 years old)
    5. itsaddison
      itsaddison
      (20 years old)
  • Posts

    • atlantis63
      I wanted to create a thread about this   Eurodance act from sweden. very good. love his stuff   worth a listen if you never have
    • Mmindy
      Good afternoon,    I have a young friend who is vegetarian and married to a full on meat eater. They have two areas of their grill clearly designated for their different cooking requirements. When she’s cooking she uses tongs or chopsticks to handle any meats. When he’s cooking he respects her request not to cook her meals on the side where meat has been. They get along fine and respect each other.    When she attends our house, she usually brings her own food, but knows I will clean my grill to meet her requirements. We love and respect her commitment to be vegetarian. I love that she trusts me to make her comfortable when visiting us. There are ways to make it work.    Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • atlantis63
      I was going to call it Numbness, then I realised well.. it isn't. basically, yeah, it isn't.   this only happens to me sometimes. I'll be lying down and my legs will.. well, I guess lock?   If I straighten them out, they will unlock- when I roll over again, they will lock again. this lasts for around 10/ 15 minutes I guess   it's not pins and needles either
    • Ivy
      In this case the MAGA GOP transphobes Just my opinion of course
    • atlantis63
      so, a close friend wants to cook for me   the issue is, she is a vegitarian and won't handle meat- I, on the other hand, won't handle vegetables- hate the things   every time she goes out to the shop, she comes back with something.. a cake, a fruit smoothie, a coffee, I won't eat any of it. please help me think of something that she could make for me that I'll actually eat   disclaimer: you are talking to the most pickiest eater in the world. good luck
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I think there is some truth in this.  They intend to implement Project 2025, whether or not he spends his energies persecuting the Democrats who have been persecuting him (in his view, a debatable point) and does nothing else.   I have seen numerous accusations that the document is about "Trumpism", whatever that is, and is merely a vehicle for him to become dictator.  From what I have read so far, that is the same sort of truth as the Steele Dossier, denying the validity of a certain laptop, Schiff's non-existence evidence of collaboration and a host of other things, many directly from Biden, that are simply not true.   I will continue reading it. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Who, precisely, are "they"?
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Wife of mine pointed out that not getting a haircut for a month looks hideous - weird bald patches.  So back to super- short buzz cut.  This morning I braced, looking in the mirror.  I look like a woman trying to pass as a a guy, maybe  a small-breasted woman with enough T treatment to grow a mustache.    I would not believe me if I read what I write about me.  This is nuts.   White t-shirt: that they sell in the back of WM so you can tie-dye them or otherwise decorate them. They are thick and long lasting and slightly fitted, so that they could be a man's.  I like them.   Jeans, flip flops.   I will no longer point out these are women's.  What else would I wear?
    • KymmieL
      That is all that is necessary. I did the same thing. I must have gotten something wrong.      
    • Birdie
      Quite right mate! I have been letting my hair grow out again (I cut it all off when I was 18).    I'll never look this good:    But I'll aspire to look my best! ☺️
    • Ashley0616
      sympathy: an affinity, association, or relationship between persons or things wherein whatever affects one similarly affects the other : mutual or parallel susceptibility or a condition brought about by it : unity or harmony in action or effect every part is in complete sympathy with the scheme as a whole —Edwin Benson : inclination to think or feel alike : emotional or intellectual accord in sympathy with their goals : feeling of loyalty : tendency to favor or support republican sympathies : the act or capacity of entering into or sharing the feelings or interests of another : the feeling or mental state brought about by such sensitivity have sympathy for the poor : the correlation existing between bodies capable of communicating their vibrational energy to one another through some medium
    • Ashley0616
    • Lorelei
      I got my voting registration card the other day. So I can definitely vote in the general election this fall. 
    • Timi
    • Ashley0616
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...