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!

UK male new here


LucyF

Recommended Posts

  • Forum Moderator
11 hours ago, PompeyMale said:

So my gf has now walked out. She clearly was 100% against it, but not honest with me. I am devastated, but having been through heartbreak before I know its a process to go through.

@PompeyMale Sorry for the late reply. I’ve just read through this entire thread this evening. It’s heartbreaking but at the same time not an uncommon experience for so many in our community. Initial reactions to one’s ‘coming out’ experience does often change over the course of weeks, months and even years. Your gf may have been honest and sincere with her initial feelings about this. In her mind, she expressed her care and truly wants you to be happy. IMHO, those were real emotions she felt at that time. Of course, there’s little doubt that your gf did some serious thinking about what it all means in the following days after your disclosure.

 

This happened to me with my three daughters. Their initial reactions undoubtedly changed in short order after I came out about being transgender. The first daughter I told went from ‘completely affirming’ to ‘somewhat accepting with conditions’. My next daughter went from ‘overwhelmingly affirming’ to ‘furious and permanently estranged’ with my disclosure in less than a month. And finally, my last daughter went from ‘somewhat accepting’ to ‘completely affirming’ within a week. There are so many direct and indirect variables that went into each of these changing levels of acceptance. There’s a chance at reconnecting after some time has passed and after her initial fears and concerns have subsided. Don’t give up on her yet if this person is someone you would like in your life. You may not get the relationship you once pictured you’d have but it may still be worth pursuing.

 

12 hours ago, PompeyMale said:

I also may have to cancel the counselling too as it's private and too expensive for me.

I can understand this but hope you continue to reach out to someone whether it be a support group or ally of the community. You have a lot going on right now and having a few close friends can make this difficult time easier to get through. I wish you the best moving forward.

 

*Hugs*

Susan R🌷

 

Link to comment
  • Replies 118
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • LucyF

    42

  • April Marie

    10

  • Ivy

    10

  • DeeDee

    7

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

21 minutes ago, Susan R said:

@PompeyMale Sorry for the late reply. I’ve just read through this entire thread this evening. It’s heartbreaking but at the same time not an uncommon experience for so many in our community. Initial reactions to one’s ‘coming out’ experience does often change over the course of weeks, months and even years. Your gf may have been honest and sincere with her initial feelings about this. In her mind, she expressed her care and truly wants you to be happy. IMHO, those were real emotions she felt at that time. Of course, there’s little doubt that your gf did some serious thinking about what it all means in the following days after your disclosure.

 

This happened to me with my three daughters. Their initial reactions undoubtedly changed in short order after I came out about being transgender. The first daughter I told went from ‘completely affirming’ to ‘somewhat accepting with conditions’. My next daughter went from ‘overwhelmingly affirming’ to ‘furious and permanently estranged’ with my disclosure in less than a month. And finally, my last daughter went from ‘somewhat accepting’ to ‘completely affirming’ within a week. There are so many direct and indirect variables that went into each of these changing levels of acceptance. There’s a chance at reconnecting after some time has passed and after her initial fears and concerns have subsided. Don’t give up on her yet if this person is someone you would like in your life. You may not get the relationship you once pictured you’d have but it may still be worth pursuing.

 

I can understand this but hope you continue to reach out to someone whether it be a support group or ally of the community. You have a lot going on right now and having a few close friends can make this difficult time easier to get through. I wish you the best moving forward.

 

*Hugs*

Susan R🌷

 

 

 

Thank you. I confided in a close friend last night who is helping me. I told my parents that I was "questioning who I am" (and no more detail), so I do have some support. Having been through divorce before (and been in counselling previously), these feelings are not new to me and I know what to expect. I also think I have put up walls after my divorce so this does hurt a lot less (which is a good and bad thing).

 

I think my (ex?) gf assumes that if you are questioning your gender and you enjoy crossdressing, that makes you gay. I also have shattered an illusion of myself to her, but if she is not willing to work on things, then I can't make her. I can only control myself and how I feel about things. 

 

Thing to me is that this just confuses my questioning feelings even more. Am I leaning towards just cross dressing, simply to appease other people? Am I wanting to say I am trans just as I don't like myself now? Have I started these feelings as I am scared of proper comittment and we were talking about marriage? Am I actually trans but to scared to admit it? I know the counsellor will help with these feelings and my next session is thursday (3 days time), so we will see how that goes.

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Susan R said:

Your gf may have been honest and sincere with her initial feelings about this. In her mind, she expressed her care and truly wants you to be happy. IMHO, those were real emotions she felt at that time.

 

I wanted to say exactly this.

Link to comment

I don't really want to tell my friends about why we broke up, but given what has happend, what do I tell them as to why we split up? 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, PompeyMale said:

I don't really want to tell my friends about why we broke up, but given what has happend, what do I tell them as to why we split up? 

Different goals or goals have changed. New personal interest. Fell out of love. 

Link to comment

Lack of communication, began to fight a lot, sexual needs not being met, or just plain needs aren't met, verbal abuse. If you need more I'm sure I can think of more. I have heard a lot. They would literally find any reason break with me if they weren't using me.

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

So an update from me.

 

I was out with a friend last Friday. I told him the basics, but didn't mention my questioning. He was supportive. Throughout the night, he once said "if you are gay, I will support you fully". I said I am in no way gay (which is true), but it just confirmed to me that he is indeed a great friend that I can confide in.

 

So we went home (he was staying over at mine), and I told him everything. He said that when were at their house at new year, my ex confided in his wife that she felt taken for granted. He thinks that this questioning (and me being honest) wasn't the issue, but it made her look at the relationship and decided enough is enough and she didn't want to be in a relationship where she was taken for granted anymore. This to me, makes complete sense. However, this is the first I heard about it at all. OK, so I am guilty of taken her for granted, which ties in with me being divorced, I was afraid to get too close in fear of being hurt again, but the fact that the first I hear about it is months down the line from a third party and the fact that she could talk to a third party about her issues, but not me, just shows that we simply could not communicate clearly together. That coupled with the fact that now she has completely cut me off and is trying to move on (from 100% supporting me a couple of weeks ago), goes to show me that I dodged a bullet. She cuts off everyone in her life as soon as things get hard and its one of the fears I had and why I was reluctant to get married. She has little friends and is only close with her mum.

 

So now I am embracing my true self. I have learnt from therapy that I don't have gender dysphoria, but I enjoy cross dressing. I have no desire to change genders, but know a hell of a lot more about the subject and myself. I doubt I will go out in public dressed, for now, its a private thing at home. Hopefully I will find someone that can communicated better with me in the future and find someone that will accept this side of me.

 

So I have good days and bad days, I am trying to keep myself busy and I worry about my kids a lot as she was their in effect step mum for 4.5 years. I worry about being alone forever and I worry about the lack of kinkiness (sex) in my life. But I am taking each day as it comes.

Link to comment
  • 2 months later...

OK. So update from me.

 

I think the lack of wanting to transition stems from fear of being alone and blaming this on the breakup of my last relationship. To me it is clearly more than just crossdressing for fun. I enjoy presenting as a female, it feels comfortable and it just feels more me. I certainly can't supress the desire to present as a female in public and eventually full time. The fear for me is the social transition and the impact on my kids, my family, friends and my job.

 

So I have now put on an online form to my GP to get a referral to at GIC. Baby steps, but a HUGE one for me. 

 

If I don't who embrace who I am at 44, I never will. 

 

Onwards and upwards.

Link to comment
47 minutes ago, LillyF said:

So I have now put on an online form to my GP to get a referral to at GIC. Baby steps, but a HUGE one for me. 

Just doing this is a big thing.

I remember how hard it was for me to make the call for my first appointment.

Link to comment
1 hour ago, LillyF said:

The fear for me is the social transition and the impact on my kids, my family, friends and my job.

Showing any part of us that falls outside of the cis/het "norm" creates such hard mental math about our lives. I am the same age bracket as you and these are very real thoughts for me, too. "If I am, how do I...?" Right?

 

Doing the work, understanding ourselves, is so hard but I am happy for you that you're forging ahead. Gender care in the British system, I've learned, is no easy path. Hang in there and keep us posted!

Link to comment

Thank you all! 

 

It is so nice embracing who I am. I have a GP appointment for 23rd November, then referral to the GIC. In the mean time I will dress as "me" as much as I can and explore more whenever I can. 

 

I do think the initial reaction of I am just a crossdresser and don't have dysphoria after I split from my ex was just a reaction to that. I didn't want to be alone and wanted to please other people, rather than be me. I am so glad for writing my thoughts on here as it really gives me perspective.

 

At the moment, I am about 80% sure I want to transition fully eventually and I am fully aware that the journey will be hard, but worth it.

 

Any tips welcome, including dealing with doubts when they arise.

Link to comment

Update from me.

 

So I have booked a MtF makeover for sunday. Hopefully that will give me the confidence to dress as I am in public.

 

Last night I also came out to my closest friends. They were more than supportive and one is coming round tomorrow. The exact words were "It really doesn't matter what gender our friends are, as long as they're happy".

 

I am more sure than ever that I want to transition, it is simply a matter of time. 

 

Time to update my gender on this profile I think...

Link to comment
45 minutes ago, LillyF said:

I have booked a MtF makeover for sunday.

Sounds like fun. I hope you have an affirming experience!

Link to comment

@LillyF  So glad you had a good experience with your friends, they made the world of difference for me. I realised that I could just be myself and it only deepened every relationship I have.

With the exception of my ex who found out recently,because I was worried about it being weaponised against me but is more mad that I told the kids over a year ago and she can't control that.

Congratulations on putting your name down for the GIC, it took me so long to pluck up the courage to make that phone call!

 

Hope the makeover goes well, just remember that you don't need to look like a glamour model to go to the supermarket - women come in all shapes and sizes. If your friends are happy to help go to Starbucks for your first time out - they have acceptance as a corporate policy and you get to be in public without interacting too much but still have someone use the right name and pronouns to try them on. x

Link to comment
1 minute ago, DeeDee said:

@LillyF  So glad you had a good experience with your friends, they made the world of difference for me. I realised that I could just be myself and it only deepened every relationship I have.

With the exception of my ex who found out recently,because I was worried about it being weaponised against me but is more mad that I told the kids over a year ago and she can't control that.

Congratulations on putting your name down for the GIC, it took me so long to pluck up the courage to make that phone call!

 

Hope the makeover goes well, just remember that you don't need to look like a glamour model to go to the supermarket - women come in all shapes and sizes. If your friends are happy to help go to Starbucks for your first time out - they have acceptance as a corporate policy and you get to be in public without interacting too much but still have someone use the right name and pronouns to try them on. x

 

Thank you. That was the hope that if I can have friends in my corner, they can help me go out as me more. Hoping the makeover will give me more confidence as well. I have kids, 8 and 11 and I worry about telling my ex in case she stops me seeing them. But I can cross that bridge later.

 

My thinking with the GIC is that the current wait list is 5 years, so the sooner the better. I am also looking into electrolysis.

 

I am still choosing a name though, thats the tough one.

 

L x

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
On 11/15/2023 at 12:30 AM, LillyF said:

am more sure than ever that I want to transition

I agree with DeeDee. You look spectacular! It looks to me like you’re just about done with transition based on your pics. Nicely done!  :)

 

Susan R🌷

Link to comment
1 hour ago, H_G said:

Wow!  Where did you go for the makeover?

It was a place near Southampton called sugar dressing?

Link to comment
2 hours ago, Susan R said:

I agree with DeeDee. You look spectacular! It looks to me like you’re just about done with transition based on your pics. Nicely done!  :)

 

Susan R🌷

 

I have yet to start! No tablets, no electrolysis, no surgery, nothing.

Link to comment

Lilly! You look amazing! 🙂

 

I hope all goes well with your appointment tomorrow. It may be helpful to read this page [link], which has some general advice about approaching your GP.

Link to comment

So I have just got off the phone from the GP and they have referred me to the GIC.

 

She also stated that they would be more than happy to support me with shared care if i wanted to go private for HRT.

 

So releived.

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, 74 Guests (See full list)

    • Desert Fox
    • VickySGV
    • Betty K
    • Birdie
    • Carolyn Marie
    • JessicaMW
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,107
    • Most Online
      8,356

    SimplyMadeloeine
    Newest Member
    SimplyMadeloeine
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. austin_4
      austin_4
      (17 years old)
    2. Britany_Relia
      Britany_Relia
      (39 years old)
    3. Emily S
      Emily S
      (67 years old)
    4. Hoof Arted
      Hoof Arted
      (22 years old)
    5. n3eeko
      n3eeko
  • Posts

    • Desert Fox
      I started estrogen (oral) a little before age 50 and not the maximum dose either and also no blockers. It almost immediately accentuated the feminine features I already had, and expanded my already soft areas of skin, widened my hips and distributed more fat to my thighs and increased my breast size. There seem to be some subtle changes to my face too though I doubt I am any more passable than I was a decade ago, it’s just nice to not use breast forms anymore. I haven’t switched to injections as planned and there really hasn’t been much change after the first 6 months and my body fights back; my E levels dropped and T increased even on the same dose so it has not really done much for me. It sounds like injections are the far better way to go, plus progesterone after a while if the doctor will prescribe that.    As is often said, everyone is unique and one’s mileage may vary, and what works for one person may not for another. 
    • Desert Fox
      This is so sad. The violence in general in Washington State seems to have ramped up a lot, and gender-based violence and hate crimes seem to be worse as well. My parents once lived in Renton but I don’t care for that city and never go there. I don’t think it really matters though as crimes like this can happen anywhere and often are perpetrated by a male who was in a prior relationship with the victim.
    • Desert Fox
      I’ve never been in therapy specifically labeled as such, butI think IFS therapy evolved from treatment of dissociative identity disorder in which one’s various alters or parts are treated as an internal family, and each part is like a separate individual who can be spoken to individually or have dialogue with other parts. In a person with full DID, doing that supposedly helps to break down the dissociative barriers that cause that person to not be able to remember what they did for parts of a day or longer. This was the case with me.   Anyone’s mind, though, can be thought of as being compartmentalized to some extent and we all can have an inner child and various aspects of our selves, yet the dissociation is never to a degree that it causes problems like with DID. But the same aspects of working with an internal family or different aspects of self, like the inner child, the rebellious teen, the persecutor parental type, etc, can help heal trauma nonetheless. I think many of us do have sides of us that we don’t like, or others don’t like, and it can be useful to examine how they came about and what purpose they serve as they are often a means of self-protection or coping with anxiety. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      We had soup and steamed rice for dinner tonight.  Simple, basic, feed-a-ton-of-people kind of food.  With strawberries for dessert!  We have a huge strawberry patch, so I spent a couple of hours this afternoon picking.  And there's some left over, which I put in the downstairs kitchenette.  Time for a late night snack!     Outside of meals, I mostly live by nibbling on fruit and a few green things. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, it is officially summer.  85 degrees outside the last two days, and GF is sick and irritable.  I have to curl up under heavy blankets in my nest, because she's got the AC turned down to the point I expect to see icicles growing on the ceiling.  This is what life is like when your partner is an arctic creature. I should be used to it by now, but just when I think its nice and warm, she has to freeze me.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I just can't resist.  Does all that mean that.............the bird is the word? 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, that might be interesting.  At least since she's 24, its not like you're on the hook for expenses. 
    • Lydia_R
      Been using the wok on the back deck a lot the last few months.  Just got another stock of udon noodles from Amazon and we are using those in the stir fry with onions, peppers and a spicy peanut sauce.  I did this often in the 90's too, but back then I was just using a standard Coleman camp stove instead of this high BTU wok burner.  I've had the burner for a couple years, but haven't been using it regularly until recently.    
    • Lydia_R
      Lovely!
    • Justine76
      I’m a lefty. Learned to be a bit ambidextrous for certain tools that assume right handedness like scissors, but couldn’t write with my right hand to save my life. 
    • Lydia_R
      Tangent, adjacent, opposite...  It's still rock n' roll to me.  I don't know about the "in god we trust" part of the money, but I like the lady with the scale.  And then I look left at the Indian statue on my mantel of Guanyin feeding a drop of liquid to the dragon at her feet.  In god we trust?  The lady with the scale?  Maybe this is too binary.  And then on the other side of Guanyin is that kind of pelican wood bird that sits two feet tall that I hauled back from South America through the Panama canal.  The beak broke in 1998 and I carefully saved the pieces (as I usually do) and attached them back about a decade ago.  I used a drill to make a small hole and then put a finish nail in there.  Then a hole on those two pieces that needed to be attached.  Upper and Lower beak.  There is still a seam showing.  I could cover that up, but the beak is a bright yellow and well, it's better with all the pieces in place and I don't mind seeing the crack.  I guess that is the tangent and the other two are the opposite and adjacent. -money  Why don't coders always code the "-" action in their search fields?  It's not that difficult!
    • Ashley0616
      A maxi dress with blue and white and some Berkenstock style flip flops.
    • MirandaB
      @April Marie Yes, it's something to shop for at least for 6-8 weeks. 
    • VickySGV
      Definitely points to learn and keep in mind.  A bunch of stuff I had put in mental "cold storage" thawed out a bit there and ready again to run through my mill.  As said, a bit long and as usual from her a tad bit challenging.  Overall I see it and can use it as a working hypothesis.  
    • kristinabee
      right handed  
  • 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...