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!

Therapy offered, opinions and experiences


Hellothere

Recommended Posts

So when i came out, my mother asked if i wanted therapy.

I said sure as i dont know what doing on in my head.

nothings been done in the time between then and now. While i want to bring it up again, thats a conversation i dread. Ive never been good at opening up with the real stuff, the stuff that goes on no one knows about. I have one true friend who i have deep conversations with. The idea of therapy both teriffys me amd is a nice thought. As someone who would like to be one one day, i dont fear the idea, just the talking. If youve had therapy, how was your experience? Any opinions on the subject, positive or negitive.

Link to comment
  • Admin

In therapy, you are talking with a caring  person who wants to help you make your life better and in the long run, happier. It is a conversation that will help you to ask questions about what is going on in your life, and what you think is the best way for you to grow and live.  The one reason why therapists are helpful, it that they have learned how humans behave and react in some circumstances that may not understand when things happen.  I go to therapists every now and then when I find myself hitting a wall.  I have learned where my fears of dealing with some people began.

 

An example is when we have been bullied for years and someone being honestly nice to us confuses us.  Bullies have things they do to set us up  for bullying, and the non bully doing the same  thing  but being honestly nice is a condition we need to sort out, and the therapist can help us recognize the friend from the bully and enjoy the nice behavior.

 

As I said above, the therapist is a caring person who has learned the differences between types of caring.

Link to comment

I understand the confusion of niceness, and its sad that being confused about kindness is a thing. My one worry is that ill never get past the awkwardness of meeting with a new person. I find the kindest people i know will never betray me and i still convince myself that they judge my every move. I blame that on a past friend who many times judged everything i did and the feeling stuck. Even if i know their job is to understand, ill still convince myself otherwise. Do have any tips on getting past the feeling of judgement, there actully being there or judgement i made up?

Link to comment
  • Admin

The Therapist is not a person who will judge you.  Counseling is them listening carefully to you and letting you find your solution.  Tell them up front that " I am afraid of being judged but I need help to resolve my feelings of being in the wrong gender.Memorize that one line or write it on a slip of paper and you will do fine, it is one of the best opening lines when you feel that way

 

 

Link to comment
Just now, Hellothere said:

Do have any tips on getting past the feeling of judgement, there actully being there or judgement i made up?

You can use your sessions to discuss whatever you need to, if that is trust and fear of judgement then start there and move towards other things like your gender when you are able to. You can do it.

Link to comment
  • 4 weeks later...

Hello, as a follow up, i have gotten a therapist. She mostly helped with sleep on our first session. She gave me a couple articles as well. Problem is that im so used to lying, i lied about a lot of phsical things. She had a checklist thingy with things like sadness,anxiety,self harm, suicidal thoughts and such.

i lied about most.

my plan is next time ill go back over it.

thanks

Link to comment

The one thing I have learned about my therapist is that you don't have to tell her everything but try to be honest. It might take a couple therapists till you find one you bond well with and like. Its harder when you have anxiety with communication. Therapists are very open about gender and sexuality! You can tell them anything. I have learned that you don't have to keep everything inside of you. They cant tell anyone what you guys talk about unless its hurting you or someone else. 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Hellothere said:

Problem is that im so used to lying, i lied about a lot of phsical things. She had a checklist thingy with things like sadness,anxiety,self harm, suicidal thoughts and such.

i lied about most.

Hello there, your therapist will quickly pick up on these things, no matter how good we think we are masking - they are trained observers and will figure out something is off over time.  Another way of looking about it is that you are accessing a service - you wouldn't take your uke into a music shop and ask them to fix it because its not working right and then lie to them about whats wrong with it. They'll eventually figure it out but it just wastes time and money for both party's. Keep trying, your honesty will make things go so much better. :) 

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, 153 Guests (See full list)

    • Michelle_S
    • Cynthia Slowan
    • VickySGV
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Mmindy
    • Susie
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.7k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,077
    • Most Online
      8,356

    gender_equality_nccu
    Newest Member
    gender_equality_nccu
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Billie75B
      Billie75B
      (67 years old)
    2. Chloe Cloud
      Chloe Cloud
      (32 years old)
    3. Hannah Emma
      Hannah Emma
      (41 years old)
    4. Joan Arbour
      Joan Arbour
      (77 years old)
    5. Liz B
      Liz B
      (49 years old)
  • Posts

    • Willow
      @KymmieL do they have you on anti depressants?  Are they certain they are the right ones for you?  Has a psychiatrist been involved?  My physician first put me on an anti depressant and when things got worse for me he added one that was the initial cause of my cancer.  My therapist recommended I had a different need changed things. My psychiatrist agreed with the particular underlying condition and the choice of medications.   everyone is different but if one medication isn’t working there are many different types and different underlying conditions that require different treatments.  No meds mentioned because what didn’t work and what did all depends on your case, not mine.   Willow
    • Cynthia Slowan
      To me loving myself means having the courage to live the way I want and to be me.     I hardly ever really like how I look but I feel good knowing I am trying to be the best version of myself that I can be. It is definitely a struggle sometimes though.  💗Cynthia 
    • Cynthia Slowan
      When I am sitting out on my patio in a nice pretty dress, full makeup, with a glass of wine watching a storm roll in!       💗 Cynthia 
    • Cynthia Slowan
      I had a five hour road trip today.  I’m trying to grow my hair out so I just pushed it back with a pink hair band, lipstick and gloss, no makeup.    White spaghetti strap top, short black skirt, white sandals with pink toenails!  A couple of rings and bracelets, necklace and hoop earrings.   I felt like a hot mess but it’s my favorite way to travel!  
    • KymmieL
      Glad you had a good day, @Willow Mine on the other hand sucked. I have been screwing up again, I even got written up. I may have to educate them on major depression and disability. not that it will work.    OH, well. May be another job I lost because of me. Yes, my depression is about down at the magma level   Kym
    • Lydia_R
      This bag is really working out for me.  I had worn out the back on my yin-yang bag so I picked this one up.  It wasn't long before I cut off the flap on it and braided a hemp strap for it.  The zipper is the best feature.  I can spin the bag around and I'm not afraid of losing anything.  I've taught myself to keep all the essential things in it and nothing more.  Here is what made the cut:   Notepad Sharpie Ballpoint Pen Teaspoon Glasses Phone (most of the time) Wired Headphones and/or Bluetooth Carmex and/or Lipstick Flash Drive Current Braiding Project Wallet Hair Clip   And on my keys I have my one inch Swiss Army Knife with scissors and a bottle opener that I like using with mason jar lids.   I don't miss pockets at all now.  The bag is fun and practical.  I can set it on the ground to get everything off my body.  If I need something, I'm looking for a fairly large object.  I always have something to work on with the braiding project.
    • Ivy
      Just keep up with your blood work
    • Abigail Genevieve
      You can ask a moderator to make the change for you.
    • missyjo
      started Spiro very recently..told to expect it like Lasix  you'll pee, a lot. have some other complications so we're taking this cautiously . heard something about slightly higher risk for OA too. hugs to all. 
    • MAN8791
      Mine was Hatshepsut, an Egyptian pharaoh who had to carry herself as a male in order to rule. I was completely facinated by her as a student.
    • Willow
      Well it was a good day at work I got everything done I needed to do. My audits came out right and everything.  I had to fix the printer on one pump. It wouldn’t cut the paper and needed two parts replaced.  The District Manager left us Thank you bags,  Murphy Bucks and candy.  We can use Murphy bucks to buy things in the store, or pay for gas.  I guess next week the Area Manager will be around to check on things.  He would be the next layer higher.  Well my eyelids are starting to get heavy, time for a nap.thats the only thing about opening the store it definitely causes me to need a nap.    
    • Vidanjali
      Interesting point. I was raised Catholic and was intensely intrigued by the lives of saints. Similar to your obsession with Mulan, I was particularly drawn to Joan of Arc, a 15th century saint who took on the guise of a man to lead the French army to victory over the English in the Hundred Years' War. Later, she was sold out by the Burgundians to the English who brought multiple charges against her as a heretic, including claiming she could communicate directly with God (which undermined the church's authority), and wearing men's clothes. At one point, while imprisoned, she was made to dress in women's clothes, which she did, but was later found again in men's attire which she said she preferred. She was eventually burnt at the stake at age 19. Rather gruesome tale, but not atypical of the stories of Catholic martyrs. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I just read something a FB friend posted about guilt.  I am changing it somewhat for here.   There are things you should not feel guilty about because they are not wrong.  Being transgender is one. People like to send us on guilt-trips about it, intentionally or unintentionally.   There are things you have actual guilt about whether you feel guilty or not.  If you murder someone, you may not feel any guilt.   The FEELING of guilt can be widely separated from objective guilt. All of us need to train ourselves to not feel guilty about things we are not guilty of,, and to feel guilty about the things we are guilty of.  It is not easy.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Jeans, t-shirt, flip-flops.
    • Vidanjali
      Good news. That just means you're normal!   Understand that thoughts leading to thoughtlessness is a VERY high ideal. Those who aspire to that may spend their entire life working on it and only ever glimpse momentary stillness. In fact, I'm reminded of a story which was relayed to me recently about a yogic master who was interviewed and asked - In deep meditation, how long can you sustain a still mind before another thought creeps in? You may expect the master to reply hours or perhaps even days. His answer - 7 seconds. The thing is, as long as you're operating with a human brain, thoughts will go on. In Bhagavad Gita chapter 6, verse 34, Arjuna (who represents every individual) complains to Lord Krishna (who represents the Higher Self), "The mind is very restless, turbulent, strong and obstinate, O Krishna. It appears to me that it is more difficult to control than the wind." Such is the nature of mind. The difference, though, is in learning gradually to not identify with thought, but rather to become the dispassionate witness of thoughts, like clouds passing in the sky, or often more poignant a simile, like high speed trains rushing by. 
  • 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...