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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
yeah i've been going to a gender clinic for two years now and i'm still not on hormones and won't be until september at the /very/ earliest.It's different wherever you are. It's more logical to assume that if you've known you're trans for over a year, you shouldn't have to go through that ridiculous 'real life experience'. (I don't support the whole year thing either way, honestly.)
Yeah, I'm pretty excited about it! I'm doing my transition in Belgium, and the requirement in Belgium is that you have to have been feeling trans for at least two years. I've been consciously aware for much longer than that but obviously I can't prove it, but:That's great! But I think you have to do that real-life test (where you live as your proper gender for at least a year) before you can get hormones? I dunno, I guess it varies by country, but that's how it went for me. Either way, good luck with your therapy, and just try and be really patient, it's definitely worth it in the end.
My mum explicitly told me she'd only encourage me after hearing from a therapist (siiiigh) so yeah, getting a medical professional to vouch for you should help.I'd suggest, with your mom, that you have her come to therapy sessions because it seems to be a lot easier for them to 'believe' it when told the whole thing from a therapist. (Apparently doctors know you better than you know yourself, as far as parents are concerned. :|) My mom did like, a heel-face-turn with her beliefs surrounding this after my therapist told her she basically has to for my sanity.
i'd do it sooner rather than later, since the getting hormones part is pretty vague cuz we never know when exactly we'll get on themALSO trans people: I'm not sure what I should do in regards to coming out at uni? I've come out to all my friends on Facebook and they've been very good about it (except one asshole who said, quote 'lol you will always be a girl to me' and 'think of it this way, I will always call you Iris' which was lovely) and are using male pronouns and such, but since I came out I've added university people and I don't feel like doing a big coming-out thing again. Should I just do it once I get on hormones? They already call me Ivo because that's how I introduced myself but they use female pronouns :| I don't pass very well because although I think I have a fairly masculine face, my voice is anti-stealth and I have ridiculous hips. I've started doing exercise to lose weight in the hopes that it'll streamline my body but obviously that's not done in a day. Bleh. What did you guys do?
and i will be sending you good vibes in return!And Jolty we have a gender appointment on the same day :o I'll be sending you positive vibes. I know how much of a pain it is to come out to the difficult parent, I have no idea how I'm going to tell my dad. Probably just wait until I have the T in my hand and then do it, haha :v
over here, the third appointment out of the initial 3 is for family to come along to so I'll probably ask my mum this time round. only my dad came last time and it definitely made him change his mind about thingsMy mum explicitly told me she'd only encourage me after hearing from a therapist (siiiigh) so yeah, getting a medical professional to vouch for you should help.
e2: I'm hoping that, seeing as this is the QUILTBAG club, you realise that I'm using 'guy' and 'girl' to refer to your identification not your assignment. Put away the knives.
That sounds tricky. Maybe you could try testing the waters a little and see what their opinions on LGBT people are?Vladimir Putin's LJ said:ALSO trans people: I'm not sure what I should do in regards to coming out at uni? I've come out to all my friends on Facebook and they've been very good about it (except one asshole who said, quote 'lol you will always be a girl to me' and 'think of it this way, I will always call you Iris' which was lovely) and are using male pronouns and such, but since I came out I've added university people and I don't feel like doing a big coming-out thing again. Should I just do it once I get on hormones? They already call me Ivo because that's how I introduced myself but they use female pronouns :| I don't pass very well because although I think I have a fairly masculine face, my voice is anti-stealth and I have ridiculous hips. I've started doing exercise to lose weight in the hopes that it'll streamline my body but obviously that's not done in a day. Bleh. What did you guys do?
I'm by no means an expert on these things, but I don't think trying to gain weight by eating more is a good idea. You generally gain more mass in areas you definitely don't want it, like your hips and breasts. One of my friends was overweight, and he had a lot of trouble getting a binder to fit his chest. Working out and gaining muscle mass is usually a good idea to try and make your body less feminine. Muscular female bodied people generally have very little breasts, and a masculine frame. But everyone's body is different, so yeah.jolty said:I've tried eating loads more to gain weight and try and make myself look bigger but it's not working.
Saith: that's terrible :/ I'm sorry that happened, and that people are reacting badly... not sure what I can suggest, it's just a shitty situation. I guess you can always use it as an opportunity to look into physically transitioning, if that's what you want to do? Argh.
It's... Not? It's just a personal preference, chill out. We all have an idea of perfect physical form in our mind - I just have one for male-bodied-people and one for female-bodied-people. Or... Male-identified-people and female-identified-people? I think I might be getting mixed up. :/Cirrus said:Then why is it only foul for an arbitrary set of people??
Eh, the people who took it badly just needed an excuse to hate me. You know, because I'm such a loveable fella that until now, nobody had any 'reason' not to like me.
The thing that pisses me off most though is that my cousin was one of the few people I trusted with the information, and he acted like it was fine - which meant he was silently hating me for it, or specifically compartmented it away in his mind so that he could use it as a fucking weapon against me. Not to mention that he and I had a falling out over a month ago. He can really hold a grudge.
(Also y'all should totally look out for a massive anger-post in the coughing cupboard soon because my conscience has recently come back to life and suddenly I'm concerned about him)
It's... Not? It's just a personal preference, chill out. We all have an idea of perfect physical form in our mind - I just have one for male-bodied-people and one for female-bodied-people. Or... Male-identified-people and female-identified-people? I think I might be getting mixed up. :/
on a different note, i have a TINY crush on a girl who i cosplay with. >__< i have a boyfriend (who i really really care about) and she has a girlfriend. but yeah. tiny little crush.
Hello QUILTBAG, very real question here for everyone. Pubic hair or no pubic hair - which do you prefer on your sexual partner?
almost everyone I know actually likes me, as opposed to thinking I'm weird or such as I had assumed they did.
I came home to her crying and asking if she did something wrong and why I had it on my computer and if I was curious and such (I just sat and straight-face denied everything except the curious part). :x But since that day she never mentioned it at all, or even acted as if I weren't straight - I think the "just curious" act worked.
You make this sound like the two things can't happen at once :p I had a similar experience at school - I was one of the kids who probably should have gotten picked on, but aside from the very meanest kids who nobody liked much anyway, most people found my weirdness (love of Pokemon, lack of fashion sense, disinterest in boys, joy at everything) endearing.
Same here; actually, a lot of kids on my retreat (and even those who weren't and wrote letters to everyone!) said that they loved how quirky I was.