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!

Feeling Good


Guest Huff

Recommended Posts

Hey guys,

I bought a suit for myself for the first time and that feels pretty darn cool. And, actually, I look pretty darn cool in it too. Kind of like just the opposite of how awful and repulsive it was to be forced to wear a strapless dress for my sister's wedding. *shudder* I like finally looking like me and getting to dress appropriately. I never could look in the mirror before because the girl staring back was, well... a girl! Now, I like looking in the mirror. It's actually kind of fun.

I was just thinking that it was neat that I've passed some really huge positive milestones and was wanted to hear some of the milestones other guys have passed in their transition.

MK

Link to comment

Hi Huff:

Thinking back to actual milestones, I can only think of one. In retrospect, it was a great one.

I was always reticent about coming out, but mostly from the viewpoint of "going on record".

I didn't want to say to somebody that I was a transsexual and then have to tell them a year later that I wasn't going through with it.

That isn't actually very well stated, but it's the best I can do.

In July, after 7 months of HRT, I said to myself, "Who am I kidding? I'm never going to stop HRT. I might as well tell everybody."

Admittedly, the first time I came out to somebody was difficult. The next week I joined Laura's Playground.

Now when distant friends email with their news that they're putting a new roof on the garage, I email them back, "Oh, Yeah? Well I..."

The openness and freedom I've gained from the first coming out counts as my milestone.

While the effects of HRT have been the most important change in my life, the gradualness rules them out as a milestone.

Z.

Link to comment
Guest GoldenKirbichu

I think when I cut my hair for the first time in eight years.

Just hacked eight inches off of it. It was like someone cutting a weight off my head.

Link to comment

So many big moments.

Same as Golden, cutting my hair was a big moment. Clipping it from below shoulder length to 7mm made quite a big difference. Although I actually felt quite sad at first. Men can have long hair. Being a student in a music school, where the men have more hair than the women taught me that. But I pass better now.

Changing my name and title legally was also a big moment, and then changing it on all of my documents. Each was a mini victory.

I think the step which excited me most though, and gave me the most pleasure was shaving. I'm not on T yet, and don't really have to shave, but it does masculinise the appearance not to have the light hair that women have on their faces. It just felt so right, the first time I put the cream on my face, and the razor glided across. That was the moment that every doubt I ever had about changing my gender left me. I was 100% sure at that moment I was meant to be male.

Standing to urinate for the first time. Well, getting it right for the first time. It takes practise. Up until now, for the last 2 months I have been using the STP device, but only in the cubical in the mens toilets. A couple of weekends ago I finally found the confidence, and used the urinal for the first time. That felt like a big milestone for me. I phoned my best friend straight after to tell him the news, that's how excited I was. :)

Link to comment
Guest GoldenKirbichu

I've actually shaved a few times. The feeling is quite exhilarating, at least at first. I actually felt giddy the first time I shaved... and it was really early in the morning because I was embarrassed to ask my dad about it. And there I was shaving my semi-beard and feeling giddy. It was pretty obvious what gender identity I have - if I can get excited over shaving chin hairs.

Of course, I cut my thumb open with the razor once. An act of stupidity on my part. NEVER try to wipe hairs off with your thumb. oO;

Link to comment

I suppose i felt kinda good when a girl didn;t know i was trans and she said she fancied me. It felt good cause i obvioulsy looked like convincing male.

And when i first got boxer shorts lol.

Link to comment

I'm with Sergei! When I cut my hair, it was amazing. Everyone thought it was a stupid, unisex haircut, but I knew better. Even if it doesn't help me pass any better, it certainly makes me feel good. My long hair made my appearance scream 'girl'. Just not my thing. (Plus it's a LOT easier to take care of now!)

Another would be letting my leg hair grow and shaving my facial hair off. Most enjoying thing in the world; I can spend quite a bit in the bathroom, shaving it off. I do it slow just because it gives me such great pleasure.^^

Link to comment

Most important milestone: I finally accepted myself

Other milestones- getting a gender therapist, starting T

Cutting my hair wasn't a milestone because my hair length has always been like a yo-yo.

Link to comment
Another would be letting my leg hair grow and shaving my facial hair off.

Yeah, I liked letting my leg hair grow again. Nothing felt so wrong as shaving it off for all of them years. But that what I was told I was meant to do!!!! When I wore shorts for the first time after letting it grow back it was a great feeling. My legs are really, really hairy as well. My cisgender male friends even get jealous! :D

Link to comment
  • 5 weeks later...

My most important milestone was probably getting a binder about 7 months ago. Since then I have felt so much more confident. I shaved my face a few weeks ago, which was exciting although totally not noticeable at all. And last week I bought my first set of men's formal clothes and wore them to my chorale concert. Some people gave me some kind of funny looks, but I felt more comfortable with myself than I ever did wearing female formal clothes.

My next milestone will probably have to be cutting my hair. I've wanted to cut it for a really long time, but I'm also afraid to because my parents will start asking questions that I don't want to answer yet.

Link to comment
I shaved my face a few weeks ago, which was exciting although totally not noticeable at all.

Keep going, it definitely thickens up with time even pre T. Somebody actually noticed and commented on my stubble for the first time today. That made me feel really good, another mile stone I guess. :D

Link to comment
Guest Alexander

My milestones were similar.

Buying a binder

Cutting my hair short, when it had never been shorter than my shoulders

Shaving

Being carded and the person not believing that I was the person on the ID (It was annoying, but also kind of cool)

Seeing a gender therapist (which has kind of petered out)

Buying a suit and looking Gosh darned good in it!

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   1 Member, 0 Anonymous, 125 Guests (See full list)

    • kristinabee
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,057
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Aleksandria
    Newest Member
    Aleksandria
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      (22 years old)
    2. CtN1p
      CtN1p
    3. heyim_finn
      heyim_finn
      (21 years old)
    4. Jayn
      Jayn
    5. joni_girl_1988
      joni_girl_1988
      (51 years old)
  • Posts

    • Ladypcnj
      Thanks Sally Stone
    • KymmieL
      Thanks, Mindy. It has been so far. Tomorrow, work some more on the wife's grand monkey. Got the right side of the hood primed, just need to do a little more work on the left then I can prime it. Then a 600grit wet sand.   I promised the wife we would take out the bike this weekend.   Kymmie
    • JessicaMW
      During my last visit with my psychologist (who has agreed to provide required letters of recommendation along with a colleague to provide the second) we discussed the shift towards my wife's acceptance. It was a long discussion but one point I mentioned was how much the two of us sitting down and watching this documentary helped:  The Kings | A transgender love story (2017)
    • Betty K
      Oops, I did not mean to post that comment yet! I was going to also say, having read a mountain of commentary on the Review, I think Julia Serano’s response (linked by Vicky above) is the most accurate and thorough. You can also read a non-paywalled version at Substack: https://juliaserano.substack.com/p/the-cass-review-wpath-files-and-the   To me the three key areas in which the review is deficient are:   1. As has already been said here, its views on social transition;   2. Its attempts to give credence to the “ROGD” theory (without ever actually mentioning ROGD because presumably a canny editor knows that would be too transparently transphobic);   3. To me, most crucially, its claims about trans youth and suicide, which are dealt with summarily in about five pages and do not stand up to any deeper scrutiny.    I will be writing about each of these issues in isolation over the next few weeks and appearing on a radio show and podcast to discuss them late in the month. I will post links to these on TP later if anyone is interested.   All that said, I actually think it’s dangerous for us to respond with outright vitriol and condemnation to the review since, like any effective piece of disinformation, it does actually contain some factually based and even helpful recommendations. The Tavistock Gender Identity Service really was underfunded and understaffed and certain staff were not adequately trained. Trans kids really were funnelled away from mental-health support once they started gender-affirming care too. So yes, more investment in youth psychology services would help, as would a less centralised model of care, more training in treatment of trans kids, and more research.   One last thing for now: beware the claim that Cass ignored 98% of studies. That’s not strictly true. She seems to have taken other studies into account but leaned heavily on the 2% that met her standards. Nor does she ever claim that only randomised controlled trials are good enough evidence to justify the use of blockers for kids; just as with ROGD, she strongly suggests this, but is too canny to say it, because she knows such trials would be impossible. For now, I think the best response to this comes from the Trans Safety Network: “[…] we believe there to be systemic biases in the ways that the review prioritises speculative and hearsay evidence to advance its own recommendations while using highly stringent evidence standards to exclude empirical and observational data on actual patients. “ (https://transsafety.network/posts/tsn-statement-on-cass-final-report/)   To me, the scariest aspect of all this is that, if it follows Cass’s recommendations, the NHS will very likely follow Finland’s recent model of trans care, which seems to amount to a prolonged form of conversion therapy. I can’t find the link right now, which is probably lucky for anyone reading this, but I bawled my guts out reading the testimonies of kids who had been mistreated by that system. Truly horrific. To me, at least from my Australian perspective, the Cass Review is the most frightening development in trans rights in recent years. To me, the safe care of trans kids is THE number one issue in politics atm.   Ruth Pierce has a good summary of responses from trans folk and their allies sk far: https://ruthpearce.net/2024/04/16/whats-wrong-with-the-cass-review-a-round-up-of-commentary-and-evidence/    
    • Sally Stone
      Welcome to the wide, wild world of transgender, M.A.  It can definitively be overwhelming, but everyone here is amazing, so no doubt you'll get bunches of wonderful support. I think you'll be happy you found us.   
    • Sally Stone
      @Ladypcnj  This is so true.  I think all of us here have had a post or two that didn't get a response.  Sometimes, it's as simple as adding to your original to post for a clearer explanation, or re-reading what you wrote originally, and rephrasing it.  But don't despair, we aren't ignoring you.   Hugs,   Sally 
    • Willow
      So, we left for lunch in our Taos, talked and went to the dealer and came home with the Cadillac.  
    • Betty K
      I have just finished reading the Cass Review, all 380-odd pages of it, and am totally open to questions including via DM if anyone wants more information on it
    • Abigail Genevieve
      What season are you?  If you don't know, look around on the internet. Or ask a girl friend..  Maybe someone here is even a color consultant?   And there are guides on figure-flattering clothes for all shapes that you should look into.    Abby
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Just know that your kids will probably turn out OK, in spite of the chaos.  One of my partners was widowed in her very early 30s, left with 3 kids.  They're teens now, and one graduated a year ago and is working, but still living at home.  A few bumps in the road, but the three are turning into responsible young adults.  It is amazing how resilient kids can be.  They should be able to handle your changes as well.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Had my time with my 2 long friends I was in the Army with.We went through the photo books and talked memories.They also found about the guy that bullied and sexually assaulted me.He is in prison,sexually assaulted and raped 2 women off base.Doing a 40 year sentence for this and was dishonorable discharged
    • Cindy Lee
      I've been transitioning now for eight months but have been wearing women's clothing for 2+ years. I am over weight and approaching my 72nd birthday. I have purchase my solid color clothing online and recently graduated to 'V' neck tops. I have been hesitant to get anything more girly due to family issues, though with my hair style I am able to totally pass when dressed in a skirt and blouse.   About two  months ago I finally went and got my nails done (which I truly which I had done long ago) though not red nor pink (again family issues). To date I don't think I am having problems with being trans unlike others seem to have. The biggest problem I am having is with my clothing. Any suggestions my girl friends might have would be greatly appreciated.   Cindy
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Umm.... if a post is ignored, live with it?   My stuff gets ignored sometimes, and its OK.  My life is different, and may seem kind of wacky to others.  Some folks just can't relate, or if I'm needing advice they just don't have it.  Diversity is like that sometimes.  If your post gets missed, don't take it personally.  Also, stuff that is new on weekends seems to get ignored more, since most folks are busy with family or other stuff during that time.  Overall, I think people here are pretty helpful. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I'd really love a professional stove.  There's actually one I want at Lowes, but its like $6k.  I've got plenty of money, the issue is that I'm not the queen (king?) of my den.  Or even of the kitchen.  My partner (husband's wife #1) owns that territory, and she's very attached to what she's got.  One of our stoves has 6 burners and a large oven, the other has 4 burners and a regular household sized oven.  And of course, there's always the wood-burning equipment.    Today was interesting.  We had the first campaign fundraiser for our sheriff and my sister.  My sister is running to be constable of our township.  Pretty sure she'll win, as her opponent is an old dude who is mostly running on "Don't elect a woman for a man's job"    What's weird is our sheriff is running as a Democrat, but he's conservative.  And his Republican opponent sounds like a leftist.  Welcome to Upside-down-ville   And of course all the kids got the chance to sit in a sheriff's car, and play with the lights.   We had a barbecue lunch and a dessert auction.  I baked three apple pies for it, and I was shocked that they sold for $20 each, since my cooking isn't that great.  My partner made her famous "Chocotorta."  It's like a chocolate layer cake with cream cheese, sweetened condensed milk, and it tastes amazing.  Usually we have it for Christmas and other really special occasions.  Two guys got into a bid war, and it sold for $175!!!    Yep, this is politics in the South.  Barbecue, pies, and police cars.  A great way to spend a Saturday
    • Davie
      Yes. That report is part of a conspiracy to torture and murder trans people. It is a lie. It is evil.
  • 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...