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!

I wish I were a little more brave


purpleboots

Recommended Posts

Hi,

 

A couple of months ago, I discovered that I'm on the non-binary spectrum, or rather I discovered the language to start to describe my identity.

I am both terrified about this (including coming out), and excited (I make more sense to me). Over the past few weeks/months, this has been taking up a lot of my internal resources - I don't want to be hidden from my friends anymore (I'm also bisexual - or probably pansexual but identified with bisexual first), which is making it hard for me to concentrate on my work, study, exercise and life generally.

 

However, I've read more than enough hurtful and bigoted internet comments to know that I cannot assume that any coming out will have a positive reception. I am lucky in that I am AFAB and completely straight passing. I wish I were a little more brave.

Link to comment
49 minutes ago, purpleboots said:

Hi,

 

A couple of months ago, I discovered that I'm on the non-binary spectrum, or rather I discovered the language to start to describe my identity.

I am both terrified about this (including coming out), and excited (I make more sense to me). Over the past few weeks/months, this has been taking up a lot of my internal resources - I don't want to be hidden from my friends anymore (I'm also bisexual - or probably pansexual but identified with bisexual first), which is making it hard for me to concentrate on my work, study, exercise and life generally.

 

However, I've read more than enough hurtful and bigoted internet comments to know that I cannot assume that any coming out will have a positive reception. I am lucky in that I am AFAB and completely straight passing. I wish I were a little more brave.

Hello Purpleboots!

 

Non-binary doesn't really require coming out to anyone or any hard and fast attempt at transitioning. You just gradually become the person you feel you are, incrementally and at your own comfortable pace. Gradual style and behavior changes are easily acceptable by family and friends.

Link to comment

Hi Purpleboots, as NB Adult says, it doesn't really require much aside from being yourself. I am sort of in that spectrum, but more inclined to be female so I picked "Transfeminine" which seems to fit. Until I change again. I'm transmutable which doesn't seem to be a category. But the main thing is coming to a place of being yourself.

I no longer get wrapped up in labeling. It only really matters for someone who wants to get snuggly with me anyway.

TA

Link to comment

TammyAnne,

 

 

Good comment about catagories and labeling, I feel the same about not getting one's panties in a wad over the stupid business of pronouns which does nothing more than create a bigger gulf between friends and loved ones. We're all human beings of various stripe which is simple. I've been asked, "What should I call you?" I say, "For starters how about by my name, and as for anything else, be polite and trust whatever your eyes are telling you!"

Link to comment

Hi Purpleboots and Welcome! 
I think you have found a great place to start here in the Forum.  Its a safe a respectful landing spot and I believe as you read the experiences and interact with more Members you will find a lot of commonality in our stories and challenges.  Hopefully its helpful for you.


Take your time and don't be shy.  Looking forward to hearing more from you.

Link to comment

Hi Purpleboots,

 

I sometimes find the trans girls a little intimidating because they know what they are.  They have a clean label.  I don't, maybe you don't either.   But there is space for non-binary and it is a valid thing.  It's valid even if you don't come out to everyone or anyone.

 

Peace and hugs,

Grace

 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
15 hours ago, purpleboots said:

However, I've read more than enough hurtful and bigoted internet comments to know that I cannot assume that any coming out will have a positive reception.

Hi @purpleboots Nice to meet you. The good news...You’ve stumbled into a forum that does not tolerate ‘hurtful and bigoted‘ dialog. You’ll find us to be a very friendly bunch (after our morning coffee, of course) and will try to help you any way we can.

 

Warmest Regards,

Susan R?

Link to comment

Hi and welcome Purpleboots, 

You've found a friendly, welcoming and non judging forum here! This place is chock full of kind people who will let you find you, however long that takes and help you along the way. You're among friends now. 

Link to comment
On 5/25/2020 at 10:45 AM, sleepinflame said:

Hi Purpleboots,

 

I sometimes find the trans girls a little intimidating because they know what they are.  They have a clean label.  I don't, maybe you don't either.   But there is space for non-binary and it is a valid thing.  It's valid even if you don't come out to everyone or anyone.

 

Peace and hugs,

Grace

 

 

Hi sleepinflame,

 

I don't have a clean label either and pronouns do matter a bit to me. I have been desperately trying to change the idea of woman to encompass me, but it just doesn't and it never has.

 

I understand that I don't have to come out, but not coming out has its own costs!

 

Thanks for the messages of validation :).

 

purpleboots

 

 

Link to comment

Hello and Welcome!

Was once in that place, not knowing where I fit, how to even apply, but also not applying to that label assuming me to a position, I never quite felt fit, was maddening. But I'm fine with Mx. and they. It does the trick enough for me and fits well enough.

Glad you joined us. Hope you find your fit, but for now you fit here just fine.?

Link to comment
10 hours ago, purpleboots said:

I understand that I don't have to come out, but not coming out has its own costs

It does have it's costs.  I've used this line before, but I read a memoir entitled, "Yes, You're Trans enough!" and concluded, "No, no, I'm not trans enough."  So I have a hard time saying what it is when I come out to a friend.  And it's even harder because, while most people don't really get the dire need of MtF or FtM people to transition, they can kind of understand the concept of,  "girl brain in boy body".  It does make sense.    I get the feeling it's harder for some random person to get "I have lots of girl things in my brain and all the boy things."  I can see the attraction of using "they" just to shake people's minds loose.  How do I even know what the girl things are and what the boy things are?  It's a big puzzle, totally aside from coming out.

 

--Grace

 

 

Link to comment

I think the what matters most is self acceptance. Once you can accept who you are, in your heart acceptance, then it won’t matter what people think of you. This works for me  until, and unfortunately, my siblings get involved. My ex, my children, and the vast majority of my friends see Erikka. My sibs are my one stumbling block. I go grocery shopping at a supermarket that caters to a more right leaning clientele, sometimes in a dress and no one seems to care. Two years ago I vowed I was going to be unapologetically trans and I have succeeded at every level except for the sibs. I tell myself that I don’t like them anyway, but inside I do care, and that kicks in my fear that I am probably not trans enough. That’s when I put on a skirt and blouse or maybe a cute top and killer jeans and sandals and then walk out the door knowing that yes I am trans enough. 
Hang in there. 

Link to comment

Hi @sleepinflame , I hadn't actually thought of it, but I kind of agree that using "they" might also push people into actually thinking about gender. I don't know if I am "trans enough". I just know that the gender binary doesn't make sense and I cannot fit myself in it and that this causes me some distress and I don't feel like I am living authentically by trying to make it fit. Would you recommend reading, "Yes, you're trans enough"?

 

Hi @Erikka,  thanks and sorry to hear about your siblings! I fear telling my family because I don't think they'll get nonbinary. I agree that self acceptance is important!

Link to comment
18 hours ago, Mx.Drago said:

Hello and Welcome!

Was once in that place, not knowing where I fit, how to even apply, but also not applying to that label assuming me to a position, I never quite felt fit, was maddening. But I'm fine with Mx. and they. It does the trick enough for me and fits well enough.

Glad you joined us. Hope you find your fit, but for now you fit here just fine.?

 I have tried using Mx. on a subscription. It's OK - it feels a bit weird, and I'd rather not have to use any titles but it kinda works ?.

Link to comment
2 hours ago, purpleboots said:

 I have tried using Mx. on a subscription. It's OK - it feels a bit weird, and I'd rather not have to use any titles but it kinda works ?.

? I agree, I'm not one to like applying titles normally, but with every crack I hope to break the ice on the issue so I can get some air, it does the job well enough. I mainly use it here to support the usefulness of the title. Can't do it physically publicly at the moment, unless I'm looking for a target tattooed to my forehead, short lose my job. The things we do to keep the chaos to a minimum. It does feel weird at first, felt the same way. But new things are always weird in the beginning, it's with continue use it starts to grow on you.

Link to comment
17 hours ago, purpleboots said:

Would you recommend reading, "Yes, you're trans enough"?

I didn't get all the way through.  It was useful to me, but coming to this site was more useful.  It's really useful to read the sections about feeling alienated from the boys and wanting to be with the girls, but that appears in so many stories.  The piece that I was trying to figure out for myself is why don't I care so much about presenting as a girl IRL.  Here, I present as a girl because it's my inner self and I feel very girly inside most of the time.  But I just don't need to present that way for casual interactions in the grocery store.  I think.  I guess I won't know until I try it.  Still figuring it out, but I don't feel the aching need which so many here express.  I feel the aching need to communicate as we do here, that's where I feel most girly.  I want to interact IRL that way with my friends and that's the biggest mystery for me, how to get those interactions with close friends.  I think I understand it now, I was always holding back because I didn't want to be seen as being flirting.  Now I can just say what I want honestly and I think it will turn out better.  After quarantine, right?

 

All of that leads me to the most important thing, which it is all very individual.   I read and I read and I read.  I find authors who have a voice who seem similar to my inner voice, but no one is the same.  I'd say my closest match is Adrienne Nash.  I like her because she resonates so much with me.  We're all different sparkly snowflakes, that makes it hard for us to figure out what we are.  But it is all valid.

 

Hugs

--Grace

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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   8 Members, 0 Anonymous, 158 Guests (See full list)

    • Mmindy
    • Mirrabooka
    • Adrianna Danielle
    • Petra Jane
    • Betty K
    • KymmieL
    • AllieJ
    • elizamichellex
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,014
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Quillian
    Newest Member
    Quillian
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. l.demiurge
      l.demiurge
  • Posts

    • Adrianna Danielle
      Met the new neighbor's wife last night,nice and she was cool about me.Boyfriend and I talked last night,about about my transitioning plans.One was has on having the GRS and he supports my decision 100%,told him I am not going to have that done.He knows about my FFS and trachea shave coming up in September,he is supportive of this 100% too.Knows these are my choices,not his
    • Mirrabooka
      @Sally Stone, I have enjoyed reading this thread immensely. There certainly are some things in it that I can relate to, particularly when you wrote that "I wasn’t a man trapped in a woman’s body." This simple statement confirmed two things for me; I am not an imposter here, and I could end up much further along the path than what I imagine now.   I very much look forward to your future posts here.   I hope that by posing this question I'm not committing you to spoil future posts, but can I ask, why you have settled on Bigender as a label? I keep changing my label and have no idea what it might be tomorrow or next week or next month!
    • Betty K
      This whole Cass Review thing is breaking my heart. I keep imagining how it must be to be a trans kid in the UK atm. I am halfway through reading the review so that I can effectively refute it if and when people cite it here in Australia.
    • Mirrabooka
      One thing I took on board from a former boss who was an absolute gentleman and fluent conversationalist but a hopeless leader because he was the classic yes man to his superiors, was to take the emotion out of the equation when arguing. Don't use hyperbole. Don't exaggerate. Stick to what you know and defeat your adversary with logic. Of course, your adversary will double down and make an even bigger fool of themselves, and not even realize that they have lost the argument, nor will they realize that people are laughing at them and not with them. It also helps if you can separate them from their minions.   A conservative elderly uncle, who left school at the age of 12, swears black and blue that taking Ivermectin (sheep dip) prevents Covid because he knew someone who knew someone else who took it and despite that person being momentarily in close contact with people who had Covid, didn't come down with it. "Well, you're the one with the science degree!" I said.   A lot of people argue out of ignorance. They base their points on populism and rumor. I rarely argue, but when I do, it is in an attempt to push back. Another favorite saying that I use is "Rumors are started by haters, spread by fools and believed by idiots." I then ask, "Which two are you?" 😉
    • April Marie
      Good morning, all!!! Cloudy today with some light rain coming. Not a day to work outside.   I will vacuum the house and the head out to our local hardware store after I get cleaned up. Time to buy a new bird feeder for the back porch.   I'm sorry the job didn't work @KymmieL! Hang in there.   It sounds like a busy time for you at work @Willow. Finding reliable people is so hard these days.   Time for another cup of coffee before I start cleaning!!   Enjoy this beautiful day we've been given.  
    • Heather Shay
      RIP Dickie Betts  
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Which  do you pefer to refresh yourself - Music, Movies, Reading, Gaming, Nature, Other?
    • Heather Shay
      HRT visit always NP brings joy.
    • Heather Shay
      Nostalgia is an emotion. It is the feeling of enjoying events from the past. People with nostalgia will often look at or use old things that they were familiar with years ago. This is because people feel more connected to those past times that they enjoyed, usually because it reminds them of how long it has been since they last connected to such past times. Examples where people may have the feeling of nostalgia includes watching old TV shows, using old technology that was very enjoyable, and playing with toys that you played with as a child. These memories are usually misleading, and can make someone wish that they could be young again, even if their childhood was mediocre. Human brains often leave out boring or bad memories, which can cause incorrect feelings about their childhood.
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Welcome. Love your photo. Glad you are here and see you've already met 2 of the amazing people here. Hugs
    • Heather Shay
      CAT FACTS A cat's jaw cannot move sideways. The only domestic animal not mentioned in the Bible is the cat   A house cat’s genome is 95.6 percent tiger, and they share many behaviors with their jungle ancestors, says Layla Morgan Wilde, a cat behavior expert and the founder of Cat Wisdom 101. These behaviors include scent marking by scratching, prey play, prey stalking, pouncing, chinning, and urine marking. Cats are believed to be the only mammals who don’t taste sweetness. Cats are nearsighted, but their peripheral vision and night vision are much better than that of humans. Cats are supposed to have 18 toes (five toes on each front paw; four toes on each back paw). Cats can jump up to six times their length. Cats’ claws all curve downward, which means that they can’t climb down trees head-first. Instead, they have to back down the trunk. Cats’ collarbones don’t connect to their other bones, as these bones are buried in their shoulder muscles. Cats have 230 bones, while humans only have 206. Cats have an extra organ that allows them to taste scents on the air, which is why your cat stares at you with her mouth open from time to time. Cats have whiskers on the backs of their front legs, as well. Cats have nearly twice the amount of neurons in their cerebral cortex as dogs. Cats have the largest eyes relative to their head size of any mammal. Cats make very little noise when they walk around. The thick, soft pads on their paws allow them to sneak up on their prey — or you! Cats’ rough tongues can lick a bone clean of any shred of meat. Cats use their long tails to balance themselves when they’re jumping or walking along narrow ledges. Cats use their whiskers to “feel” the world around them in an effort to determine which small spaces they can fit into. A cat’s whiskers are generally about the same width as its body. (This is why you should never, EVER cut their whiskers.) Cats walk like camels and giraffes: They move both of their right feet first, then move both of their left feet. No other animals walk this way. Male cats are more likely to be left-pawed, while female cats are more likely to be right-pawed. Though cats can notice the fast movements of their prey, it often seems to them that slow-moving objects are actually stagnant. Some cats are ambidextrous, but 40 percent are either left- or right-pawed. Some cats can swim. There are cats who have more than 18 toes. These extra-digit felines are referred to as being “polydactyl.”
  • 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...