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arbon
08-04-2016, 03:41 PM
For some time I have felt like I need to step away from this forum. That I need to move on and not be so connected to transgender stuff.

I’ve been here for about seven years and a lot has changed for me. When I came there was this hope that I would learn to enjoy cross dressing, and be okay with that. Hoping somehow that if I did this it would calm what was really tormenting me. It never worked. I hated how I looked, like a man in a dress. It was the last thing I wanted to be. I did not try very hard and quickly gravitated to the TS section which I connected with much more.

I copied my first post on the forum here. My introduction from 2009. At the time I was very messed up. That whole year was probably the darkest of my life as I tried to come to some type of understanding and acceptance of myself. Looking back I don’t know why it was so hard but it was. I was very broken from a life spent living to others expectations of being male – a boy, a man, a son, a brother, husband, father. All the while hating myself for it, feeling that I was living a lie. It was not who I was or wanted to be, but I was to terrified and confused, and alone, to do anything about it.

Slowly I did connect with others here through their sharing, and with others outside this forum. I was not alone. I picked up bits of direction from others. Changes came slowly. My transition was messy and painful.

Sometimes I was very cold, defensive, liked to argue with others here. I’m still that way really. I’m sorry for that. There are a lot of women I met here that I came love and respect, and that I am very grateful too, even if I was not always very nice or appreciative at the time of what they would tell me. I’ve made some of the best friends I ever had in life on this forum. Sisters.

So my first post here:



It might be better to describe my trying to accept myself like having a tooth drilled into without novacaine. Very painful and you just pray it is over soon.

I know I am not alone in that, and am not the first and will not be the last to struggle through all that shame, guilt and self loathing trying to find some peace on the other side.

I hate to admit I have tried most my life to not be one of "those people". And I have also been miserable most of my life. Go figure.

Then came last year when I made the tiniest stupidest mistake that involved attaching the wrong file to an email - dumb dumb dumb - and now a bunch of people know something about me which I rather they didn’t and I have sense lived in terror of little rumors spreading around our small community and getting back to people that know me, say like my boss or parents, and you know everyone else in little hick town USA that might throw a rock at me. Wife already knew and we have problems to work out - but at least rumors getting back to her has not been my greatest fear.

The thing is though, to get to the point maybe, I am tired of living in fear. After what happened last year I started hanging out on some of the forums like this and posting a little for a couple months, trying to reach some level of self acceptance. Then I got deeply afraid of it again and stopped doing that, it is more familiar ground trying to repress certain feelings, behaviors and living in denial. Works except then I just feel like I want to die all the time and hating life.

But here I am back again wanting to ge to a point where I am not afraid of who I am or the world around me. I want to be at peace with myself. I want to be who and what I am and not think evil bad sick person you are!!

I like this forum - I have been lurking around here for the last few weeks and thought I might as well give an introduction, difficult as that can be.... but, so, there you have it.


So did I ever find peace with myself? Mostly, yes. I don’t have the inner turmoil that I had when I came here. I don’t feel like dying all the time. I don’t feel like I am living a lie. I don’t carry the shame that I came here with. There is no comparison between today and when I wrote that introduction. That was the gift of transition.

I am not afraid to be myself today. I know who I am and I am not afraid to be her no matter what people might think. In that sense I am free.

That does not mean that I don’t have issues because I have plenty. I am not the healthiest person in the world mentally or emotionally and I know it. I go through lots of steep ups and downs. There is still a lot of healing to do.


Anyway, I wanted to share some thought about my time here.

I’ll add some to this when I have some more time.

Jennifer-GWN
08-04-2016, 04:33 PM
Being cheeky... You've come a long way babe... On a more serious note. Transition is not an overnight processes... It's not suddenly declearing yourself a woman. It's sole searching... It's life changing or at least life realizing.... It comes with loss, with sadness, with anger, with happiness. It takes work, it takes a commitment to ones self and a pursuit for what is right.

We watched the up the downs, the challenged, the struggles, and the personal victories along the way and I'm the end love who you've become...you!

So yes... You've come a long way babe and happy to call you a friend!

KymberlyOct
08-04-2016, 04:47 PM
Thanks for explaining before you go. While I will be sorry to not see your replies anymore I certainly support your decision to do what feels like the right path for you. I appreciate those very much that hang around this forum mostly to support those of us that are just starting this journey. From the few months I have been here it certainly seems to me that you have paid it forward already. And most importantly if you feel the need to move on then I support you.

Although we don't know each other I do notice which posts and replies ring true, and make sense and yours definitely fall into that category. You seem to have grown immensely from your original post those seven years ago. Also you mention from time to time you still feel like a guy in a dress. The pictures you have posted occasionally appear to me as a confident, attractive woman. Thanks for your contributions and I am happy for you regarding finding some degree of acceptance of yourself.
Kym

tgirlamc
08-04-2016, 06:41 PM
So did I ever find peace with myself? Mostly, yes. I don’t have the inner turmoil that I had when I came here. I don’t feel like dying all the time. I don’t feel like I am living a lie. I don’t carry the shame that I came here with. There is no comparison between today and when I wrote that introduction. That was the gift of transition.

I am not afraid to be myself today. I know who I am and I am not afraid to be her no matter what people might think. In that sense I am free.

Hi Arbon,

I haven't been around here actively for long but I always have appreciated your posts... They are always reflective of your wisdom...hard won on the battlefield that transition can be.

If you are stepping away from here for a while or forever... Please know that you have done more good here than you likely know... Sometimes the most inspiring thing we can do for others is just to get up everyday and go once more out into the fray and survive.... If they see that... maybe they could do that too... Maybe being Trans isn't a death sentence... Maybe they could come out of the process happier and more complete than they went into it.... Much good has been done... Lives have been changed...for the better!!! I'm glad yours is better than when you came here!!!!

May your head and heart always find happiness Arbon

Take Care,

Ashley :)

AllieSF
08-04-2016, 08:13 PM
Thank you for that very personal rewind and then update of who you are and how you are doing. May the positivity and highs continue with the good times greatly outnumbering the bad.

PretzelGirl
08-04-2016, 08:37 PM
You certainly know how I feel about this. Your perspective has been immense. But we all give and we move on at some point. You may or may not. I have considered it many times myself. I always feel a need to come back. Some day that needs will vanish. I have seen posts that ask when we think transition ends. I am leaning more and more to never. It seems something either shifts or hangs around and keeps us making another adjustment, deal with another dysphoric thought. The big thing here is that this place (certain people especially I would think) was hear for advice or a sounding board. And that is a lot for us. Seven years worth of difference....
:love:

There is a key value to this subforum and that is the experience of those that have been there. Not the experience of therapists or those that have been researching the path, that's everywhere. But just absolute experience. Arbon gave a ton of that and probably would say she benefitted from a like amount.

PaulaQ
08-05-2016, 12:08 AM
Thank you for your time and service here Theresa. You literally saved my life three years ago. Thank you.

becky77
08-05-2016, 05:17 AM
You can't leave you're one of the nice ones!
Who's going to provide the good cop to Misty's bad cop?

You have inspired me, I always await your polite but incisive replies.

Most fulltimers move on at some point if you no longer feel you can provide helpful input then what is there left? You don't need this place anymore so it figures a time will come when you just can't show an interest in the same subjects over and over.

I will miss your posts here.

Marcelle
08-05-2016, 05:19 AM
Hi Arbon,

I have not been on this side of the forum long but I can say your voice is one of a few who bring a balanced perspective to transitioning. You are not afraid to put out the raw emotion of what transitioning means and I am sure you have helped many, myself included. I wish you peace and happiness should you decide to leave . . . living one's life on their own terms is all any of us can ask for.

Cheers

Marcelle

Starling
08-06-2016, 03:44 AM
Arbon--Theresa--we joined about the same time, and you have made so much more progress than I have, despite the obstacles you have faced. I hope there comes a time, and soon, when you no longer have to work three jobs to get by. You're a beautiful woman, and a good soul, and I thank you for sharing your experiences with us.

:) Lallie

Deborah_UK
08-07-2016, 04:43 AM
Theresa,

I know exactly how you feel. Ive been here ages, I rarely post anymore and question why I still drop by. Partly to keep in touch with one or two people who only ever contact me through this site. I do feel at times as an outsider, I've hd a succesful transition, post op since 2013 and living my life as I always should have.

So I can fully understand why you intend to leave.

But as the James Bond film title says "Never Say Never"