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Transition and the job hunt (unemployed again) the sequal


KieranD

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Hi Kieran,

I don't know how you're dressing, appearing, passing, etc. So, I can't say too much specifically.

My inclination would be to go to the interview, try to look job-worthy, and do not mention the trans issue at all. I just have the feeling, that an employer would choose a non-trans person over a trans simply because they would see the other person as a known entity while trans would be unfamiliar and therefore less appealing. During the interview, you can get a feel for what kind of culture exists, in general terms. Once you know who they are, you can then find out more about their policies - without it affecting the interview itself.

For someone like myself, who is post transition but still obviously trans, I would approach an interview as if being trans is the lowest prority in my life, and the biggest priority of the moment is what I can do for the emplyer.

I hope that helps - best of luck, let us know how it goes?

Love, Megan

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Hi Kieran,

I don't know how you're dressing, appearing, passing, etc. So, I can't say too much specifically.

My inclination would be to go to the interview, try to look job-worthy, and do not mention the trans issue at all. I just have the feeling, that an employer would choose a non-trans person over a trans simply because they would see the other person as a known entity while trans would be unfamiliar and therefore less appealing. During the interview, you can get a feel for what kind of culture exists, in general terms. Once you know who they are, you can then find out more about their policies - without it affecting the interview itself.

For someone like myself, who is post transition but still obviously trans, I would approach an interview as if being trans is the lowest prority in my life, and the biggest priority of the moment is what I can do for the emplyer.

I hope that helps - best of luck, let us know how it goes?

Love, Megan

http://www.lauras-playground.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=45947&hl=&fromsearch=1

That's the thread about my presentation. I present as male as much as possible (only because I'd rather be seen as male than female). In general I don't get seen as male yet. So, I don't really know how to do what you're asking as I believe I'm visibly different from what they might be expecting. Been on hormones for a year and a half, out as genderqueer/trying to get seen as male for about 7 years.

With your approach and everything do you interview "as male" and see being trans as the lowest priority?

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Hi Kieran,

I would try to de-emphasize your trans status, however you can. What they want to see is a person ready and willing to work whose personal issues won't spill over into the workplace. If you go presenting male, prepare a short explanation of why. without going into a history of your transition, I can't tell you what to say exactly - I would have to think long and hard what might even work for myself, let alone someone else - I guess this falls into the "do your homework" category...

Love, Megan

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Hi Kieran,

I would try to de-emphasize your trans status, however you can. What they want to see is a person ready and willing to work whose personal issues won't spill over into the workplace. If you go presenting male, prepare a short explanation of why. without going into a history of your transition, I can't tell you what to say exactly - I would have to think long and hard what might even work for myself, let alone someone else - I guess this falls into the "do your homework" category...

Love, Megan

But I don't know how to de-emphasize my being trans.
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Guest Jade T

Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

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Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

I live near NYC, and have included NYC in my search (if the position is right...I won't be willing to pay $20 to get to work and back for a position as a fry cook). I'm not sure how else I could/should further my education. If one degree isn't enough do I go for my masters? Do I try to get a bachelors in something else?

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Guest Jade T

Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

I live near NYC, and have included NYC in my search (if the position is right...I won't be willing to pay $20 to get to work and back for a position as a fry cook). I'm not sure how else I could/should further my education. If one degree isn't enough do I go for my masters? Do I try to get a bachelors in something else?

I personally would go for another bachelors if possible. My reasoning is this: You open the door up to more professions than if you just concentrated on one area of expertise. Perhaps if you get a bachelors in business management, not only do you open the door up to being a supervisor or manager at restaurants (you have the cooking experience already I assume). You now have the ability to transverse different career fields easier than if you went for your masters in your current field.

Of course, if that field is your passion and you do want to pursue any other field even if it means a little hardship, than getting a masters in that field wouldn't be a bad thing and may suit your individual goals more. Me personally, I am looking for any job, regardless if it is my passion or not. I have already realized that I will not ever be able to pursue my passion anymore due to my transition. But I rather be happy and alive than doing my job with a passion yet being unhappy, depressed, and constantly debating suicide. I was in that position not too long ago and it drove me crazy.

All that being said, I am not a career counselor though I have played one many times in the past lol. If you want some sound advice, I suggest you contact a college counselor and talk to her/him about your specific goals and desires.

About transportation to NYC, have you looked at getting a bus pass to transit back and forth? I know in the city I am in has monthly and weekly bus passes and using one saves a fortune on gas.

Hugs,

Jade

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Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

I live near NYC, and have included NYC in my search (if the position is right...I won't be willing to pay $20 to get to work and back for a position as a fry cook). I'm not sure how else I could/should further my education. If one degree isn't enough do I go for my masters? Do I try to get a bachelors in something else?

I personally would go for another bachelors if possible. My reasoning is this: You open the door up to more professions than if you just concentrated on one area of expertise. Perhaps if you get a bachelors in business management, not only do you open the door up to being a supervisor or manager at restaurants (you have the cooking experience already I assume). You now have the ability to transverse different career fields easier than if you went for your masters in your current field.

Of course, if that field is your passion and you do want to pursue any other field even if it means a little hardship, than getting a masters in that field wouldn't be a bad thing and may suit your individual goals more. Me personally, I am looking for any job, regardless if it is my passion or not. I have already realized that I will not ever be able to pursue my passion anymore due to my transition. But I rather be happy and alive than doing my job with a passion yet being unhappy, depressed, and constantly debating suicide. I was in that position not too long ago and it drove me crazy.

All that being said, I am not a career counselor though I have played one many times in the past lol. If you want some sound advice, I suggest you contact a college counselor and talk to her/him about your specific goals and desires.

About transportation to NYC, have you looked at getting a bus pass to transit back and forth? I know in the city I am in has monthly and weekly bus passes and using one saves a fortune on gas.

Hugs,

Jade

Nope. My degree is in photography, not any sort of cooking. There's a lot of different stuff to do in the field. There's editing, restoration, lighting assistance, shooting, background/prop assistance, booking shoots, photo publishing, printing, aaaaand a whole bunch of other things I can't think of.

I've been looking at photography positions, anything related to art fields, administrative assistant, customer service, general desk jobs, pretty much anything outside of retail. I've never been fired from a job and have worked as a management type position before (the company ended up filing for bankruptcy causing me to leave). Did have two companies that I worked for closed due to financial situations. I would be taking the train (1 hour) and not the bus (3-4 hours), driving in would cost like $60+ because of parking. Train ticket is $20 round trip.

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Guest Jade T

Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

I live near NYC, and have included NYC in my search (if the position is right...I won't be willing to pay $20 to get to work and back for a position as a fry cook). I'm not sure how else I could/should further my education. If one degree isn't enough do I go for my masters? Do I try to get a bachelors in something else?

I personally would go for another bachelors if possible. My reasoning is this: You open the door up to more professions than if you just concentrated on one area of expertise. Perhaps if you get a bachelors in business management, not only do you open the door up to being a supervisor or manager at restaurants (you have the cooking experience already I assume). You now have the ability to transverse different career fields easier than if you went for your masters in your current field.

Of course, if that field is your passion and you do want to pursue any other field even if it means a little hardship, than getting a masters in that field wouldn't be a bad thing and may suit your individual goals more. Me personally, I am looking for any job, regardless if it is my passion or not. I have already realized that I will not ever be able to pursue my passion anymore due to my transition. But I rather be happy and alive than doing my job with a passion yet being unhappy, depressed, and constantly debating suicide. I was in that position not too long ago and it drove me crazy.

All that being said, I am not a career counselor though I have played one many times in the past lol. If you want some sound advice, I suggest you contact a college counselor and talk to her/him about your specific goals and desires.

About transportation to NYC, have you looked at getting a bus pass to transit back and forth? I know in the city I am in has monthly and weekly bus passes and using one saves a fortune on gas.

Hugs,

Jade

Nope. My degree is in photography, not any sort of cooking. There's a lot of different stuff to do in the field. There's editing, restoration, lighting assistance, shooting, background/prop assistance, booking shoots, photo publishing, printing, aaaaand a whole bunch of other things I can't think of.

I've been looking at photography positions, anything related to art fields, administrative assistant, customer service, general desk jobs, pretty much anything outside of retail. I've never been fired from a job and have worked as a management type position before (the company ended up filing for bankruptcy causing me to leave). Did have two companies that I worked for closed due to financial situations. I would be taking the train (1 hour) and not the bus (3-4 hours), driving in would cost like $60+ because of parking. Train ticket is $20 round trip.

That sounds pretty interesting and fun! I finally am getting into taking pictures. It is a shame that the majority of my life went by undocumented because I abhored being in pictures. Have you thought about trying to be a photojournalist? You could probably photograph and write about quite a bit of events going on in the world today, or even your local area. You can go to City Hall meetings, councils, and political events to document them. You can also visit any area or site that has any type of controversial event. You can find out about events by reading your local newspaper. There is a treasure trove of information in them :). The possibilities are endless on where you can take this =).

Even if you don't get hired right away, you can always set up a web site or blog about your passion of photography. Over time, people may begin to follow you and you may be on your way to something big before you know it. I have something very similar with a blog I write. I love to write about philosophy, politics, and current events. I do it out of passion for writing and politics. Maybe one day I will make something big out of it. If not, I am not concerned, as I enjoy writing =)

Wow, the buses/trains are insanely expensive in New York O_O. I figured when you said $20 dollar round trip you meant that in gas if you would of drove. When I use to live in Northern New York, I don't remember the prices being that high! Then again I only took the cab when I went out to go to the bars.

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Hi Kieran, I understand what you are going through right now. Since Feb, I outwardly present as female but everything I have for identification is still under my male name. It makes the process of applying for a job daunting as I am pretty sure that most employers in this economy have the ability to choose from hundreds of applicants and would most likely choose a non trans person over me. It doesn't help that my resume and skill set is geared towards male and masculine dominated markets. It makes it very unlikely for me to ever get hired using my old life's skills and training with me looking the way I look now. With the way the hormones are affecting my body, I think I really only have maybe 4 more months or so before I cannot hide the fact I am transgender even if I tried to due to secondary sex characteristics. I have pretty much made peace with the idea that my old life and resume is basically worthless to me in my search for employment.

I have at the moment given up looking for employment until I get my ID changed or I move to a more trans friendly area. If you are able to, perhaps you should move to or search out locations that are trans friendly. You can perhaps check online for jobs that are hiring in those areas and apply for them. If you get an interview and are hired, they may pay for your relocation costs if you are lucky. Another option you may have available is applying for grants or financial aid to further your education and get new job skills to expand your marketability.

I wish you the best in your search. With the economy the way it is, it is tough for all of us to find employment. Sadly, it makes it twice as hard on people like us to get the same job.

Hugs,

Jade

I live near NYC, and have included NYC in my search (if the position is right...I won't be willing to pay $20 to get to work and back for a position as a fry cook). I'm not sure how else I could/should further my education. If one degree isn't enough do I go for my masters? Do I try to get a bachelors in something else?

I personally would go for another bachelors if possible. My reasoning is this: You open the door up to more professions than if you just concentrated on one area of expertise. Perhaps if you get a bachelors in business management, not only do you open the door up to being a supervisor or manager at restaurants (you have the cooking experience already I assume). You now have the ability to transverse different career fields easier than if you went for your masters in your current field.

Of course, if that field is your passion and you do want to pursue any other field even if it means a little hardship, than getting a masters in that field wouldn't be a bad thing and may suit your individual goals more. Me personally, I am looking for any job, regardless if it is my passion or not. I have already realized that I will not ever be able to pursue my passion anymore due to my transition. But I rather be happy and alive than doing my job with a passion yet being unhappy, depressed, and constantly debating suicide. I was in that position not too long ago and it drove me crazy.

All that being said, I am not a career counselor though I have played one many times in the past lol. If you want some sound advice, I suggest you contact a college counselor and talk to her/him about your specific goals and desires.

About transportation to NYC, have you looked at getting a bus pass to transit back and forth? I know in the city I am in has monthly and weekly bus passes and using one saves a fortune on gas.

Hugs,

Jade

Nope. My degree is in photography, not any sort of cooking. There's a lot of different stuff to do in the field. There's editing, restoration, lighting assistance, shooting, background/prop assistance, booking shoots, photo publishing, printing, aaaaand a whole bunch of other things I can't think of.

I've been looking at photography positions, anything related to art fields, administrative assistant, customer service, general desk jobs, pretty much anything outside of retail. I've never been fired from a job and have worked as a management type position before (the company ended up filing for bankruptcy causing me to leave). Did have two companies that I worked for closed due to financial situations. I would be taking the train (1 hour) and not the bus (3-4 hours), driving in would cost like $60+ because of parking. Train ticket is $20 round trip.

That sounds pretty interesting and fun! I finally am getting into taking pictures. It is a shame that the majority of my life went by undocumented because I abhored being in pictures. Have you thought about trying to be a photojournalist? You could probably photograph and write about quite a bit of events going on in the world today, or even your local area. You can go to City Hall meetings, councils, and political events to document them. You can also visit any area or site that has any type of controversial event. You can find out about events by reading your local newspaper. There is a treasure trove of information in them :). The possibilities are endless on where you can take this =).

Even if you don't get hired right away, you can always set up a web site or blog about your passion of photography. Over time, people may begin to follow you and you may be on your way to something big before you know it. I have something very similar with a blog I write. I love to write about philosophy, politics, and current events. I do it out of passion for writing and politics. Maybe one day I will make something big out of it. If not, I am not concerned, as I enjoy writing =)

Wow, the buses/trains are insanely expensive in New York O_O. I figured when you said $20 dollar round trip you meant that in gas if you would of drove. When I use to live in Northern New York, I don't remember the prices being that high! Then again I only took the cab when I went out to go to the bars.

Well, my specialty is with studio photography. Photo journalism pays well if you're able to get a contract with any sort of news source and they usually begin with internships (when I was an intern our class would meet once a month and two of the students were photographers for the local paper at the time). I do have a portfolio available online and every now and then I add a piece if I think it's worth putting up. Documenting the events themselves doesn't really do much unless you have a large source outlet who wants the pictures and is willing to pay. I've documented the trans day of action a few times in the past, as well as my trips to Albany when I met with representatives. Sure, people might go and try to find pictures of these things but they're not on a news/information website.

I currently track how many people visit my portfolio per day, but can be as specific as the hour. Generally there's nobody on there each day. I get maybe 5 visitors outside of myself per month and that's just because I put the link in my resume.

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Alright, so I got a call back on Friday saying that the place I interviewed with (the boring job I interviewed for). I didn't say anything about being trans at the interview. When I got the call the supervisor offered me the job and I mentioned being transgender, and the few things I wanted (being called "he", having an ID card with a name different from my legal name, and using the bathroom). I was told that there would be a meeting with the owners on Monday (today) and that I would get a call back after that meeting where they would discuss these things. In my mind, if they are able to give me these very few things, and a general reassurance of safety in that way then I'm good to go. If they can't then it sucks, but I'll live.

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Bad news: I was told they can't have a preferred name on my ID, I have to correct co-workers and supervisors when it comes to my name and pronouns, and that even if co-workers or supervisors call me the wrong name and pronouns over and over and over with me correcting them each time, they will not be reprimanded at all.

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      On the way back to her desk she was interrupted by six short, urgent conversations that had to be attended to. Then she slipped into the women's room and locked the stall door.  She took a deep breath, then another, and allowed herself to shake for five minutes,  Then deep breathing, ten in and ten out, stretch up, touch the floor, neck rolls and she was fine. She used the toilet and a woman knocked and said, "Taylor, are you okay?"   "Ready to conquer the world!"  on her way out she found her makeup was fine.  Three stalls, two sinks.  If she ever designed a women's room with three stalls, there would be four sinks, with plenty of space to plunk your stuff down between them.   She met a deferential Karen.  "Here is the branding I came up with," she said.  And she went back to working as hard as Brenda and Mary, who looked up worriedly and then went back to the proposal.   Shortly before 5:00 she received an email with the title Consolidation and Compensation.  In it she learned that the position of office manager was eliminated, and the current office manager was to become the chief executive officer. The former CEO, along with the CFO, the chief legal officer, and sundry staff, had been terminated, per the Board of Directors.  Effective immediately everyone would receive a base salary of $20,000 with a commission to be set by the individual's supervisor.  Each supervisor would be given a certain percentage to distribute.  Most functions they had been handled would be outsourced as needed.   "The question of what profit was made last year is frequent enough to be answered.  The company lost over 500,000 in fiscal 2023.  At this point further cuts are not anticipated.  We will be strategically adding positions that will enhance our profits. Hard work is expected of everyone."   Her two web guys had been complaining because their games had been remotely uninstalled.  After the memo came out they were absolutely silent.  That gave her an idea, and after an exchange of emails they were reassigned to maintenance out at the plant, effective tomorrow morning.  There were lots of weeds that needed pulling, if nothing else. That email went out after they left early, for the day.  The maintenance foreman was a no-nonsense type who did not tolerate slacking, and they would learn a thing or two.  This also freed up two spaces for her to put new people.
    • Davie
      Except for this thung thwister: Theophilus Thistle, the successful thistle sifter, in sifting a sieve full of unsifted thistles, thrust three-thousand thistles through the thick of his thumb. Now if, Theophilus Thistle, the successful thistle sifter, in sifting a sieve full of of unsifted thistles, thrust three-thousand thistles through the thick of his thumb, how many thistles can'st thou thrust through the thick of thy thumb . . . in sifting a sieve-full of unsifted thistles? Success to the successful thistle sifter!
    • VickySGV
      You have given you and us a big clue right there.  I hope you have shared this observation with your Endocrinologist and are willing to take their advice about changing that behavior.    Non prescribed herbal or animal supplements can have a negative effect on your body's use of your available hormones.  Also, your genetics are going to be controlling what your body is going to do with your hormones, and again, that is for you to consult with your Endocrinologists.  On this site none of us are licensed medical personnel and we cannot give you advice on your health more than what your doctor can.  We have rules that we enforce against our members advising about "Folk Remedies" because we have had members who have gone that route and badly damaged their health and quality of life.  Only thing I can go anywhere on, is that maybe if you change your expectations of what should happen, you will at least not be in danger of harming yourself from anxiety.
    • Timi
      Hi @violet r!    Thank you so much for sharing. I'm so glad you found this place. I hope you find as much comfort and support here as I have.    -Timi    
    • marysssia
      Hi lovely people,   I'm a 25 yo MtF woman, and I've been suffering from low estrogen issues since October 2023. I completely lost my feminine libido, my breast completely stopped growing, my estrogen levels dropped by a lot (despite NOT decreasing my E dosage) and thus my dysphoria drastically increased. I think it is worth mentioning that, for my health issues, I had been taking ----- Lamotrigine for months & had been on ketogenic diet, and these things seem to be a culprit of my current issue. I weaned off Lamotrigine some time ago and gave up on keto diet, but it still doesn't seem to help. My estrogen is still low (44 ng/ml) and my libido hasn't come back yet. In general, I struggle with my dysphoria so much because of that and, to be honest, I don't know what to do. I've tried so many dietary supplements, yet I didn't get any effects from them. My endocrinologist didn't know how to help me. She only suggested to increase my daily estrogen dose (to 3x per day ------sublingual estrogen tablets and 3x per day ------ estrogen gel applied to armpits or thighs), which I did, without any effect.   Please, help me. Prior to keto diet & Lamotrigine treatment, I'd never had experience like that. I'm basically helpless and have no clue what to do. Having to deal with low estrogen is a horrible experience to me and it affects my life severely.   BTW, my T levels are always within female range.   Do you have any clue what exactly I should do?
    • April Marie
      I love wearing a jeans skirt!! That looks like airport carpet. Safe travels if you're flying!!
    • Maddee
      Flight faraway forthcoming Fabulous forum friends 😊😊🎸🦂
    • Maddee
    • KathyLauren
      One of our cats is polydactyl.  He has 7 toes on each front paw and 5 on each back paw, for 24 toes total.   Another one, an ex-feral who, at the time, was free to roam, climbed 50 feet up a tree without having any thought about how he was going to get down.  His pal climed down backwards, but he couldn't.  He ended up coming down by leaping from branch to branch.  Which nearly gave us heart attacks, because he only has one eye and therefore has no depth perception.   The other ex-feral (both are now indoor cats) obviously does not have those soft pads on his feet.  At night, when we are in bed, we can hear him stomping around the house.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      The two o'clock Onshoring meeting was going well.  Taylor was leading, inviting other people up to speak on their specialties. Aerial photogrammetry and surveying, including the exact boundary, were out for contract signature  Gibson had handled that - Manufacturing was supposed to, but somehow hadn't happened.  Legal issues from Legal. Accounting reported on current costs, including all upkeep, guard salaries, etc.  Manufacturing was supposed to give those numbers, but they hadn't.   The downside was the VP of Manufacturing.  He had arrived at the meeting red-faced, his tie askew, clutching a bottle. It smelled strongly of vodka. He had never done anything in his twenty years of being VP of Manufacturing, and he did not like being asked now.   "Mr. ----, do you have the inventory we asked for?" Taylor asked politely.  VP Gibson had asked him to have his people go through the plant and not only inventory but assess the operational status of every piece of equipment.  They needed to know what they had. "I'm not going to take any f---- orders from a g-d- tra---," he snarled. "God knows what kind of perverts it has dragged into our fair city and bangs every night." "That is completely out of line." That was Gibson.  Taylor controlled herself.  That was a shot at Bob, not just at Taylor.  She was glad Bob was not there to do something stupid.  Had Mrs. McCarthy been talking? What had she said?  Was she given to embellishment?  Taylor took a deep breath. "I'm not sorry.  You f--- can take this stupid onshoring --- and shove it up your -" "That is quite enough."  This was the head of HR. "You can take your sissy ways and sashay -" "You are fired." "You can't fire me." "Oh, yes I can," said the office manager.  The VP took another swig from his bottle. "Try it."  He looked uncertain. "I will have you removed.  Are you going to leave on your own?  I am calling the police to help you leave." And he dialed the number. He stomped out cursing. They heard him noisily go down the hall.  This was the front conference room.  He actually went through security and out the door, throwing his badge on the ground on his way.  The guard picked it up. They could see this through the glass wall. "Can you fire a VP?" "The Board told me that if anyone gives me problems they should be shown the door. Even a VP.  I can fire everyone here. I won't, of course. Those were problems." "Are you alright, Taylor?" She nodded.  "I've heard worse.  Shall we continue?" And they did.   The last item was that certain business people in China had been arrested, and the corporation that had been supporting them all these years had been dissolved.  They were on their own, and the Board was dead serious on straightening things out.  After this meeting, Taylor believed it.  She did not attend the meeting to discuss how to distribute the few duties the VP of Manufacturing had done.  That was ultimately up to the Board.    
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Lunch was at Cabaret, still free.  The place was quiet: it was the sort of place you took a business client to impress them, and the few other people were in business suits.  Most of the legal profession was there.   She told him of the morning's frustrations, breaking her own rule about confidentiality.  She asked Karen how the branding was going, and Karen had snapped back that she had not started on it yet - they had all these proposals.  Taylor had explained that it was important, for the two o'clock meeting, and Karen told her to do it herself.  Karen pointed out that Taylor could not touch her - her uncle was on the Board and her brother was VP of Manufacturing.  Nor would the two computer guys go out to the plant - they were playing some kind of MMORPG and simply not available. If she wanted the pictures, she should go.  Mary prayed an Ave Maria, but both she and Brenda were racing to get the proposal out. The client wanted it Friday for review.   She didn't bring up what Mrs. McCarthy had told her.  She wasn't sure how to approach it.  She thought of telling her of a 'something more comfortable' she had bought in case he ever DID show up at her door. It was in the bottom drawer of her dresser, ready to go.  Instead she talked about moving to a place with a garage.  Several of the abandoned houses had one, and they had been maintained well with China cash.   Bob had finally realized that when he was introduced as Bob, Taylor's boyfriend, that was just how things were done here. Other people had introduced each other in terms of family relationships, which were strong.  Long before you found out anything else about someone, you knew how they were related.  Family kept people from leaving Millville.    "What is the real name of this town, anyway?"   She laughed.  "I am trying to find that out.  It's 'Welcome to Millvale' when you come into town from the north, and 'Welcome to Millville' on the south.  I have counted two other variants."   "What a town. Roosevelt is like that, with the families, but there is only one spelling."  
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