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!

Thinking about patience


secondlook

Recommended Posts

When I'm waiting for dinner to finish cooking, it's easy to be patient because I know that after a certain amount of time elapses, my food will be ready and I'll get to enjoy. But if, say, I was dealing with an unreliable oven that sometimes worked and sometimes didn't, it would be hard to be patient because I'd be in suspense as to whether the food is cooking or not (this may or may not be based on a real-world example ? )

 

That's where things stand with my wish to transition -- it's very hard to be patient right now. I know it hurts my wife to talk about my recent revelations, that anything I do to start moving in that direction is going to hurt her more. I'd like to think that over time the hurt will be less and she'll be able to tolerate things better, but she's not that kind of person. She can readily recall something that made her upset 5, 10, 20 years ago and be right back in that moment. She's a highly sensitive person, and in many ways she's an emotional open wound all the time.

 

So while it would be cruel to stop waiting for her to adjust after just two weeks of knowing the truth, it's hard to be patient because I don't know how long it's going to take for her to be able to tolerate any signs of me transitioning. Will it be a week from now? Doubtful. A month? Probably not. A year? I suppose there's a chance. 5 years? 10 years? 20 years? Never?

 

What I want is to shave my beard and body hair, start ordering clothes and accessories, start living at least a little bit of my life as who I want to be. I feel like a racehorse that's been loaded into the starting gate, but they never open the gate to start the race. As I sit here now I'm still 100% masculine in my appearance, and living this way, with no progress at all, and no real hope for any progress anytime soon, is getting tougher by the day.

Link to comment

I probably should've mentioned, my therapist canceled on me this week. Maybe if that hadn't happened, I'd feel more like I was making progress.

Link to comment

I like your racehorse analogy. It is very hard to patient, especially for something that you wished had happened at birth.  For me, my sense of urgency comes from already having lived two-thirds of my life expectancy.  It hit me that waiting for my children to grow up could mean never transitioning.  No better time than now, right?

 

I am sorry your wife is taking it hard.  I would suggest asking your therapist (hang in there, you will get your appointment eventually) if they can do a couple's session.  It sounds like your wife might need some help processing things.

Link to comment

You are at a nexus of knowing who you are and what you want and at the same time you want to be in the safety and security of being your old male self and comfortable life snd marriage to help someone else deal with it.  Unfortunately some marriages do not survive a transition.  Some do though and are still going strong.  Mine will end but by no means do I have it as bad as others.  
The sad reality is you may be put in the position to make the choice to move forward or not.  Though being transgender is not a choice.  You were born this way.  Our only choice was how long we hid ourselves but in the end you need to be happy too.  
Talking and keeping open conversation with your wife is all you can do.  Don’t let it rest or be put off or shut down if it gets hard.  Eventually time will smooth things out and if not then you will eventually find your path with or without your spouse.  Sorry it’s tough love I know.  I don’t mean to hurt you.  I’ve just been there.  As have a few others.  
Good luck and keep at it. You deserve to live.   
 

Link to comment

When I first came out to my wife, I knew she wasn't going to just accept it and I would be able to start hrt, or start seeing a therapist, or anything. I came out to her almost as soon as I knew. It has been 8 months since I told her everything and I've known about 9 or 10. Most of my marriage I have worn some kind of women's clothing, mostly panties or swim suits in private, and I've always had a kind of flair for the femme. But here we are, in the exact same situation you are. I feel like I will never be able to move forward. She is going at a pace that seems like baby steps in a 5 year old. *No such thing* but we are moving forward. I now am able to wear breast forms and bras out with her, and when I'm home I dress completely femme. She has started helping me with some make up, though she hates when I shave my beard... So I can understand completely. 

 

Like Shawna said, it may happen or it may not. I wish you the best of luck and I hope everything works out for you... I also want to mention that since we have taken this time, I've realized so much more about myself and transition. Do some research, watch some YouTube videos about others transitions and try to understand the true time commitment it takes. It won't happen overnight.

 

Good luck and hugs ❣️

Link to comment

Transition requires patience anyway, regardless of what we wish or others think. As said above, it's lots of baby steps that done appear to give much of a result. I prefer to think of it more like glaciation... it is slow to the observer and possibly even gentle but it is steady, powerful and inevitable to anything impeding it.

Things like shaving yield instant but temporary results. Permanent hair removal (I chose laser hair removal) is a drawn out process that is rewarding (despite the pain) in most cases giving nearly instant results aside from the ongoing crop of persistent stragglers that have to be treated over the next year. It has certainly buoyed my spirits to have that done.

Choose your steps well. Shaving your head is a more obvious step than shaving your body or wearing softer underclothes. I tend to avoid the obvious when I can, although my hair is now past shoulder length. But that's been a gradual process.

Even starting HRT won't be a magic bullet, but a slow process of a second puberty over several years.

TA

Link to comment
On 2/16/2020 at 6:20 PM, ShawnaLeigh said:

Talking and keeping open conversation with your wife is all you can do.  Don’t let it rest or be put off or shut down if it gets hard.  Eventually time will smooth things out and if not then you will eventually find your path with or without your spouse.  Sorry it’s tough love I know.  I don’t mean to hurt you.  I’ve just been there.  As have a few others.

 

No hurt done at all, in fact your advice was right on the money. We finally had a conversation where, even though she was upset, on some level she seemed to be somewhat accepting. I had to get past my fear of rejection and share more information to get that reaction. I thought it was going to hurt her more, me talking about my dysphoria and why I feel female inside, but it actually seemed to do the opposite. Not saying she loved hearing it, but she responded to the honesty.

 

There's still a very real chance that she's going to decide this is a path we can't walk together. I'd put the odds at 30-40%. I just have to do everything in my power to increase the odds of us sticking together. If I've done my best and it doesn't work out, at least I can say I didn't throw the relationship away. It'll still hurt, a lot, and for a long time, but I'll be able to live with myself.

 

On 2/17/2020 at 4:59 AM, Juelie_Atlas said:

Do some research, watch some YouTube videos about others transitions and try to understand the true time commitment it takes. It won't happen overnight.

 

Oh, for sure, I get that this is a marathon, not a sprint. Even if everything breaks my way, I know I'm many years from being who I want to be. It's just hard when it seems like I can't even get to the starting line of the marathon.

 

On 2/16/2020 at 7:45 AM, MetaLicious said:

I would suggest asking your therapist (hang in there, you will get your appointment eventually) if they can do a couple's session.  It sounds like your wife might need some help processing things.

 

I'm actually in the process of contacting therapists on her behalf (I offered to do it and she was pleased that I offered). She definitely needs an outlet other than me to talk to.

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, 93 Guests (See full list)

    • Mirrabooka
    • MaeBe
    • Ivy
    • MaryEllen
    • VickySGV
    • Pip
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.8k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,011
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Zoe Denise
    Newest Member
    Zoe Denise
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. 777fleetleader777
      777fleetleader777
      (21 years old)
    2. ArinHallm3
      ArinHallm3
      (18 years old)
    3. ITakMyTime
      ITakMyTime
      (70 years old)
    4. Jess31
      Jess31
      (40 years old)
    5. Natalie71645
      Natalie71645
      (39 years old)
  • Posts

    • Mirrabooka
      So do I! You look terrific, @MaeBe!
    • MaeBe
      Aww, shucks! Thank you, @Ashley0616 and @Timi! I find taking a picture of myself so difficult. 
    • Timi
    • Ashley0616
      You're pretty! It's nice to see a face.
    • Ashley0616
      I'm very glad that everything worked out even better than you thought. It's a tough spot to be in and I know the exact feelings. I'm still waiting to apply for divorce under abandonment so I officially can meet someone who one day I can call someone my prince or my queen. Although the desire for someone is fading because of everything. it's even more amazing that she was your high school sweetheart! Looking forward to the next entry.
    • Ivy
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Been a good long day for me.Got everything done I worked on.Been getting customers that want me to work on their trucks only and my boss is cool about it.A construction company,seen I do good work and do not leave a grease mark in the interior.I keep tub o towels on my tool box.Had a good supper when I got home,a grilled pork steak with a potatoe and green beans
    • Betty K
      Awww thanks for listening everyone. I have another 5-6 songs in this style that I started recording at the same time, so hopefully I’ll finish the next release soon.   Yes, exactly. Everything was easier about this project, mainly because it felt authentic. The energy was very different, because it was such a pleasure to express myself without a filter. I laughed a lot. 
    • Betty K
      Thanks for listening @Mmindy.   You’re welcome @April Marie. I think Sally Can’t Dance is an underrated album.
    • KymmieL
      Well I had an interview with the local Ford Dealership for an opening in the parts dept. It sounded positive. I was told I would here by tomorrow morning.    Other than that just sticking around the house. I haven't done much, the weather is cold and yucky. Doesn't look like good weather till Sunday. Maybe tomorrow I'll fire up the heater in the garage and see about getting the other brake hose put on the Explorer.   Have a good rest of your day/evening.   Hugs, Kymmie
    • MaeBe
      Maybe they called me he/him at the dealership because I completely forgot my mascara! Eyeliner without mascara…a bold new trend among the helplessly lost! :)   Fixed that! 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Ah. Email from Gibson. [it was actually less legible than this, as he didn't use punctuation, it was all caps, and he ran all his words together. Taylor was used to it.   T - As everyone was under my super. this last year, don't worry about the evals. I will handle it. Send all email about new proposals to me, your unit handles work under way.  You will be involved but the first step is those go to me. Thanks   Here is an outline of what questions I want to see answered tomorrow.  Feel free to just jot down your thoughts.  If you don't know, say so and maybe point to how we can find that out............   Your new position will seem very challenging for a while but I am sure you can handle it.  Everyone has the utmost confidence in you.   PS your performance evaluation will be stellar, as reflected in your new position and compensation.  You get 100. One less thing to worry about.   Taylor sent him 45 emails right after that, gave some thought to the questions, and then had to turn to one of the proposals under way and review it.  That done, she read through the personnel files on her people so she would better understand them and what they could do. There was a very thin folder with her name on it.  It had one piece of paper on it. On it was written "the best!".  The others were thicker but didn't take long either, and she returned to answering the questions.   
    • Sally Stone
      Post 5 “Coming out to My Significant Other”   My wife and I were high school sweethearts and after 40 plus years of marriage we are still soulmates.  Yes, I consider myself lucky, but we also worked hard to stay sweethearts, and my transgender nature was one of the things that required a lot of hard work to reconcile.    Back when I realized she was the girl I was going to marry, I was still struggling with gender identity, and up to that point I had kept this guarded secret from her.  I wondered how I was going to tell her, and I pondered the timing.  I had already decided she needed to know before I would feel comfortable asking her to marry me.  I was absolutely terrified that when she learned about my gender identity issues, it would scare her off.  Despite my deep concern, I just knew in my heart, I couldn’t keep the truth from her.   In my case, I never thought a relationship with a girl, or marriage to a girl would somehow cure my gender dysphoria.  In fact, the blossoming of our relationship didn’t mute or minimize my gender confusion one bit, so my desire to keep dressing like a girl remained strong.  I actually considered not telling her at all, but I already knew this wasn’t a passing phase, so kicking the proverbial can down the road didn’t make sense to me.    Since I was committed to revealing my secret, I pondered how to initiate the conversation?  Obviously, I would tell her that I enjoyed dressing and looking like a girl, so part of the conversation would be about crossdressing.  The fact that I cross-dressed was the easier part of the conversation and it would make clear to her what I was doing, but the harder part would be explaining why; because, at that time in my life, I had no idea why I was feeling like I was a girl.  Still, I felt a partial explanation was better than none at all and if she could accept the crossdressing part initially, maybe she and I could explore the deeper meaning, together.    Telling my fiancé I was a crossdresser seemed the simplest explanation at the time.  All that remained was the timing and this is when a situation arose that I hoped would be the perfect setup for my big reveal.  She and I were going to a friend’s party, and on the weekend it was to take place, my fiancé’s parents were out of town.  I casually mentioned that I thought it would be a “goof” to show up at the party dressed like a girl.  Much to my joy and surprise, she thought it was a super idea.  In fact, her enthusiasm for the idea was more than I could have hoped for.  With her parents out of town, we had her house to use for my transformation.    At the time, I had my own stash of girl’s clothing, but admitting to this would have revealed too much.  Besides, she had already started planning my wardrobe for me and I was certain her efforts would be much better than anything my feeble stash might result in.  I couldn’t have been more correct and after she dressed me and did my makeup, I looked more like a girl than I ever had before.  In fact, my new appearance was so striking, I could barely contain my joy.  Of course, this was supposed to be a “goof” so, I did my level best to hide the excitement I was feeling inside.  While I was elated being dressed and out in public, I was absolutely terrified at the same time.  Consequently, showing up at the party was a lot more difficult for me than I had imagined.  Ultimately, everyone got a big kick out of me, and that did help to relax me a little.  However, I had vowed to come clean to my fiancé at some point during the evening, so I remained uncomfortably anxious.   Later, and after a few drinks, I had mustered up the courage to reveal my secret to my future wife.  I pulled her aside and had her follow me to a quiet room upstairs.  Alone together, I began trying to explain my feelings, which as I recall revolved mostly around my desire to dress like a girl.  I did tell her my feelings were more complex, but I think she latched onto the fact that I was a guy who enjoyed looking like a girl on occasion.  I was extremely emotional as we talked, but she comforted me and told me it didn’t change her feelings for me.   I have to say having that conversation with my fiancé that night was the best decision I ever made.  It ensured we would face the future together without secrets or deceit. I know it strengthened our relationship. Of course, my wife really didn’t have any idea what she was signing up for when she agreed to support my transgender nature.  It would be like riding a roller coaster, lots of ups and quite a few downs, but the fact that she knew about me before we got married, made the ride a lot smoother than it could have been.   Hugs,   Sally
    • Maddee
    • rachel w
      Thank you    Here is a up date all went well was back home by noon time feeling really good just chilling out,  I was able to kind of get my sister on board with me and it feels so good she is trying and i told her I am very proud of her to try to under stand she wants to no know so that is a step forward. she also drove me to the hospital.  thank you all for just being here
  • 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...