Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 28

Thread: Therapist laid it on the line

  1. #1
    Member Darla's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Posts
    308

    Therapist laid it on the line

    My therapist finally laid it on the line. She presented it like we both knew it all along, but that I was dancing around the issue. Personally I bet she was fed up with me, and to some degree so am I.

    Basically - I'm a crossdresser and there's no way ever my wide will ever accept me as such. She affirmed that I seek acceptance and I'll probably not get it.

    Kind of a bombshell and I'm still a little reeling.

    So do I get divorced? Anybody ever been here? Seems pretty dark down in this hole.

    Darla

  2. #2
    Swans have more fun! sandra-leigh's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Central Canada
    Posts
    7,322
    How important is that acceptance to you? What are you "asking" for? What could you "live with" ? What (of what is present now) can you not "live with" ?

  3. #3
    Silver Member Jodi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
    2,640
    Yes, I have been there. Divorced now for 12 years after being married for 33 years. We are both happier today.

    It can be a tough road.

    Only you know what is the correct course of action.

    Jodi

  4. #4
    Member Megan Briana's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
    Location
    Lehigh Acres, Florida
    Posts
    208
    There is only one answer to this, and I am afraid none of us can really help make it (although if we could, we would). Ultimately it will come down to your choice. Like it has been said, what are you willing to live with and without? It is a hard choice and my thoughts and prayers got out to you. Whatever decision is made, be sure to find peace for yourself.

    for myself, I was in a marriage that nothing could have helped survive. My cd-ing played no part in it, but there are times i wish it had. It might have opened up doors to other issues we wound up dealing with at the end.
    If i knew then what i know now, i would have stolen my ex wife's clothes. I loved the way she dress

    Megan Briana

  5. #5
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    Daytona Beach
    Posts
    55
    Wow, I would never attempt to tell you what to do, but that said if you don't mind I will mention a few things to think about, and also a little about my own situation.
    First how much do you Love you wife, sometimes a person's Love for someone else can make up for a lot of things that we would like but not get.
    2nd, you do not give a lot of info, Is their any degree of acceptance, meaning can she accept that you have the desire to dress, but just can not stand to see it?
    Does she accept some underdressing?

    My situation is a little like yours, my wife can not stand me dressing, but she lets me underdress, I wear panties all the time, and have for the last 30 years or so. I have boobs so she lets me wear waist simmers, and a bra on occasion, I like the open shelf bra because it supports my breast and makes them stand out which makes them extra sensitive. I can wear spandex shorts all I want.
    If you will tell a little more about you situation I am sure there are lot of Girls on here that will give you advice.

  6. #6
    Platinum Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    S.E.Baltimore Co. Maryland USA
    Posts
    43,906

    Time For Some Soul Searching Now !!

    Hi Darla, I see by your age that you may have probably been married for a few years now
    what you have to do is ask yourself , Can this marriage be saved and what are the alternatives.
    Having my ears triple pierced is AWESOME, ~~......

    I can explain it to you, But I can't comprehend it for you !

    If at first you don't succeed, Then Skydiving isn't for you.

    Be careful what you wish for, Once you ring a bell , you just can't Un-Ring it !! !!

  7. #7
    Gold Member Cynthia Anne's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Mo. Ozarks
    Posts
    6,746
    I don't think it could be said any better then how Sandra said it! Remember we all live and die with our decisions we make!
    If you don't like the way I'm livin', you just leave this long haired country girl alone:

  8. #8
    Ice queen Lorileah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Denver
    Posts
    11,799
    Quote Originally Posted by Leann68 View Post
    First how much do you Love you wife, sometimes a person's Love for someone else can make up for a lot of things that we would like but not get.
    Just remember this works both ways. Love is not one person giving up everything for the other, it is two people working together to find common ground. So many times here it seems that it is either my way or the highway for one or the other partner. Communication and negotiation, not demands and immovability.

    You want your wife to accept what you are and I would bet that for the longest time you didn't accept it. You didn't change over night, she won't either. In the final minute though you have to be happy. She deserves to be happy. You have to live with you no matter what. Can you be happy not being who you are? Are you willing to give up who you are? The rest of Leann's post is true, can you meet somewhere in the middle and both still be happy?

    How did Billy Joel put it?
    later you sleep in your own space Either way it's O.K. you wake up with yourself ...
    The earth is the mother of all people and all people should have equal rights upon it.
    Chief Joseph
    Nez Perce



    “Love isn't a state of perfect caring. It is an active noun like struggle. To love someone is to strive to accept that person exactly the way he or she is, right here and now.” - Fred Rogers,

  9. #9
    The avvy pic isn't me
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Idaho
    Posts
    1,090
    Quote Originally Posted by Darla View Post
    Basically - I'm a crossdresser and there's no way ever my wide will ever accept me as such. She affirmed that I seek acceptance and I'll probably not get it.
    Darla
    Just to clarify this comment, this is what your therapist said to you?

    And if so, i'm shocked and amazed that no one has jumped all over this. This site has a good many folks who are trumpeteers for acceptance and that everyone loves us and will be just fine with the news.
    So therefore i'm wondering where all the indignation comments are.......something like...."how dare you therapist say this to you!" or maybe...."this is not the right way for a certified therapist to speak to a patient!"

    Or maybe i'm just missing the boat entirely.

  10. #10
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Coon Rapids, MN
    Posts
    162
    My X would not put up my dressing at all and after 10 years called it quits. That was a very hard time but now couldn't be happier.

    You won't know until you talk to your wife. You'll have to come up with a compromise that you both can live with. I always live with the belief that for every negative there is a equal or greater positive.

  11. #11
    Girl from the Eagles Nest reb.femme's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    S London UK
    Posts
    2,281
    Quote Originally Posted by MsMjSerene View Post
    So therefore i'm wondering where all the indignation comments are.......something like...."how dare you therapist say this to you!" or maybe...."this is not the right way for a certified therapist to speak to a patient!"

    Or maybe i'm just missing the boat entirely.
    I was trying to work out if your answer was tongue in cheek or not . Either way, it's good that someone can state a point in black and white rather than hedging around the issue for once.

    It is a tough decision but to paraphrase Lorileah, a relationship is one of compromise not ultimatums. That said, all options look to be on the table at this point, even the nuclear divorce option. Sorry if I seem unsympathetic, but I'm a realist and pessimist first and foremost.

    Reb
    Flying high under the spell of life!

    http://www.rebsweb.co.uk

  12. #12
    Member Marlana's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    CNY
    Posts
    316
    Well, what ever you decid to do has to be your decision. The important questions have all been listed above. For me personally, I choose my wife and family over cd'ing. I am in a similar situation. My wife wants nothing to do with my cd'ing. Doesn't want to see it or talk about it. I do underdress at night and on weekend mornings. When she goes out of town, Marlana gets to come out and play. I hope all goes well and you can live with your decision. Good luck.

  13. #13
    Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    145
    I've been there, and your therapist gave you the best answer she knew; hopefully well informed from her time with you.
    The ball's in your court. It always has been.
    There is no "correct" decision here, only what is right for you.

    If I may, pick up a copy of the book "Should You Leave?" by the psychiatrist Peter Kramer. He argues that much dissatisfaction within a marriage is due to depression. Consequently, before making a major decision like this
    consider a course of antidepressant medication.
    For me, that advice didn't change my decision, but it did make me realize how much negative emotion I was walking around with every day.
    I made some changes in my career and marriage that I am still content with 10 years later.
    The issue was me, and the solution was making choices that weren't entirely selfish but which didn't require me to sacrifice joy just to try to appease someone else's unhappiness.
    You are hopefully in a place in life where you can share the journey with people you care about, rather than trying to pretend to be someone you are not just to prevent complaints from others.

  14. #14
    The avvy pic isn't me
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Idaho
    Posts
    1,090
    Quote Originally Posted by reb.femme View Post
    I was trying to work out if your answer was tongue in cheek or not . Either way, it's good that someone can state a point in black and white rather than hedging around the issue for once.

    It is a tough decision but to paraphrase Lorileah, a relationship is one of compromise not ultimatums. That said, all options look to be on the table at this point, even the nuclear divorce option. Sorry if I seem unsympathetic, but I'm a realist and pessimist first and foremost.

    Reb
    Agreed, and as to the OP, i too concur with the ever intelligent and honest Lorileah.

  15. #15
    Senior Member KellyJameson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Posts
    1,491
    I'm not married but in all my relationships I must feel that my individuality is honored, that I'm not being used purely as an object for someone elses benefit, a means to someone elses ends.

    That they recognized that there is a flesh and blood person standing before them who can be hurt and deserves to be protected, particularly from them.

    To love, a person must carry within them a sensitivity so they feel the same pain the one they love is feeling and so seeks to protect them and help ease their burdens.

    From this compromise is born because compromise is about sharing pain.

    Not crossdressing is not experiencing the self which is painful so when it is given up the person is expected to bear the pain alone which is not love in my opinion.

    I understand why some women would not want to experience this because it could affect her sexual desire, her sense that she is with a man that cannot emotionally support her, concern for how others will be affected and or react, concern that it is a mental illness and a whole host of other reasons.

    The question for me would be is my wife cowardly and always runs from pain or does she have a generosity of spirit that comes from strength in the face of adversity.

    Is one person always doing the giving and the other always doing the taking, it is a pain avoidance form of selfishness.

    Are you nothing but a beast of burden that is expected not to feel pain and only do what you are told?

    To give up crossdressing (you) when you are not loved is different than giving up or changing your crossdressing when you are loved but it is crucial to really understand the concept of love which leaves you feeling valued and protected for "you" and not for "what you do" which is secondary.

    Love is a response to what we value so how we are loved comes from the persons own relationship to their lives and with their own mind, love is the result of the relationship a person has with life, wisdom, truth, pain and their own mortality.

    It is the expression of the collective qualities or absence of qualities that make us more than just smart animals.

    Are you loved by someone who has the capacity to love?

    Is she couragous, sensitive, humble, honest, fair (justice), giving, confident but not arrogant ?

    All these things come from the relationship a person has with themselves, what they have learned and what they really value and this will decide how they treat you.

    If I could decide between crossdressing and love it would than depend on whether I believed to my core that I was really loved.

  16. #16
    Platinum Blonde member Ressie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    SW Michigan
    Posts
    3,763
    So do I get divorced?
    Sounds like you're jumping the gun a little. A lot of marriages are doing OK in cases like yours. How's the relationship other than the crossdressing issue? Love is a decision you know. If you're depressed because of your marriage, then divorce might be considered. But you're not giving enough info to us "experts" to give advice.

  17. #17
    Senior Member MissTee's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Deep South
    Posts
    1,504
    Gheesh, that's a tough one for certain. Not sure I'm the one to advise, either. So, are you saying divorce is imminent? I would offer up that it's difficult to think that the survival of my relationship rested on this one issue (CD-ing). If she don't want to be a part of dressing then DADT would work for me. If you set the ultimatum of accept or else, then you have to be prepared to suffer the "or else" part.

  18. #18
    New Member carriecatgirl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    WA
    Posts
    24
    Ok im going to lay down some food for thought. How long did it take for u to get to know yourself in cding? One year or 20? To expect a so to accept in timely matter means that they need time. Just as u had time to find out your likes and dislikes so does it take time for your so. Just cause your therapist says she wont doesn't mean she cant or wont. I would give her time love and communication. Also some So's need tons of time some not so much. I wanted to say also that some have there own ideas of what is ok and what isnt ok. Its up to you on what you want to or are willing to compromise on. If its ither your family or your cding that takes president.Which ever is more important to you. Your desicion but Some partners don't want to be involved but are ok with giving you time to dress on your own. I dont have enough information to know whats going on to give your more on the gg/ partner front to help you. Just cause someone says that they wont doesnt mean that they wont forever..
    Last edited by carriecatgirl; 10-02-2012 at 11:33 PM.

  19. #19
    Female Illusionist! docrobbysherry's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Orange County, Calif.
    Posts
    24,894
    I'm with Serene. Confused about what u mean about what your therapist said/meant, Darla. The way I read your post, your therapist concluded that u r a CD and your wife will never accept that?

    Which makes no sense, from my experiences with professional counselors. They usually try to seek avenues of truth and compromise in relationships. Why would your therapist take away all hope of saving your marriage? It's not up to him/her, it's up to u and your wife. If u both wish to stay together, you'll agree to compromise and stay together. If one of u gives up, THEN your marriage is over! This happened in mine. My wife said she was done compromising and that was the end for us.

    I don't see this as a CD issue. If you've been together awhile, you've both already had to compromise. Your CDing is simply one more u need to work out. Whether u stay together is not up to your therapist. It's up to u 2!
    U can't keep doing the same things over and over and expect to enjoy life to the max. When u try new things, even if they r out of your comfort zone, u may experience new excitement and growth that u never expected.

    Challenge yourself and pursue your passions! When your life clock runs out, you'll have few or NO REGRETS!

  20. #20
    Member angpai30's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Provo, UT
    Posts
    448
    To many times in a relationship there are many things holding a couple together, but then there are those things ripping them apart. In my marriage when I still classified as a CD my wife would do all sorts of things to make me feel like she wanted to help, but then turn around and bash me instead. My point is, is that I did what I did because I had no intuition on what my ex was really saying because I was so involved and I felt like I just could not abandon being a trans woman. I wanted to be a woman so much that it destroyed any chance I had of even getting back with her like both of us wanted at a certain time of our seperation, but even now I could never go back to being a "Man". I have desired being a woman since I was five, which is the time I knew that I was different than the rest. As everyone has said... this is a time in you're life which you must make your own decision on. Does it feel right to divorce? Does it feel right to stay married? Does it feel like a lie? Does it feel like Truth? We all wish for acceptance, but in reality how many of us actually get accepted? I am not accepted by my family, but I still live with them. Nobody talks to me accept for one brother and my mother. I have six brothers and one sister and only one brother and my mother talk to me? OK, whatever time to move on. You have to weigh the consaquences of your decision because the ripple effect will not only effect you and your spouse. It will effect all that know and love you... are you willing for that to change as well? Life got better for me because I was always fighting with my wife and yelling at my kids. I was always angry, defensive, paranoid and bitter because I could not accept that I wanted to be a woman at that time. I feel differently now and my transition is a source of strength for me and I don't let anybody tell me otherwise. You have to take into consideration your own circumstances, your own family and friends, your wifes mental and emotional state as of right now and how can you help her feel better. I in my own relationship with my ex-wife made being a woman all I thought about and I regret that with all my heart and being, but I still would not go back. I am happier and life has more meaning to it now. Don't do anything that you know will not increase your own happiness and the happiness of all those who are intertwined with you. But if it must be done... just remember that when grafting a tree will the branch you are grafting make the tree stronger or will it weaken the tree. Does the branch have enough strength to help the tree overcome the challenges ahead. By removing the branch from one tree to graft it onto another tree don't just assume that the best decision to make would to graft it onto the tree. You have consider if the tree in which you wish to remove the branch is healthy enough to even overcome it's own challenges down the road. I would sit down with your wife and explain to her what you explained to us here, but don't mention divorce. The best thing that you could do is talk to your wife, family, and even friends if you have any that you can talk to about this. Don't let what your therapist said make you automatically beleive that divorce is the only and final answer because there is never a final answer just a decision that was made in hope of a better life. I'm sorry I started mumbling, but my divorce failed because that's what I thought and I made it so my ex didn't even want to be around me anymore because I was always dressed at home.


    Angela
    Last edited by angpai30; 10-03-2012 at 01:23 AM.

  21. #21
    Senior Member Diversity's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Posts
    1,038
    Tough to answer your question. My question to you is: Do you love your wife? If so, do you love her more than you love CD'ing? It would seem to me that you would always put your wife above your urges to CD. See if you can reach a compromise (with her setting boundaries that you can live with), then I believe there is a good opportunity to save your marriage. I know that I was lucky to save mine through talking with her!
    Di

  22. #22
    Platinum Member Beverley Sims's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    Lowestoft UK. Beverley was here.
    Posts
    30,955
    I would try and make your marriage work first.
    Just because there appear to be a lot of accepting SO's here it is not as clear cut as that.
    There are limitations.
    These people have worked at the marriage.
    Divorce is not something you contemplate lightly.
    It is for the rest of your life.
    Work on your elegance,
    and beauty will follow.

  23. #23
    Silver Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Northeast USA
    Posts
    4,004
    Darla,
    If that was my therapist I would never return!!! Does your therapist have training and experience with gender indentity issues? No therapist should get tired of listening to a client! That is his/her job! I have been to more than a half dozen untrained therapists, who assured me they knew gender issues. It wasn't until I changed practices, that I realized how I was teaching them and paying for the priviledge! I strongly suggest you try someone else. Also has your wife ever gone to a session with your therapist, with or without you? If no there is no way the therapist can make this conclusion!! Run Forest! Run!!

  24. #24
    Member Darla's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Posts
    308
    Wow. Woke up this morning to all your amazing replies, and I think I've figured out how to make a post last a long time. Give a little bit of information but not enough to fully flesh out the argument. Isn't that how the TV series Lost worked? My apologies for dumping the half story on you girls. And seeing as how it's really hard to reply to quotes on an iPhone screen please bear with me - I hope to hit all your questions....

    I Love my wife a lot. A lot. Like soul mates love, and our relationship reflects that. She's an only child and had an intense relationship with her mom and that same intensity is transferred to our relationship. We're a nuclear family (and there's a joke coming up) because we have all the strength of a tight knit family, but on the off days you know how nuclear energy reacts when not handled properly. I have no intention of leaving my family, but I do have this need to dress.

    How well do I know myself? Not that well in terms of who my feminine self is. And I need to know her. Dressing is one of the ways I want to know myself better, even if it's incompatible with the boundries I have now. And those boundries are as self imposed as those that my wife and I have discussed.

    What do I want? To explore this side of me which means the space to dress, at home, possibly in a DADT manner if that works. I would like to attend a support group at some point- I'd like to know some people who are like me. I'd like a little freedom to shop for clothes, but within reason and not break the bank. But not have to hide charge purchases or stash cash or lie about where I went at lunchtime.

    So that's the form of acceptance I'm hoping to get. I guess some of you would call it tolerance, but it's a step better than where I am at now. I haven't dressed in 6 months and my brain is beginning to melt.

    And as to what my therapist said, I applaud her in some ways, was that through all the sessions we've had she's come to believe that my wife won't under any circumstance come to accept any part of my dressing. So we work on ways to find joy in other parts of life. I operated in therapy as if there might be a chance my wife would accept some part of it, or might come to grow into a little acceptance. But I think my therapist put the hammer down and put it bluntly. She might be right. And so that left me hanging - or rather as many of you said - the balls in my court and always has been.

    And as a postscript to this my wife always prys after therapy. I've been moody and depressed probably for two weeks, seriously and yesterday I looked like that cumulatively with the added bonus of being run over by the therapy bus. My wife and I talked this morning and there were a few cracks in the door. She asked what I wanted to do and pitched a few far flung scenarios, like underdressing, or dressing fully when the family was away, and also touching on why sexy men's underwear isn't the same as a bra and panty set from Victorias secret. It was a surprise, and it got us talking. It was a small break in the clouds. I feel like a coward for not bring it up sooner, and I'm trying to let go of the guilt for not having done so.

    And divorce was a bad, overreative statement. It would take a lot for me to seriously contemplate this. I do love her very much.

    Darla

  25. #25
    Gold Member NicoleScott's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Mississippi
    Posts
    5,000
    Yes, we should have revealed that we crossdress before we married, but we didn't, so here we are.
    Darla, when my wife found out that I crossdressed, she wanted us to go to counseling, and I agreed. The problem was that I wanted her to accept my crossdressing, and she wanted me "cured". Not having a common goal doomed the counseling to failure. There was no way it could have succeeded (as far as meeting conflicting goals). Maybe the goal should have been to save the marriage.
    This is hard to believe but true: the counselors (husband wife team, meeting with my wife and me both individually and together) recommended that we stop the counseling sessions, and that we split, seeing that I could not stop crossdressing and she could not tolerate a crossdressing husband. Harsh reality. We divorced soon after.
    But life went on. For both of us.
    Last edited by NicoleScott; 10-03-2012 at 10:44 AM.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


Check out these other hot web properties:
Catholic Personals | Jewish Personals | Millionaire Personals | Unsigned Artists | Crossdressing Relationship
BBW Personals | Latino Personals | Black Personals | Crossdresser Chat | Crossdressing QA
Biker Personals | CD Relationship | Crossdressing Dating | FTM Relationship | Dating | TG Relationship


The crossdressing community is one that needs to stick together and continue to be there for each other for whatever one needs.
We are always trying to improve the forum to better serve the crossdresser in all of us.

Browse Crossdressers By State