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busker
01-13-2010, 10:30 PM
Why should they?

I've been here for a while now and have had an opportunity to read a lot of the threads. Despite the half gazillion threads, they could all be boiled down to maybe a hundred topics and one of the most passionate topics is "when is my SO going to accept my dressing"? Hence, my question, why should they?
A member here continues to drive home the point that while it would be nice if his wife were just a bit more accepting, this wasn't part of the original wedding arrangements. She didn't ask to be married to a crossdresser and she/he accepts that point of view and is determined to make it work in her favor (at least I get that impression, not knowing her personally).
So it goes for all with an SO who wishes never to be involved in that part of their mate's life.
The other part of this post is a question of why continue to try and make a globe into a cube? At this point in life, one should start really considering the options that only adults can consider. Here again, its suggested-family first, dressing, if possible ,at the end of the day.
The other options are: divorce -if you are married you are freeing up your ex-spouse to pursue a life without a dresser and all the pains that go with that, and you to persue life as best you can with the possibilites of dressing when you want. That said, some men are not skilled enough to make it as a single person in this world, so this is a tough choice to make ; simply living alone and enjoying your passion for dressing (why is it so difficult to keep some things secret? Unfortunately, the closet has gotten a bad name over the years. I keep my balls in there--I wanted to be an all-star bowler) ; living alone and outing yourself (fraught with all sorts of unintended consequences or just the pure joy of living free of worry ); staying married and finding a place to enjoy your dressing (just like having a hobby, one doesn't necessarily have to take the whole family along and they may actually prefer that you did your own thing alone anyway) ; and finally, if every creative soul on earth waited to be patted on the head for what they wanted to do, there would be damned little art, music or literature, and a lot more besides, on this little globe we live on.
Finding a way to do what you enjoy without trying to drag everyone else along is very likely the way to go. It is a way to free oneself within the confines of a life that may seem difficult. There will be converts along the way (at their own pace and time) . Figuring out how one can incorporate themselves into the life around them should be the priority--hopefully the rest will follow.
Mandrake out of water

JiveTurkeyOnRye
01-13-2010, 10:37 PM
The wedding vows are vows of adjusting and compromising in a partnership. While the spouse may not agree to specifically being ok with crossdressing, the vows are "For better or for worse," not "as long as nothing ever changes."

sherri52
01-13-2010, 10:52 PM
I have to agree with Ryan.
It's for better or worse. Was your wife a nagger before you got married. I married my second wife for love but I was attracted toher long hair, Longer than mine. At that time the middle of my back, later past my belt. Did I want her to cut it and get a perm. I don't think so, but I dealt with it. Why couldn't she deal with my dressing, and I didn't do it in front of her.

Katesback
01-13-2010, 10:54 PM
Well said. Sadly I have a feeling all the effort you put into writting that post will fall on deaf ears.

I am a post opp ts gal. I learned that for the most part when one goes through transition you make a whole new set of friends. The ones you knew before tend to cease to be your friends. Why? Well you are not the person they knew anymore.

The fact that this happens should be a cue to CDs that for the most part SOs are not exactly interested in thier hubbies being girls. Are there some SOs that are? Sure but few and far between. And now I know I myself am writting to deaf ears. Guess we are both in the same writters club or something like that.

I dont know about you but I have a professional cat herder license.

Katie

AllieSF
01-13-2010, 10:56 PM
I like what JiveT said. I also believe that each person needs to make their own decision on how they deal with this side of themselves and the people around them, including and most importantly their SO. Most of our members here are very mature adults, so they know the risks they are taking and the potential negative consequences of keeping all this a secret.

aggi123
01-13-2010, 10:57 PM
Some secrets are tough keeping. To some people, secrets become terrible burdens. Covering one secret with a lie, simply creates more secrets and lies. The stress can become unbearable. I've barely dealt with it, and I had to let the horse out of the closet. Unfortunately for me, that includes telling my Girlfriend who (i think) has no idea about my dressing. Am I going to be taking a gamble and throwing it all away? You betcha. It will be far better now than later.

Rachel Morley
01-13-2010, 10:59 PM
So what are you saying? ... it's a case of "put up or shut up?" ... hummm, .. where's the love? ... where's the understanding? Where's even the curiosity? If you really love the other person wouldn't you want to at least try to understand what makes them tick? I don't think it's unreasonable to open you heart to your wife and expect at least a little bit of empathy :2c:

lingerieLiz
01-13-2010, 11:21 PM
Relations are made up of a lot of compromises. Most people entering a relationship give up relationships with other potential mates and many other things to form a bond. I know couples where one hates other things (not CDing) that their mates do and refuse to participate in the activities. Yet they don't seek divorce, they allow or comprise with their SOs. Yes there are things that can not be reconciled that end in divorce. Having been married for eons, my wife and I don't agree on several things, but we agree on the most important subjects. A relationship is constant adjustment as we grow older and learn we change, if you can't, you won't be happy in any relationship. That includes work. I know people who didn't like their job, quit and 3 jobs later still hate their job. They will never be happy and several are divorced.

SuzanneBender
01-13-2010, 11:34 PM
The wedding vows are vows of adjusting and compromising in a partnership. While the spouse may not agree to specifically being ok with crossdressing, the vows are "For better or for worse," not "as long as nothing ever changes."

I am out right now waiting on a band to start playing. I read this post on my phone and this one hits close to home. I have to go through the frustration of typing on my Iphone to reply or I will be mulling it over all night. I shared this thread with the girls that I am out with (TS, CD, GG) and the overwhelming consensus is we vowed to love our spouse no matter the circumstances. We enter into that vow knowing that our spouses change and so will we.

The foundation of a relationship is honesty. One can perpetuate a lie and hide in the closet, but eventually that closet door and your balls (bowling of course, possibly even golf) will fall out and you will get caught. When that day happens you will not only be asking for acceptance you will be asking for forgivness for your betrayal. Trust me I have lived it.
Katie is correct. We shouldn't expect the love of our life to yell, "yippe my hubby wants to wear a dress and/or be a woman". She isn't going to grab the car keys in order to drive you to the salon and mall. But which is worse sheltering them from this reality or lieing to them about who you are?

For me this is not about simply receiving a pat on the head for a "hobby". This is about acceptance from those which I love. Acceptance isn't helping me chose my new breast forms. It is simply acknowledgment that we live with this in our lives and the search for a comprimise that allows both of us to live a happy life.

Unfortunately, many of us own up to this way too late in life. Our loved ones have to share the price for our not having the bravery to challenge society's norms earlier in our lives. That makes acceptance of this is difficult for them, but it does not negate the fact that we can't simply turn our transgenderism off. If we could I am sure there would be a significantly fewer number of T gals on T guys on this site. I could sell my motorcycle tomorrow if my wife asked, but I can't remove the fact that at my core is a feminine soul.

So to answer your question. Why should they? I don't know because I am not a GG wife wrestling with this. If I had to wager a bet its the same reason why two people marry... to love and to cherish, to have and to hold, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do they part. Ryan got it right on the first post.

That is just my two cents. I wish you were here so we could talk about this between sets over a drink or two. I am sure it would be a lot more fun.

carolinoakland
01-13-2010, 11:41 PM
Well said, i think that you have to do what works best for a person and their situation. It's almost like the serenity prayer, you change what you can, accept what you can't, and wait for the day when you CAN change things.

danielle.cd
01-14-2010, 09:36 AM
lets just say that the wife is bi sexual and married u ( person) because they love them for them now i dont see a big deal there, but if the women is straight up not into women at all (wich to me is a little strange cause women especialy if they have close friends somehow admire other women in some way) then i could see it being a problem, but in general most women just dont have an understanding of the dressing and feelings and alot of them will say your gay and or slander u for it and most crossdressers are not even interested in men at all .

if u really think about it why would they say that about a crossdresser and not about a clown, both dress up , they both were makeup, they both change there voice somehow, and they tri to be different people when there dressed, who knows maybe the wifes are scared of clowns. lol

Sandra
01-14-2010, 10:00 AM
I don't remember in my wedding vows agreeing to being lied to and not trusted.



Perahps if all of you got off your high horses and came clean early on to your SOs then maybe just maybe things would be better.

Karren H
01-14-2010, 10:19 AM
In my humble opinion, if they weren't made privy early on then they didn't sign up for this and don't have to accept anything!! I don't blame my wife for not accepting my crossdressing. Hell I wouldn't accept it if she did either... Good for the gander is good for the goose even if the gander wants to be a goosette!!

SuzanneBender
01-14-2010, 10:40 AM
if u really think about it why would they say that about a crossdresser and not about a clown, both dress up , they both were makeup, they both change there voice somehow, and they tri to be different people when there dressed, who knows maybe the wifes are scared of clowns. lol

Clowns are creepy! I know they scare me.


In my humble opinion, if they weren't made privy early on then they didn't sign up for this and don't have to accept anything!! I don't blame my wife for not accepting my crossdressing. Hell I wouldn't accept it if she did either... Good for the gander is good for the goose even if the gander wants to be a goosette!!

I didn't expect my wife to accept when I told her. In fact, I expected to see my stuff tossed out on the front porch. She didn't have to accept it, but at that point there was really only two choices. Stay married and find a way to make this new revelation work (acceptance) or say the deal is off an get divorced. Karren I always read your posts and from what I have seen you wife is accepting. Its just not at the level you would like. If she didn't accept you she would have kicked you out on your pretty little Goosette kester.

It is hard for a girl to come clean with their spouse when they have not even come clean with themselves. This site is littered with wonderful TGs that thought they could make it go away and then realized long after they were married that this was not the case.

minalost
01-14-2010, 10:58 AM
The wedding vows are vows of adjusting and compromising in a partnership. While the spouse may not agree to specifically being ok with crossdressing, the vows are "For better or for worse," not "as long as nothing ever changes."


I don't remember in my wedding vows agreeing to being lied to and not trusted.

Perahps if all of you got off your high horses and came clean early on to your SOs then maybe just maybe things would be better.

I have to agree with BOTH of these thoughts. And that's why some marriages make it, and some don't. And I don't think any of us are in a possition to judge a spouse who can't handle it.

I also think that it's wrong to blame the CDer for hiding what he/she is. The ramifications - job, family, friends... are just too great. We are also taught by society that we are "bad" for crossdressing, so, being unable (in most cases) to stop, we hid it.

All this being said, I still think that the best path is to tell your potential mate before getting married!
:2c:

Karren H
01-14-2010, 10:59 AM
Clowns are creepy! I know they scare me.



I didn't expect my wife to accept when I told her. In fact, I expected to see my stuff tossed out on the front porch. She didn't have to accept it, but at that point there was really only two choices. Stay married and find a way to make this new revelation work (acceptance) or say the deal is off an get divorced. Karren I always read your posts and from what I have seen you wife is accepting. Its just not at the level you would like. If she didn't accept you she would have kicked you out on your pretty little Goosette kester.
.

Actually there are more than two choices, in my humble opinion. Leave, stay married and work it out, stay married and make life hell... Stay married and ignore the situation... Stay married and leave... Leave and make life hell!! Lol. And my wife accepts me as her husband, not her girlfriend... So as long as I keep it out of her face, she turns a blind eye to my hobby... But the tension is still hovering in the background...

minalost
01-14-2010, 11:02 AM
Actually there are more than two choices, in my humble opinion. Leave, stay married and work it out, stay married and make life hell... Stay married and ignore the situation... Stay married and leave... Leave and make life hell!! Lol. And my wife accepts me as her husband, not her girlfriend... So as long as I keep it out of her face, she turns a blind eye to my hobby... But the tension is still hovering in the background...

Thanks Karren for your usual dose of reality!

Veronica75
01-14-2010, 11:10 AM
There's truth to both sides, but the fact that the issue is CDing and is being discussed on a site with a preponderence of CDs is going to skew things.

If the unapproved activity-- and I'll equate it further to CDing by saying thr unapproved compulsion-- were gambling or other women, our opinions might change. Both of those can, after all, range from more or less harmless (office pools, causal flirting), to significantly damaging (massive gambling debts, cheating).

In both those cases, as in CDing, there has to be compromise. In some cases that will be a spouse caving in entirely: such as letting her man keep a mistress with her knowledge (I've known this to happen). It could be a moderate path: the wife letting the husband gamle whatever he likes from his "fun money" as long as he doesn't touch the budget.

But it can also be-- and I think this is what is often missed on this site regarding crossdressing-- the husband realizing his activity hurts his spouse, and agreeing to fight the good fight and avoid the temptation to pursue his compulsive behaviors-- no, I will not gamble, no I will not flirt, and... no, I will not crossdress.

We can't help feeling the desire, even the "need" to crossdress, but we are all human beings with the tools built in to deny ourselves things that might draw us very strongly, especially if we know indulging those things can be harmful to our lives at large. Saying a wife needs to compromise and let her husband crossdress is too narrow-- there are situations where crossdressing (or gambling, or philandering) are NOT damaging to the relationship, based on a variety of factors, the most important being the attitudes of the people involved. But there are also situations where it IS damaging, and we each need to make our own decisions as to what we do, what we risk, and how we treat our SO.

sallyjones
01-14-2010, 11:50 AM
i think we all go through some or all of it. but for god sakes dont throw your clothes away. long talks an understanding relationship are what lets us do what we do. but you married her and she you. so that should be very imporant in what you do in the future. its not cut and dry, all or nothing.

danielle.cd
01-14-2010, 01:39 PM
its almost a double standerd cause i know my wife was fit a slimmer then and i liked here weight and now she has gained and expects me to just like it and deal with it well how am i to say well your not the same so im throwing you out, im not atracted to you now that i now u dont care for your body the way u used to. i could see if some one says im gay an i dont want to be with u but to want to be with her still emotionaly and physicaly i mean u agree to this when u get married good bad ugly sad all of it u may not like it but i married u and for u it is part of u just like someones past is part of them how it affects u is up to u but when u marry someone your not doing it so u can stay the same person all your life anyways if your gay or going to transition all the way to female i can see them not wanting to be with u anymore but not for just crossdressing

Karren H
01-14-2010, 02:38 PM
its almost a double standerd cause i know my wife was fit a slimmer then and i liked here weight and now she has gained and expects me to just like it and deal with it well how am i to say well your not the same so im throwing you out.......

Ohh come on! She didn't hide her weight gain in some uber secret girdle that she unexpectedly exposed to you one day!! "News release..... 110 pound woman explodes to 250 pounds when her super girlde fails.... Photos at 11".

Not even close to being on the same level... In my humble opinion.

CamilleLeon
01-14-2010, 03:49 PM
This assumes of course that you didn't tell your wife til after marriage...if she knows beforehand she did ask (well, chose to accept) to marry a crossdresser.

If it's important enough to you that you'd consider divorce or bitch about how unaccepting she is, you should have talked to her about it before you asked her to be your wife for the rest of your life. I know, I know, a lot of people think that marriage will somehow end their desire to dress up, and that's kind of your fault for assuming that getting married will change how you feel. I've never understood that arguement - it's just a lame excuse thrown out by guilt and denial and it ends up hurting a lot of people, especially if you wait through years of marriage before you own up to what you really are.

Why should she accept you if you've never been honest with her and yourself?

TJ Tresa
01-14-2010, 04:26 PM
I am currently on my second marriage My first wife did not know abut My crossdressing, my current wife not only accepts but encourages it. Mu first wife and I divorced because I didn't make enough money, ( so much for better or worse, righer or poorer.) Now my second and current wife, found out about a month after we were married about my crossdressing.
Now with all of that said, please allow me to resopnd with this. In today's world, with divorce so easily available those vows go out the window for most of the population. I have heard several Mom's tell thier daughters that if it doesn't work out you can always get a divorce. This is the mind set for most marriages these days.
I do not feel that we, (crossdressers,) have a right to force our hoby, lifestyle, addiction, or what ever you want to call it, on to someone who did not know about before you got married. Think about it. Would you want your daughter to stayed married to an abusive drug user, when she had no idea that he had such a habit before, or even if he developed the habit afterwards. Do what is the difference.
Just so you all know I strongly feel that Marriage is a sacred institution and should never ever be entered into lightly, never go into a marriage with the idea that divorce is an option.
I wish all my crossdressing sisters couold be as fortunate as I am and have an accepting wife, however knowing that all of do not enjoy this. Let me say that you girls should make your choices based on the love of your life, the love for your wife, and wether or not you want to be happily married, just married, or divorced and alone. If you are not married as of right now, please before you get married be forthright and tell her about your feminine side. Let her decide before you get married if she can handle it.

joandher
01-14-2010, 04:54 PM
I'm an old lady now and haven't told my wife all, she doesn't mind me under dressing even washers and irons my undies, but I couldn't tell her I was a c/d 37 years ago things like c/dressing and gay people etc etc ( I am 100% hetro ) were just not talked about you would have been committed to a hospital if you admitted to it
Times are so different now with all the technology there is today ,also a greater under standing of acceptance, the younger generation should have no problem in broaching the subject with there intended,
What would your s/o say if you became an addicted gambler or alcoholic or something similar

:hugs: J-JAY

melissacd
01-14-2010, 05:54 PM
Each of us has our own set of experiences in life that sets the tone for what we will and will not agree to accept. Some have lived lives that allow them to modify the filters that they look at life through because the love is the most important thing. Others just do not have that ability. Their filters trump anything else and so they cannot accept anything that goes outside of that range.

I accept that my ex wife has a point of view that can never include cross dressing, it is her right to believe whatever she wants, to have her own truth. I also accept that my point of view could not leave cross dressing out of the equation.

Her point of view was as valid and correct for her as mine was and still is to me. We hit an impasse that we could not resolve and after 25 years together decided that we would be better off not being together. It was a painful choice but really in the end the only choice that could be made.

Now she lives her life happily and the way she wants and I do the same.

The real issue is a) being able to accept that another person's point of view is equally valid to your own or anyone else's for that matter and b) being willing, after a reasonable attempt to work through it, to let go and move on.

Staying together because of some idealistic concept of what people who love each other should do and be willing to accept is just a pipe dream. If a person does not like an aspect of you that they never signed up for they are well within their rights to choose not to be there, not to be a part of it. Is it sad, yes. Is it painful, yes. Is it the right thing, sometimes yes and sometimes no. Every situation is different and has to be worked through in the most reasonable way that we can, but we always have to be prepared to let go if in the end we have tried our best and can see that moving on is the best choice when all else fails.

suchacutie
01-14-2010, 06:05 PM
Let me start with the easy part: There are positives to crossdressing, and we all know that, and these positives stretch to the relationship. As we struggle to improve our feminine selves we most certainly become more empathetic to our spouses. We understand what they go through every day. We learn how they think...not one person on this forum should have to be accused of saying, "I haven't a clue how women think". Our feminine selves makes us better spouses, broader conversationalists with our spouses, and should help them feel more comfortable in the marriage even if they never see us dressed and never consider our feminine selves their girlfriends. Ok, all the better if they do, but our increased closeness doesn't require it. Bottom line, crossdressing should make us the best spouses on the planet! (ok, how's that for conceit, huh?!).

But..........................

There are a number of potential land mines: 1) Let's not forget that presenting as the other gender is not the most accepted pasttime. In many people's minds it is perverted, sinful, and makes us less "manly" (if they only knew how "manly" we have to be to even think of walking out in public dressed as a woman they would reconsider!). 2) If our spouses didn't know up front, these women understood that they married MEN. Those who are competely hetero, as is my wife, would recoil at the thought of intimacy with their "man" in this framework, especially if he is really good en femme! (a kick in the teeth, huh...get good at being a woman and make it worse). 3) The potential societal "stigma" that would be attached to our little "perversion" might be thought of as a destabilizing factor in the family, in the workplace, and in front of the children in the eyes of a wife who suddenly finds out her man enjoys being (needs to be) en femme. Their whole world could seem to be upside down in an instant. Also, she sure as hell isn't going to talk to anyone about it, thus isolating her from any help that might normally be available to her. Also, if she is really close to her husband, she can't talk to that normally stable confident! 4) One big elephant in the room is intimacy. Suddenly your MAN is a woman, and can you get that out of your mind? (ok, eventually, but what a rocky road to get there).

A husband presenting as her gender crosses all manner of potential landmines that the length of one's hair or one's weight or leaving one's socks under the bed can't hope to compete with. We are talking about emotion here, not logic! When threads are started about what we would do if our wives suddenly told us they have been dressing as men and going to bars to swig beer with their guy buddies, some agree it would be great but most are silent on the issue. Let me say again, it's emotion, it's expectation on the deepest level. It is hard!

Ok...after almost 1000 posts, you all know that my wife and I have been doing this together for 4+ years. We started it together. We do it together. We talk about it. She teaches me, giving her complete input on what she wants me to learn from her! She likes that I understand her better. I like it too! Am I going to go clubbing without her? No. She is my wife. I wouldn't go clubbing without her in male mode! Have I stopped being her guy? No. And maybe that's the point. I haven't pushed the buttons that we all are in a position to push. My world would be very different if I suddenly really needed to be Tina 24/7. Suddenly I would not be the man she married. There has to be a point in an agreement when the original contract is stretched to the point of breach of contract, to the point where the original contract conditions are not present. Gender is a big part of the marriage contract. As much as I adore Tina, if it were necessary for me to completely transition to Tina, I would understand that my wife would be fully justified in claiming breach of contract. Likewise, if she decided to take hormones and present as a male 24/7, I might very well also claim breach of contract.

It comes down to each relationship, what the agreement is, and how far it can be stretched before it breaks. That's why there is a legal procedure called annulment. What we are doing is serious business, both for us, and for our spouses. Hopefully this next generation will be the first to be able to discuss this openly, and without malice, before wedding vows are taken. That will obviate the need for this thread in the future. We can only hope and work toward that goal.

as always, just my :2c:

tina

melissacd
01-14-2010, 06:25 PM
I really like your response suchacutie. Very well articulated!

busker
01-14-2010, 08:46 PM
Thanks for so many considered replies. I think I may have made several reader a bit defensive--that wasn't my idea. I wanted to focus more on this line Figuring out how one can incorporate themselves into the life around them should be the priority in a more practical/philosophical way but I got carried away.
Many very good points were made that sharing is important, the notion of for better or worse (sometimes works) and still there are so many problems.
Several did mention other "hobbies" and how they are incorporated and accepted or not. compromise is an important issue but how often does it really work? I remember reading of one cder who "compromised" by giving away the house, the kids and bank account so that his then divorcing spouse would not out him.
I need to rephrase my question. Assuming that 1) she knows about her spouses cding, 2) is not at all interested in that activity and won't encourage it 3) won't necessarily chase her spouse around the house with a broom when he does
HOW DOES ONE FIND the PEACE to do what is important in life and the expression of it without
1)feeling that one is not cut from whole cloth 2) that while this activity hurts no one, it is not possible to dismiss thoughts that a spouse may be adversely affected mentally by this expression of self 3) how do we practitioners of this art fit it into the life around us with a minimum of disturbance and be accepted at the same time? 4) how do we avoid feeling that somehow we are still living with this "headache" no mater how well things seem to be going?
Mandrake out of water

ReineD
01-14-2010, 10:31 PM
Busker, you do it with negotiation. If you can accept that your wife does not want to be involved, you can ask her to accept that you need private time and space to CD. The rest will have to come from your own inner strength; the ability to forgive yourself for who you are.

danielle.cd
01-15-2010, 09:48 AM
egzactly (spelled that bad) my wife doesnt really like to see me dressed so i do it when her and the kids go to bed or are gone during the day for me thats my way of not throwing it in her face, if she asks what am i going to do i tell her have some me time and she just goes to sleep

DaisyG
01-15-2010, 10:40 AM
It is hard for a girl to come clean with their spouse when they have not even come clean with themselves. This site is littered with wonderful TGs that thought they could make it go away and then realized long after they were married that this was not the case.

I couldn't agree more.

It took me over FIVE DECADES to understand myself; to know who my femme side really is and that Daisy really is forever. During this time I destroyed an opportunity to marry an absolutely wonderful woman because I couldn't tell her something I didn't understand myself, yet somehow I had the sense not to marry her until I could tell her.

A year later I ended up marrying another super lady (who was promoting marriage enough trhat I relented, and didn't tell). I kept my secret until I was discovered after 35 years with her. Fortunately after a few months she gradually came to accept, then participate. I had 5 years to enjoy and share my CDing with her before she passed away. If only I had been able to understand my self a lot better, a lot earlier; and only if I could then have mustered the courage to tell her. We could have shared many more years out in the open.

I learned the hard way. I sincerely hope not many others will follow my path.

I counsel to all:

Early and full disclosure, continuing conversation, and complete honesty. Effort at building and maintaining trust in each other.

Daisy

utah beauty
01-15-2010, 11:27 AM
I suppose there's no really good response to someone going through this... if their SO is rejecting their CD or TS ways... just like no good response to you if you get dumped by someone you were head over heels for... life's just tough sometimes, and we all need friends ... thus why this website exists :)

Malori Cross
01-15-2010, 11:51 AM
Well said!!! Excellent! Thanks.

"So as long as I keep it out of her face, she turns a blind eye to my hobby... But the tension is still hovering in the background..."

Bingo. Same here. I can live with this.

Erica2Sweet
01-15-2010, 12:29 PM
...I also think that it's wrong to blame the CDer for hiding what he/she is...

Sorry, that's a cop-out. The very least one can do for his or her SO is to be honest about who they are. Being open and honest is simply the tougher of the two choices one can make with regard to full disclosure, that's all.

If one feels the need to keep secrets this big, then why not fore-go the marriage proposal and save the woman the pain and suffering of later finding out she has been (or is being) deceived?

I'm guilty of hiding my femme side in past relationships... and surprisingly none of them worked out. I stopped hiding my femme side and discovered that the defense skills one acquires in keeping big secrets is the very thing that was causing the problems in those past relationships. Things now are much much better relationship wise, and life makes so much more sense.

All I had to do was take some time, think, and be honest with myself, and I quickly realized lying and keeping secrets was no way to sustain a relationship. It was selfish of me to hide the important bits of me that I felt were not at the time admirable qualities.

Acadeca
01-19-2010, 03:40 AM
Ohh come on! She didn't hide her weight gain in some uber secret girdle that she unexpectedly exposed to you one day!! "News release..... 110 pound woman explodes to 250 pounds when her super girlde fails.... Photos at 11".

Not even close to being on the same level... In my humble opinion.

Thanks, Karren, for being honest about this. I appreciate your forthrightness.

One of the issues is that it's NOT that CDers changed; many knew they were CDers when they married. So it's about telling the truth, not about changing.

And, as Karren said, I always wonder how much most of the CDers here would accept their wives doing something analogous--that is, trying to present as an animal, a baby, etc, not just wearing a pair of jeans.



If one feels the need to keep secrets this big, then why not fore-go the marriage proposal and save the woman the pain and suffering of later finding out she has been (or is being) deceived?

I'm guilty of hiding my femme side in past relationships... and surprisingly none of them worked out. I stopped hiding my femme side and discovered that the defense skills one acquires in keeping big secrets is the very thing that was causing the problems in those past relationships. Things now are much much better relationship wise, and life makes so much more sense.


Absolutely. Being honest doesn't just save her pain. It also gives the CDer a chance to find someone who can accept him as he is, without spending a lifetime trying to force it. It may take longer to find a compatible partner, but a happy marriage is worth it.

Hope
01-19-2010, 05:46 AM
Ultimately, at the end of the day every person in every relationship has to do what is best not only for themselves, but for their relationship. When one gets married, they suddenly have to stop thinking first about their own welfare and start thinking first about the welfare, not only of another person, but of their relationship with that person. That is a huge shift in mindset, and it can take a while to happen... but it MUST happen, because a marriage is not a one way street, set in stone for time and all eternity. People change, grow, and blossom not only during the course of a life, but during the course of a marriage as well. If they do otherwise they are doing something spectacularly wrong. Expecting that either wife or husband will not change is an expectation that will lead to certain misery.

The CDers who don't disclose to their wives before marriage (for those who were fully aware and cognizant of their lot in life) don't really deserve to be in marriages. At the same time, wives who refuse to accept their husbands CDing (after a fair period of time to get past the surprise) also really don't deserve to be in marriages. And I don't mean that in a small way. I don't mean that people who can't be vulnerable with their partner shouldn't be married to people who refuse to accept there partners. I mean they shouldn't be married to anybody. Guys who can't be vulnerable with there partners should not have partners. Women who cannot accept their parters for who they are, should not have partners.

"Why should a partner accept another partner's CDing when that isn't what they signed up for?" Because it IS what they signed up for.

What about if a wife is in a car accident? The husband didn't sign up for life with a paraplegic. What if he really likes to dance?

Here is the thing a lot of angry wives seem to miss entirely - the femme nature the guy carries around with him, is a big part of what makes him who he is. If you want to change your mate significantly, if you wish that a significant part of what makes your mate who they are would simply go away, or if you refuse to have anything to do with it - you have no business being married to that person. If you cannot support your mate - you do not deserve to be with that person. And quite frankly, why would anyone expect any less from their mates? Why would anyone commit themselves to the health, welfare and support of another person who is not willing or able to commit to them in the same way?

But lets be honest about what the problem really is here - because it really isn't about CDing or car accidents, or clown shoes. It's about people being healthy, self aware, emotionally mature human beings - something that the human race is woefully short on. Healthy people can have healthy marriages - unhealthy people simply can't.

"Why should a partner accept another partner's CDing when that isn't what they signed up for?" Because it IS what they signed up for.

JiveTurkeyOnRye
01-19-2010, 07:37 AM
One of the issues is that it's NOT that CDers changed; many knew they were CDers when they married. So it's about telling the truth, not about changing.

Absolutely. Being honest doesn't just save her pain. It also gives the CDer a chance to find someone who can accept him as he is, without spending a lifetime trying to force it. It may take longer to find a compatible partner, but a happy marriage is worth it.

You're not wrong here. I am an advocate for full disclosure before things get serious. The only issue I have with it, is that it works great in a perfect world. But since our world is sometimes very harsh to crossdressers, sometimes there are complications. Especially for people who got married more than a decade or so ago, or even longer, before things like gender and sexuality were being openly discussed. And it is a world where someone might be married to someone they truly love but also need to come out as a crossdresser.

(I mean no offense to anyone here, but so it's not confusing, I'm going to use male pronouns here for the husband and female for the wife so it is clear who I'm talking about.)

Is it wrong for a husband to hide his crossdressing from his wife? Yes. Is it understandable why he would? Yes. The biggest reason why he didn't tell her is usually because he isn't comfortable with it yet himself. Also often men who crossdress think "I can stop once I'm with her." So he doesn't tell her because he thinks it won't matter.

The fact is sometimes it has taken so many years for him to tell her because he wasn't secure in his own feelings about it yet either. Having said that, if someone is comfortable coming on here and posting frequently about it, they really should muster up the strength to tell the person that is supposed to be their partner.

But when he finally tells her, then a great deal of compassion is required on both sides and that there is where the "for better and for worse" part of the vows really kicks in. If he tells her the right way, and gives her the chance to work through her pain and doesn't overload her with details, and even perhaps goes to counseling with her, and she still leaves because of the crossdressing, well then that is partially on her as much as it is on him.

Samantha Kelsey
01-19-2010, 10:34 AM
I find that many CDers tend to despise their wife/SO for not accepting them as they are and that their partner will despise them for wanting to wear the clothes of the opposite sex. Everybody changes throughout their lives so its wrong to say 'you're not the person I married' usually this will be from a partner who weighs half as much again as they did at the start of the relationship.

Don't give me the line "but it's only the crossdressing I/they dont like", You either like someone or you dont.

How can you live with some one who doesn't like you or who you dont like?

I hear many of you say "I'm only staying to keep the family together".
Get a life man!
Your upset, she's upset and the chances are the kids have picked up that theres something wrong and they're upset as well.

Do em all a favour and split!
Ah! you say, but thats a bind and stirs up a boat load of trouble.
Not as much heartache in a divorce as there is in living with someone you despise.
Excuses, excuses.
I'll bet you're afraid of having to find a new place to live, doing your own cooking, cleaning, and oh god! what will the neighbours say.
Believe me all the gossip will be over and you'll be forgotten in two weeks.
Then,
Bliss,
You can dress up whenever you want to with absolutly no hassle. You may even find a new partner! BUT REMEMBER!!!!!! Tell them from the start that your a crossdresser or you'll be back where you started!


.

ReineD
01-19-2010, 01:15 PM
or if you refuse to have anything to do with it - you have no business being married to that person. If you cannot support your mate - you do not deserve to be with that person.

I agree with everything you say except this part. We don't live in a society that has taught us that gender (and to some degree, sexual) variance is OK. It is hard to overcome a lifetime of indoctrination. It is even difficult for some CDs. And we don't even know if sexual preferences are hard-wired. An accepting wife invariably needs to accept that her husband, or a part of him, is feminine.

I think that a wife can acknowledge that her husband CDs and she can respect him enough to give him the space and time for self-expression, without having to be actively involved with the CDing herself. But if this is not enough for the husband, if the CDing needs to be a much larger part of his life than his wife can live with, then I agree they should not stay married. But, it becomes more complicated to end a marriage the older and the closer the partners are to retirement.

Laura_Stephens
01-19-2010, 04:09 PM
In my humble opinion, if they weren't made privy early on then they didn't sign up for this and don't have to accept anything!! I don't blame my wife for not accepting my crossdressing. Hell I wouldn't accept it if she did either... Good for the gander is good for the goose even if the gander wants to be a goosette!!

Karen, I couldn't agree more. If I had the opportunity to live my life over, I would have told her BEFORE we got engaged. My wife doesn't accept at all and it's not her fault.

JiveTurkeyOnRye
01-19-2010, 04:32 PM
We understand what they go through every day. We learn how they think...not one person on this forum should have to be accused of saying, "I haven't a clue how women think".

When threads are started about what we would do if our wives suddenly told us they have been dressing as men and going to bars to swig beer with their guy buddies, some agree it would be great but most are silent on the issue. Let me say again, it's emotion, it's expectation on the deepest level. It is hard!


tina

Tina you made a lot of points and I'm sorry I can't address them all but I'm replying via iPhone. I wanted to address this issue though. Women can and do basically what you describe. I know lots of women who will swig beer, wear sports jerseys or jeans and t-shirts and hang with their friends, male and female, the same way guys do. It isnt considered abnormal at all. Women are free to act like guys. Maybe the reason some people stay silent when threads start is cause their wife already does this stuff.

I know this isn't the same as actually presenting as men, but would so many CDs actually want to pass as women if they could get away with "girly" interests like femme clothes and makeup in guy mode? And would these same occasionally tomboyish women be ok with their men coming to the makeup counter or wearing dresses as long as they continued to present as a man in a dress as opposed to dressing as a woman? I'm guessing most would not.

Hope
01-19-2010, 05:38 PM
I agree with everything you say except this part. We don't live in a society that has taught us that gender (and to some degree, sexual) variance is OK. It is hard to overcome a lifetime of indoctrination. It is even difficult for some CDs. And we don't even know if sexual preferences are hard-wired. An accepting wife invariably needs to accept that her husband, or a part of him, is feminine.

I think that a wife can acknowledge that her husband CDs and she can respect him enough to give him the space and time for self-expression, without having to be actively involved with the CDing herself. But if this is not enough for the husband, if the CDing needs to be a much larger part of his life than his wife can live with, then I agree they should not stay married. But, it becomes more complicated to end a marriage the older and the closer the partners are to retirement.

I can whole heartedly agree that getting divorced is a complicated messy, painful endeavor - no matter what stage of life one does it in, and that it only becomes more painful, more destructive, and more messy the closer to retirement age folks get. Absolutely. And some folks will make accommodations to avoid the pain and the messiness and destruction that is wrought by divorce. That can be a reasonable accommodation to make and people in relationships can still live together in an otherwise productive arrangement. But the fact that divorce is messy, painful, and destructive does not have any real bearing on one's fitness or appropriateness for a relationship.

If you cannot accept and treasure your partner, you do not deserve to be with your partner. That is still true even if leaving, or being left, is painful.

ReineD
01-19-2010, 06:00 PM
If you cannot accept and treasure your partner, you do not deserve to be with your partner.

But can a wife accept and respect that her husband CDs without directly getting involved if she feels she cannot? Can they come up with a mutually satisfying arrangement whereby the wife busies herself doing other things while the husband dresses either at home or out?

For simplicity's sake I am using traditional gender pronouns, although I know that a TG partner is a "she".