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!

I Dream As A Girl


Guest Emily Violet

Recommended Posts

Guest Emily Violet

ever since i was little in all my dreams i wasnt a boy but a girl i even have dreams where i become a girl those where my favorite but any way i was wondering if anyone else has similar dreams to mine

Link to comment
Guest ~Kelly~

In my dreams, I am rarely self aware of my own condition. In other words, the issue of whether I am a boy or a girl is never really an issue.....I am simply me (with me being a girl, so I guess I AM a girl in my dreams, but that really hasn't been a central theme to the dream itself so I have never really made the connection) However, recently I have been having dreams that are quite different. In these dreams, I am someone completely different. I have just finished reading the Twilight saga and practically every night of the 3 weeks it took to read, my dreams involved me being Bella (the female lead in the books) Even having finished them a week ago, I still have the dreams. I am not sure what my subconscious is trying to tell me with this one.....whether I really relate to her that much or whether I am jealous of her relationship with Edward or maybe it is just so much time devoted to the character development in my own head of who I envision her to be and the fact that it is a first person narration, that I actually based her character on myself, and therefore by dreaming that I am her, I am really dreaming for myself to be put in the fictional situation she was in the book. hmmmmmmm....I tend to over-analyze things LOL And dreams can be one of those things that just allows all the over-analysis that is possible. I know this doesn't necessarily answer your question....in fact it probably just confused you....I know I personally am now more confused than when I first read the original post.....and for that I am sorry :P

Link to comment
Guest Isobelle Fox

I've had a few of those. Not as often as I'd like, but it happens once in a while. In fact, the best, most amazing dream I ever had was such a dream.

I actually had one last week, but it was brief. Its silly to admit, I suppose, but in that one I was Willow from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. ::laughs:: Not terribly surprising as I always admired her character, I guess.

Link to comment
Guest ashley4623

99% of my dreams I'm just "there" it's like I'm unaware of my body... almost there in spirit form.

The few times I have been aware of my body... it has been female :)

Really great dreams, haha.

So to answer your question... yes I've had dreams like that :)

Link to comment

I have had so many dreams where I became a girl, they started when I was about 6 years old and still continue.

I'm going to bed right now, I've already told the other moderators that I am going to try sleeping tonight and I'm pretty sure I'll have anothe rof those dreams.

Love ya and Good Night,

Sally

Link to comment
Guest 1Char

Had one dream where I was Columbia from the rocky horror picture show! Lmao!!

Otherwise my dreams don't seem to really have a relavent gender

Link to comment

In my dreams I'm pretty much always looking through my eyes, so I'm not really sure if I'm male or female in them. However, I can't remember a dream where there wasn't a girl in it, although it isn't always the same one, and not always "human" either. There are sometimes other people there as well, although in the dreams I can remember after waking up it is rarer for there to be others. Some dreams I'd spend just watching her, sort of like I was watching a TV show (floating/weird angles and it being like I wasn't there), others we would interact in some way, and sometimes we wouldn't interact at all. The "TV dreams" I never seem to be self aware enough to do more than follow along, but occassionally in other types I will, which often end up being rather weird dreams and I've only been able to see my arms and legs.

Link to comment

In my dreams, I am usually female though, like Kelly said, that's not really the main focus of my dreams so it's not what I'm thinking about. But yeah I'm female 99.99% of the time in my dreams... When I was little I used to have dreams of being a boy but becoming a girl at embarrassing times XD - like in the middle of a room full of other kids, or with my parents around, etc.

Link to comment
Guest Emily Violet

there not my main focus either ive just noticed that when i don dream im usually female. ive had tons of weird dreams though haha

Link to comment
Guest Neil!

All my dreams were in a first-person POV for the LONGEST time. Then, a little while after I started transition, I started dreaming in third-person, as a guy. Only occasionally though - sometimes I still dream in first-person but when I don't, I'm definitely male.

...Although, after I got my first "real" haircut, I kept having these nightmares where I'd pass by a mirror and notice that it had grown back and I looked the way I had pre-transition. I always panicked and spent the rest of the dream trying to cut it short again. Yeah, that was traumatizing. :l

Link to comment
Guest Christy.dancer

I very rarely see myself in my dreams, but ever since I came to grips with my gender issues, I see myself as female.

Right after my diagnosis, when I had some really new, warm, fuzzy feelings about the idea of my transition, I saw myself in a very vivid dream. I was standing on the sidewalk looking across the street at a bus stop, and I could see myself waiting for a bus. (It's a sidewalk I jog down every day, and it's a bus I'm very familiar with). Anyway, I saw myself as a girl in the dream. I wasn't particularly sexy, just wearing a pair of capri tights and a hoodie (my normal kinda dress) but I could tell I had breasts, and was wearing my hair longer and had very light makeup (and for the oddest reasons, blond hair!) and I was supremely contented.

Link to comment
Guest Ripley82

Almost all of the dreams that I can remember I have been a girl in. But it is depressing when you have a wonderful dream like that then wake up and "POOF" its all gone. It dose give somthing to daydream about though. :P

Link to comment
Guest Sandra

The other night I dreamt I was a girl and accidentally walked into the men's washroom, got embarrassed and then went to the women's. There were some other things that happened which I can't recall at the moment, but I always wake up very pleased whenever I've been my female self in my dreams. I wish I could make it a reality by transitioning, but can't start right now due to complications in my life. Hopefully I'll get the chance later this year.

Link to comment
Guest Casey7890

Most of the time in my dreams I either don't have a body, or my body is completely sexless. Very rarely am I a girl or a boy in my dreams.

Link to comment

in my dreams at an earlier age i had the ability it change from my current wex to a male and back again when i would like

then around 14ish it was just male

and now im either the male i really am or i actually dream im trans

Link to comment
Guest AllisonD
In my dreams, I am rarely self aware of my own condition. In other words, the issue of whether I am a boy or a girl is never really an issue.....I am simply me (with me being a girl, so I guess I AM a girl in my dreams, but that really hasn't been a central theme to the dream itself so I have never really made the connection) However, recently I have been having dreams that are quite different. In these dreams, I am someone completely different. I have just finished reading the Twilight saga and practically every night of the 3 weeks it took to read, my dreams involved me being Bella (the female lead in the books) Even having finished them a week ago, I still have the dreams. I am not sure what my subconscious is trying to tell me with this one.....whether I really relate to her that much or whether I am jealous of her relationship with Edward or maybe it is just so much time devoted to the character development in my own head of who I envision her to be and the fact that it is a first person narration, that I actually based her character on myself, and therefore by dreaming that I am her, I am really dreaming for myself to be put in the fictional situation she was in the book. hmmmmmmm....I tend to over-analyze things LOL And dreams can be one of those things that just allows all the over-analysis that is possible. I know this doesn't necessarily answer your question....in fact it probably just confused you....I know I personally am now more confused than when I first read the original post.....and for that I am sorry :P

You too?! I read the 4 book series cover to cover 4 times. It is a great fantasy with so many opportunities to let your imagination take off. Even better than Harry Potter for that. I have a great imagination given a seed idea like Twilight. I rewrite whole sections in my head while I am driving to work and when I am swimming laps. Like what if Bella had Hermione's wand, hmmmm? What if she could take James on her own? That would make an interesting story too. Instead of letting the Italians leave, she might have kept any from escaping!

But no, I don't dream about my gender. If I am in a dream, I am in the dream but my gender hasn't actually come up. Perhaps I have pretty boring, androgynous dreams. When I can remember them, which is infrequently. 'Course I am speaking as an adult now. Decades ago I had the same dreams that so many of us as children had about a machine that could change my sex or some other really cool painless transition.

Allison

Link to comment
Guest ~Brenda~

Dearest Emily,

The strongest memories of my childhood are remembering that when I dreamt, I was a girl in my dreams. I remember too the hollow feeling when I woke up only to discover that I was in fact a boy. That vacant feeling of discovery after I awoke as a child is very vivid to me to this day and haunts me. Gender identity has always been an issue for me. All throughout my life, I have had good stable years and not so good, unstable years. I am finally working on settling my gender identity once and for all. Dearest, I wish I started to ask real questions like this when I was your age.

HUGS

Brenda

Link to comment
Guest My_Genesis
In my dreams, I am rarely self aware of my own condition. In other words, the issue of whether I am a boy or a girl is never really an issue.....I am simply me (with me being a girl, so I guess I AM a girl in my dreams, but that really hasn't been a central theme to the dream itself so I have never really made the connection)

yeah same here. the only time there was ever an issue of gender in my dreams was this one weird dream i had, where this girl in schol i had a crush on was taking people's pulses, and i was in a line that was all guys. i ended up chickening out at the last minute cuz i was worried she'd be suspicious if i had a really high heart rate. lol, it was a funny dream considering we are both bio majors and i think this happened around the time we were learning about the circulatory system

even in that dream i wasn't really self-aware of whether i was physcially male or female but considering the surrounding circumstances i assumed i was supposed to be a guy in that dream. :rolleyes:

oh, there was another dream i had about a year or two ago where i grew a mustache, i think in that one i was anatomically female cuz i remember the mustache just popping up out of nowhere and i didn't really know how it happened but was just really psyched abut it.

:D

Link to comment
Guest Kailey

Sadly my sleep has been almost entirely dreamless for over a year. I recall maybe two dreams at most, with one being the night my parents got divorced... though my dad has never been in, nor ever will be in, the military, it was the most dreadful dream where I saw some terrorist bat him with a gun barrel to death. Of course he's still alive and well now though... but I actually felt the pain of actually losing a parent. I woke up crying only to have my memory come back to me. Don't know where that one came from because I would never in a million years think like that...

I had a one a while ago, though (another very random one) in which Marci Bowers agreed to perform SRS on me before I was even out or hormones or anything :huh: But what was so neat was I remember touching myself, and I was ME... I still don't understand how I could know what that felt like though... because of course I'm in a male body right now. :huh:

~Kailey

Link to comment
Guest LightNebula
Sadly my sleep has been almost entirely dreamless for over a year. I recall maybe two dreams at most, with one being the night my parents got divorced... though my dad has never been in, nor ever will be in, the military, it was the most dreadful dream where I saw some terrorist bat him with a gun barrel to death. Of course he's still alive and well now though... but I actually felt the pain of actually losing a parent. I woke up crying only to have my memory come back to me. Don't know where that one came from because I would never in a million years think like that...

I had a one a while ago, though (another very random one) in which Marci Bowers agreed to perform SRS on me before I was even out or hormones or anything :huh: But what was so neat was I remember touching myself, and I was ME... I still don't understand how I could know what that felt like though... because of course I'm in a male body right now. :huh:

~Kailey

The first one sounds very sad. :( I have dreams like that all the time, heh. The second one seems very, very nice. I'm glad you had one like that. I'd like to have one like that sometime, too.

Link to comment
Guest My_Genesis
I'd like to have one like that sometime, too.

lol, my sister is 13, she told me the other day shes had two dreams where she was...anatomically male...and she said "it was really disturbing." and i was thinking, "then why dont you give them to me?" cuz i never have those types of dreams... <_<

Link to comment
Guest LightNebula
lol, my sister is 13, she told me the other day shes had two dreams where she was...anatomically male...and she said "it was really disturbing." and i was thinking, "then why dont you give them to me?" cuz i never have those types of dreams... <_<

=\

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   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 102 Guests (See full list)

    • tracy_j
    • Ladypcnj
    • Breanne_O
    • Pip
    • AllieJ
    • Betty K
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,043
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Mealaini
    Newest Member
    Mealaini
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. AlanaTG
      AlanaTG
    2. Alicia
      Alicia
      (35 years old)
    3. brianna051
      brianna051
      (39 years old)
    4. canofworms
      canofworms
    5. delmori
      delmori
  • Posts

    • KayC
      Braised short-ribs with all the fixin's (potatoes, onions, garlic, and celery) and homemade brown gravy - Leftovers from 2-nights ago, but even better 2nd time around (I wonder why that is?)
    • KayC
      I saw this on Erin's blog post too.  I definitely think this a BIG positive, but you're right @Carolyn Marie.  Now-a-days you never know how the World will get turned upside-down.
    • KayC
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I have never been in the military, but my husband was in the National Guard.  Sometimes I wonder, based on the few things he tells me, how some of the "demands of military service" might be somewhat artificial.  For example, the military won't allow a man who is missing a testicle (like from an accident) to serve.  Even though a man with only one testicle still has all functions and plenty of testosterone.  So, why that requirement?  Seems like banning trans folks is similar, in that there's no particular physical reason.    Also, some requirements are detrimental to the physical health of many people in the services.  Soldiers end up with back issues from carrying too much.  My husband has a bad disc in his back, primarily from service.  Even military medical personnel and researchers have talked about this sort of preventable injury for a long time.    Not everybody is in the special forces, or even in the infantry.  Even if trans folks have some sort of physical weakness compared to others, surely there are still plenty of duties they can perform?  I would be interested to know the experiences of some of our military members on this forum - how much physical exertion and risk was actually necessary for fulfilling your duties?  How much difference is there in exertion/risk between one MOS and another?
    • Sally Stone
      Post 9 “The Jersey Years”   If it wasn’t for the property taxes, I’d still be living in New Jersey.  The state gets such a bad rap but it is actually a beautiful place, with lots to do, and it is extremely trans friendly.  Moving to New Jersey was quite uplifting from a trans perspective.    Because of my new and very flexible work schedule, I was suddenly getting a lot more time to express my feminine side, and I took every opportunity to do so.  Additionally, I became a member of a trans dinner group.  It was the perfect way to meet other trans women, and I made quite a few friends.   The dinner group was actually a throwback from a time when going out dressed as a woman was still something of a novelty, and it was created as a safe haven for girls that still weren’t comfortable being out in the world by themselves.  When the group was formed, it was a necessary resource, but that need waned over the years, and it morphed into more of a social group.  It still occasionally served its designed purpose as we often had newcomers just emerging from the closet, but for most of us it was an opportunity to get together and catch up.   The move to New Jersey also coincided with an important trans milestone for me.  I made the decision to keep my legs shaved.  This wasn’t a decision I came to easily.  It meant I was going against my wife’s wishes.  While she had always been supportive of me, shaving my legs was just a “bridge to far” for her.  I honestly believe, that in her mind, dressing like a woman was always a temporary thing, but shaving my legs, well, that was more of a permanent condition, and I think it scared her.    To me, shaving was a rite of passage.  I had made the decision to be a woman part time, but I wanted something exclusively feminine to signify my inner woman, even when I wasn’t presenting as a woman.  Finally, I decided not to wait any longer, and in deference to my wife’s concerns, I started shaving my legs regularly.  For the longest time, she remained unhappy about my decision, and while there were times, I thought about giving in just to keep the peace, I stayed the course I had plotted.  Over time, my smooth legs became less and less of an issue, and now it’s been ten-years since I last had hair on my legs.  Thankfully, my smooth legs are no longer much of a concern for my wife, and now, I can’t imagine ever going back.   So, how does a part-time woman who isn’t stealthy by most measures, get along so well in the world?  In two words it’s attitude and mannerisms.  At one of the Keystone Conferences, I kept noticing another trans woman always staring at me.  At the time, I didn’t know her but the attention she was paying me was becoming borderline creepy.  Later, while I was sitting at the hotel bar enjoying a cocktail, this same woman took the empty seat next to me.  Before I could decide whether to stay or leave, she turned to me, introduced herself, and then apologized for her stares.  She went on to tell me she was staring at me because I intrigued her.  She told me that of all the people she had met or observed during the conference, I was the most “girly” (her words, not mine).  She said if it wasn’t for my height, she’d never have guessed that I was trans, because I had the poise, attitude and mannerisms of a very feminine woman.       I met another girl through the dinner group, who was living fulltime and preparing for GRS.  She and I became the best of friends, a bond I believe was formed over us both serving in the military.  Often, she would comment on how authentic I was.  She would always tell me I was so feminine and womanly; I could easily go fulltime.    There have been other acquaintances who made similar comments, and the truth is I could probably live my life as a woman without too much trouble.  The thing is, I don’t want to.  Yes, I thoroughly enjoy being a woman, and when I am, I am quite convincing, but that doesn’t mean I’d be truly happy.  If I had never met my wife, and didn’t have two super great kids, and I didn’t enjoy being a guy, perhaps I would have given serious consideration to transitioning.  Maybe I’m just selfish, but I want to walk in both worlds, male and female, and I see nothing that should prevent me from doing so. Does my part-time life make me any less a woman.  If how much of a woman I am was measured by how much time I spend expressing that part of my personality, then yes, I probably could be considered less of a woman.  But it wouldn’t change at all how much of a woman my feminine half is.  Her time for self-expression is limited yes, but when she’s out, she’s every bit the woman anyone else is.   Hugs,   Sally
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Meeting up with a therapist I seen back in 2001.Seen I am better,saw her after being honorable discharged from the Army.I was beaten up and sexually assaulted by a fellow soldier.Nothing was done about it and did report it.It put a toll on me.Was 22 at the time and we did not get along at times,bullied me too.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Army doing 4 years,I ended up be discharged after my 4 years were up.Another guy in the same unit I was in beat the crap out of me including sexual assaulting me.Nothing was done about it,reported it and it put a toll on me.Had anxiety issues which I did get help and did recover from it
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Ash! You’ll find lots of information and resources here to help with your journey. Jump in where you feel comfortable.  I look forward to learning more about you.
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Justine! We’re glad you found us. You’ll find many of us here who embraced our true selves late in life for many reasons. Each of us is unique, yet we often share much in common. Read, ask questions and jump in where you feel comfortable.
    • Mealaini
      I've perused a few introductions on here.  To say that my situation is unique would be silly, but it is my situation.  I have had questions about who I am my whole life.  At an early age, I was exposed to traumatic experiences in both the emotional and sexual realm.  I've been through many therapies, and over the last year and a half, I finally found a therapist worth her title. After using EMDR, I have been finally able to convince my brain (for the most part) that I am no longer in danger, and am no longer being abused.  With some of the worst of my experiences faced and accepted, I have been working with my therapist with Internal Family Systems.  I highly recommend the book "No Bad Parts" to get an idea of what IFS is and how it can be used to reunite the fractured internal family.  The main idea of the internal family systems theory is that trauma can fracture the Self into different parts - and each part takes on a role that tries to protect the Self.  In order to repair these parts, and to bring these wounded parts back so that they can unload their burdens (the traumatic experiences), I have had to learn who they are and how they should fit in within my Self.  It is a long and difficult  process getting to know these parts.  I have been able to work within on a few of the parts, and one of the parts that has shown herself as an important character in my whole Self has been Mealani (Gaelic for Melanie and sounds the same).  I've been familiar with this internal part since I was about 10 years old.  I am now 55 years old, and I am realizing that she had an important role in my complete Self - a role that has led me to conclude that I have been hiding from my true gender.  As of now, I identify as Gender Fluid.  My pronouns are He, They, and Them.     I have been married for 30 years.  I have two kids who are both LGBTQ+ - one is Queer and the other is Transgender.  As I have worked through this with my Therapist, I have realized that my kids have been fortunate to have a father who has been accepting of them from the start.  I am their biggest supporter and have never questioned their identity.  My wife has had a lot of trouble accepting both my kids and their identities.  She is doing better now, but it nearly tore us apart.  My wife is a devout Catholic, and I have deconstructed my faith and am now a Faithful Atheist who tries to practice Radical Awareness.  Coming out as Atheist was another thing that nearly tore us apart.  Defining myself as Gender Fluid might just be the last straw.  As both of my kids are fully grown, I am not too worried if this ends the relationship because I want my wife to have a complete life with someone who is able to be the person she expects.  BUT, I am not ready to break the news to anyone yet.  That is  why I found this site.  I am going to hang out in the chats, ask some questions, learn some things, and make some hard decisions.  I thank anyone who reads this.  There is so much more to my story, but I am not fully prepared to spill the beans here. ....I am a process, not a fixed thing, and I've come a LONG way to get here today!  :)
    • KathyLauren
      Hi, Justine.  Welcome to Trans Pulse.   Many of us can relate to your story.  Please feel free to check out the various forums and to join in on any discussions or start your own.
    • Justine76
      I'm AMAB been experimenting with a more feminine presentation for some time as an adult. At first, I'm not sure I was really conscious of it being a desire to look more feminine. I'd buy male skinny jeans and fitted tees, but that didn't feel quite right so I'd cuff the jeans into capris. Then I added an ankle bracelet, which I liked, but it kind of felt like the limit for an ostensibly cis-male in public and even drew surprise from my wife. So, I moved on to trying more things in private and, somewhat to my own surprise, feel really comfortable and sexy adding some platform heels to my capris and donning a more feminine top and wig; I'm older and don't have much hair of my own anymore ;) Make-up is still difficult but I'm practicing when I can. On the first attempt I just looked like some dude from Motley Crue, which could be fine but not what I'm going for day to day :P   Not sure exactly how I got here or where it's going. I've had to search my past a bit to speculate why this would be emerging now, in my 40s. I've always been a more effeminate individual; it just bleeds through somehow. I grew up being called '-awesome person-' or 'fairy' constantly, although there was never any question in my mind that I liked girls. In junior high I briefly experimented with applying make-up until a friend convinced me I'd get my butt kicked if anyone from school discovered it (mid 80s). Remembering these things lead me to think I perhaps just buried this aspect of myself for ages in fear. I learned to be masculine and the teasing eventually stopped.   I'm still relatively new on my journey, so I'm here to learn and figure myself out more. After lots of reading I suppose I currently identify as transfemme. Haven't come out to anyone yet. I feel like I need more experience and searching to be sure. But I'm definitely having fun along the way! Cheers everyone!             
    • Ivy
      Yeah…  As an exvangelical in my case. Guess I'll listen to that part of me this time.
    • Willow
      Day was fine at work.  The District Manager was there.  She actually likes me so everything was fine.  Since I was the lowest level person there she had to ask me the questions they ask every time they come.  Then apologized for having to ask me. (Yes I answered them correctly). After she left I learned that there was a meeting scheduled with her for May 23rd for the entire management team (4 of us). I’m not certain what that’s about.  No sense speculating it’s probably just getting ready for the summer crush.   good night 3 am comes early tomorrow.   Willow    
    • Ashterlin27
      Hey I'm Ashterlin or Ash for short and I'm from the US  I play French horn I also love reading and my favorite book right now is The Tailor's Daughter by Janice Graham my pronouns are He/Him or any Neo I prefer masc terms when being referred to  and this is my pronouns page
  • 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...