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Guest Ragnar Danneskjold

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Guest Ragnar Danneskjold

Hello everyone this is my first post here, and I thought this to be the appropriate forum to put it in. I was introduced to this site via another forum where I originally started to post about my issues here, I am happy to have multiple places to discuss this!

I am not sure where to start, this is about the seventh time I have completely erased what I was going to say, and started over. Talking about myself is not easy, and talking about myself in the context of the current discussion is extremely new to me. (This is the first time in my entire life I have ever talked to anyone about this.) I had an extremely long post written up explaining things from my childhood and recent past, but I have scraped it in favor of a much shorter one. Here are the facts:

I am a 27 years old guy, and finally revisiting feels that I have suppressed for many many years. I am confused about who I am, and how I feel about myself. As for my orientation I can probably definitely put myself squarely in to the pansexual category. That is to say I am attracted to men & women, as well as people who fall outside of traditional gender roles.

The part I am having trouble with is how I see myself in terms of my gender. We have already established I am a guy, but that isn't how I really feel. I am sorry this is the point where it is difficult for me to explain how I feel, because it's just hard for me. I guess the easiest way to put it is I identify more as a girl than a boy. I think I would feel much more like myself as a girl, I definitely like "girl" things more than "guy" things. I like girls clothes, and have always been jealous that I have to wear clothes that I find to be boring in comparison. Whenever I see my sister getting dressed up for something, I usually without fail always feel a twinge of jealousy.

My biggest obstacle in this, and I think it skews my perception of how I feel, is how I look now. I have the unfortunate luck to be a 6'2", I have broad shoulders, I am mediterranean so I am a really hairy, and I have huge feet. Basically when I look in the mirror I see the exact opposite of everything that is feminine. Again I am really struggling to explain how I feel here, but I am having difficulties doing so. There are so many emotions I am dealing with right now, that it is making it even harder then it normally is. (The past few days I have been giving a lot of thought to this, and quite frankly it has thrown me in to depression, I have had to break in to my emergency Xanax stash lest I break down in to tears, which I have almost done a few times WITH the Xanax!)

That's me in a nutshell, I really wish I could explain myself a little better, but I am just having a hard time right now, it's been tough lately for me. I know that was an awful lot of writing to not explain very much. :(

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Guest ~Brenda~

Welcome Ragnar!!

Please do come in and feel welcome here at Laura's. I do hope that the medication you are taking is prescribed and safe. Sweetie, many of the loveliest ladies here are your height!! Hair is not a problem at all!! Shaving, Veet, Nair, etc will solve that!!! Don't look at yourself today and say that this is how you can only be. Dearest, there are so many ways to look the way you want to and to realize who you are!!!

Obstacles are only percieved and all challenges can be overcome!!

Welcome sweetie,

Your journey has begun!!

HUGS

Brenda

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Guest Ragnar Danneskjold
I do hope that the medication you are taking is prescribed and safe.

Oh absolutely, with regular checkups at the doctor to make sure everything is fine. I would never take any sort of medication without some form of medical guidance!

Sweetie, many of the loveliest ladies here are your height!! Hair is not a problem at all!! Shaving, Veet, Nair, etc will solve that!!! Don't look at yourself today and say that this is how you can only be. Dearest, there are so many ways to look the way you want to and to realize who you are!!!

I think I am slowly coming to realize this.. I think that perhaps it's just hard when you try to think of everything happening at once, and not in individual steps or parts. Nothing happens all at once, or overnight after all, so I realize I shouldn't expect them to. With that said not worrying is easier said than done.

But I thank you for the warm welcome! :)

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Guest Donna Jean

Good Morning, Ragnar...

Welcome to the Playground!

Let me offer you some nice hot coco and a plate of Sally's cookies...that always makes one feel welcome...

We run a nice safe site and you are free to just be yourself...we don't judge...

Let me tell you...we have some tall ladies around here and, although I'm rather short...it just means that I'll get a much better hugg from them and that I'll have to hugg them twice to get all of them covered!.....lol

Seriously, Hon...I know that it's a concern, but, the main point is your identity...all other things are secondary...

Heck, I'm not tall, but I am 59 years old....see? We all have things to get over...

So, make yourself comfortable and be sure to post a lot...we're really happy to have you here!

With love....

Donna Jean

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Good Morning Ragnar,

I just wanted to let you know that I am a bit on the tall side as well, 6'4" and I hope that I am one of the loveliest ladies that Bernii was refering to.

I worried about my appearance a lot and I will tell you the cure for that.

Go to a large shopping mall, go to the food court and buy a large drink, then just sit and watch women walk by - all ages, shapes and sizes and you will begin to notice that real women all look different and relatively few of them actually look like the ones on TV and in magazines.

We all can fit in, it isn't really that hard.

Welcome to the family.

Love ya,

Sally

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Guest Alyssa Leigh

Hi Ragnar

Welcome to the playground everyone is so nice here, so make yourself at home and more will be by shortly to greet you.

Alyssa

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Guest Elizabeth K

Ragnar

I think your introduction said a lot, and it wasn't too long - it was about right. There is a lot of pain there - and it is so typical! We are all like that here. that is why Laura's might be perfect for you. We try to support each other.

I am 6'2' myself - and I never thought I could transition - but I am doing it.

You need to have a gender therapist review your feelings - that is the next step - psycholgist seem more appropriate than psychiatrists as they work on the mental health part rather than root causes.

So WELCOME WELCOME WELCOME

Look around and POST POST POST - give us your opinions, your experience - and most importantly, your questions.

And if you get down - come here and tell us immediately. You will have a flock of people come to your aid!

Lizzy

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  • Admin

Welcome to Laura's, Ragnar. My lovely friends have already said everything there is to say in terms

of welcoming you and reassuring you. There are so many posts in the forums that speak to the

issues you've raised, that I think you will find tremendously helpful. So please take your time,

explore the forums and the resources pages, and LEARN. Then you will be in a much better

position to make decisions and plot a course.

There are many many members from all over Europe, so finding local resources should hopefully

not be a major problem.

It's great that you found Laura's. This is a wonderful resource and you'll find many friends here with

whom to share your thoughts. We welcome your insights and opinions too, so please POST often.

Carolyn Marie

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Guest Ragnar Danneskjold

Thank you everyone for the warm welcome, I will certainly be using the resources here to their full potential. As someone has already suggested, I think I will be calling on Monday to make an appointment at the local student psych clinic in town. (It is the only thing I can afford right now, they only charge something like $10 a session.) Even though the prospect of this scares me tremendously!

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      Hi Ivy!  Thanks so much! 💗Cynthia                      
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      As a guy with a mom constantly throwing around "she/her", I feel you.   I think trans people in general hold ourselves to an impossible standard to be more girly or manly. There are some people who look or act a lot like the opposite gender, even if they're completely comfortable in their AGAB. That thought helps comfort me sometimes. If being a man was a set of boxes to check off (beyond the obvious chromosome things), I'm sure there'd be plenty of cis guys that would suddenly find themselves no longer being guys. It can be hard when it feels like evidence is stacked against you, but you don't have to be a certain way to turn into a guy. Some people will make it sound that way, but you're already a guy, regardless of how you look or act. After all, men don't look or act one way.   Moving on from that, your mom'll probably (unfortunately) be an issue until you're able to put some distance between yourself and her. Finding a good group of people that support you and your identity can help some -- even if you can't stop her from misgendering you, the more people that you find that respect you can sometimes make it easier to drown out that voice.   I wish you the best of luck <3
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Dang, this post started a loooooong time ago :o   I'm not the most masculine guy, and I would be way too terrified to talk about any desire to be a boy tbh. Everyone said I was girl, I was told I had girl parts, all that, so I figured there was no other option, even if I wanted to be a boy. So, I basically masked the few remaining "signs" I would have after taking away some stereotypical guy things. I was a bit of a tomboy, but I didn't mind wearing fem clothing, and I was seen as just that -- a bit of a boyish girl.   Though, one internalized sign I did have and never talked about was my obsession with Mulan. A girl who got to go and be a guy. She got to hang out with the guys, eat and sleep with the guys, act like a guy, learn the same things the guys in the movie did. I thought every girl would be jealous of that... apparently not, lol 
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    • Ivy
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    • Betty K
      I’m not saying that situation will change for you — how could I know? — but I can say it changed for me. I am frequently astonished at how differently I behave since transitioning, how much more relaxed and free and confident I am, and how much of my behaviour seems — to me and to others — genuinely feminine. It can happen.
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • MaeBe
      The behaviors you mention are all socialized, they’re not natal. The women all lived lives where this behavior is expected and they learned. That’s not to say every person aligns with societal “norms” or does it well, this situation was a microcosm. I think I understand where your head is at and I’m confident nothing I wrote is news to you, but look at it this way: do what brings you joy and the rest will follow. At the end it seems like you got in the way of your own joy, the others were including you be it through politeness or acceptance, and only when the Self got in the way did the interaction change.
    • Ladypcnj
      Here are some safety tips whenever going out: 1. Make sure your cellphone is fully charged, and don't forget to bring the charger with you. 2. Tell a trusted friend or family member who is accepting about where you're going to be (if you're traveling alone). 3. Bring along a trusted friend or someone else that is in the community, go together, and afterwards leave the place together. 4. Be aware of your surroundings.
    • Mirrabooka
      I’m posting this here because maybe it is a sign that I dislike my natal self in some ways that I hadn’t thought of before.   A situation happened yesterday which ended up giving me a good ol’ reality check. It left me feeling quite deflated. As a result, once again, I’m questioning my place on the trans rainbow spectrum. It’s not so much that I feel like an imposter, but rather, I feel like an alien.   Our oldest daughter is a single mom and her daughter, our granddaughter, is going on seven. They had a special event at her school yesterday; it was Special Person’s Day, where parents or significant others were invited to participate in some out-of-class activities in the last hour with the students. Since our daughter was working, my wife and I were glad to attend in her place and our granddaughter was thrilled to see us.   My wife isn’t disabled, but she’s not especially capable of doing physical stuff. So, it was always going to be me holding onto the tug-of-war rope with half a dozen mothers against the kids, just as it was to get in the rock/paper/scissors comp where the loser went to the back of the line and the winner had to sprint madly along the line to mee the next contestant. It was nice to be doing something amongst a group of lovely women, not that they knew that I was emulating them. There was some small talk and a bit of gentle banter with these strangers, and it felt nice; I felt included. Of course, these women were just being good humans and not actually including me as one of them. Not that I expected them to do so.   Then we went to the art room and waited outside until the previous group finished up. I became observant during this time, not ogling the ladies amongst the throng at all, but just taking in their hairstyles and clothing choices and the spontaneous, intuitive conversations between them. I started to get a sinking feeling. I was nothing like them, not just in appearance, but in womanly ways. Once inside and assisting the kids, I found it impossible to interact with any of the mothers at all. It’s as if I could see their large pink auras all intermingling, and here was I with my tiny blue (purple at best) aura tied to an anvil and unable to think of myself as anything but an outlier. I almost felt embarrassed to have long hair.   It doesn’t matter how womanly I feel inside, or what feminine mannerisms automatically happen, or how I might display myself to keep my inner woman happy – I am missing the naturality of it all. And that's what gave me the feeling of being deflated.   Just had to get this off my chest.    
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