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| Image from David Gavi on UnSplash. |
If you are a transgender woman or transgender man, you are a member of the survivor tribe. You have earned your spot through too much trial and error that a “normal” human simply would not go through.
I know there are many of you who are early on your gender
transition paths that really need a survival pep talk. My pep talk would be…to
try to stay on the bumpy path you are on because it will be full of sharp
curves, stop signs and steep walls in your way. What is that old saying? If it
doesn’t kill you, it will only make you stronger sadly happens in record
numbers to the trans population. In fact, I tried to kill myself several times
due to the amount od stress and depression I was feeling through my gender
dysphoria. Fortunately, I was unsuccessful at my self-help attempts and lived
to talk about it.
Even to this day, I still have to keep a close eye on how I
am feeling mentally, and I still take meds for depression and anxiety which
have very little to do with my gender issues. I suppose we all have our own
weight to carry through our lives, and that one is mine. I am also fortunate in
that I have mental health and LGBTQ support groups to attend virtually every
Friday at the Dayton, Ohio Veterans Administration. In the group, we have a diverse
set of survivors with different experiences to share, and the moderator always
starts the session with what good things have happened to each of us every
week. It is so successful that anytime now I think the henchmen from the orange
crook in Washington DC to catch wind of it and have it cancelled. So far
though, it seems to be OK. All I can say is, I have been in many support groups
over the years with little to no positive results, so I hope this one lasts.
If you are feeling lonely and need like minded individuals
in the LGBTQ community, seek out local groups in your areas. I know it is
difficult for those of you in isolated areas but maybe you can do it virtually online.
And, if you are jaded like me, don’t expect too much too soon from the groups
you are in. Often, these are highly insecure individuals in the group who are reluctant
to share until they know you better.
Then there are the ultimate survival tests such as spouses,
family members and jobs. Each one of you will have to face your own challenges
in these areas and the only thing I can say is, you have to be patient and try
to use common sense when telling the world about your seismic gender changes. In
my case, my second wife knew I was a cross dresser from day one of our marriage
and never stood in my way but totally refused to have anything to do with me
going on HRT and being transgender. She told me there was no way she would live
another woman, and I understood what she was telling me. My second strike came
with my employment. I had a very successful high energy job I worked hard to
get and knew there would be no way I could transition on the job. At that point
in time, I did not know what I was going to do to survive and continue my dream
of living as a transfeminine person.
Perhaps you are blessed with a more understanding wife, and
I would suggest a sit-down talk with her before appearing cross-dressed in your
best feminine clothes. That way, you can tell what she is going to do and will
she ever come to accept you. Then you can make plans for your survival.
Remember too, there are various stages of development as a
transgender woman. First of all, you have to accept you are much more than a cross-dresser who can survive on fewer days a month dressed. Even though I had free reign to
dress a couple days a week from my second wife, it was never enough to satisfy
my need to go behind the feminine gender curtain and learn more. Even though it
doesn’t sound like I took a slow and cautious path to my own form of womanhood,
I certainly did. I wanted to make sure I could survive when I came out for good.
The amount of introspection alone makes you a better person
and more of a survivor than the normal person. To have the chance to experience
intimately both sides of the main gender binaries is the reason why some
shallow people will never trust you. At some point to survive, you have to learn
to accept the fact that you have reached a point where you are better than
them. Plus, if you happen to be a person who thinks change is good, you are in
for the most change a human can attempt.
When you are a survivor, you will join an elite tribe of
humans who have walked an incredible path and lived to talk about it. If you
are considering taking the path, just try to reach inside your inner soul to
determine if the path is right for you. In my case, when I did, I came up with
the answer that it was the only direction I could take and if I did not my life
would not be worth living after all. My life then went full circle and a ciswoman
who accepted me picked me up and made me the person I am today. I made it
through all the self-harm and destruction I tried on myself just in time to
transition into a transfeminine world in which I could survive. Hopefully, you
can too.

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