Croddersser...do I come out?
I hope this is the right place to post this...forgive me, I am new here.
Let me start telling a bit about my life, though, I'm sure no one will read and I'll just get flamed, but this is important to me. I hope someone out there can give real input.
It started around when I was 4 or 5. I wanted to be a girl so bad, I would get so angry that I was born a boy, I would tell my parents but of course at that age no one takes you seriously. I used to "play" dress-up as a child with friends, no one thought it was strange, I was young, it was normal. But I was always dressing as a girl, not for fun, but because I could finally be who I wanted to be. I was happy.
I would dream of being a girl. It's all I wanted, it's all I want now. There honestly hasn't been a day I haven't gotten upset over my gender.
Now I'm 21, I've always dressed, dreamed and wished that I could still be who I want to be. But I can't.
I live a lonely life, not many friends. I live with my parents. My last girlfriend (who I was with for 4 years) bailed on me. I have no job. I start school in the summer, and I also suffer from extreme anxiety.
I wish I would have come out at an earlier age. I wish I would have told my parents the truth and made them believe me.
At 21 I feel time has runing out, the older I get the more weird it'll be for everyone.
No one knows this, no my friends, not my family.
My question is this, do I come out to my family or keep living miserable as a man? I know I can never truly be a woman, and I've accepted that.
Croddersser...do I come out?
Welcome to the Forum Libby-Anna! You've got more friends here than you can imagine. You've taken the first step to becoming the person you are meant to be just by being here, so you've already "come out."
Now to get on with the rest of your life. I agree with the others who suggest you find someone in your area with whom you can talk about this. But if that isn't possible, just accept what you are and enjoy it. Society is changing faster than I can believe, so things will change for the better for all of us. Just get away from negative thinking or feeling shame about your feminine side. Celebrate it!
Meanwhile, how about telling us a bit more about yourself--how do you like to dress? How often? Have you ever gone out in public as a woman? How did that go? Do you have any questions about dressing? I for one have had several questions I had answered here.
Malori