Thanks to you and your lovely SO!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Lawren
In my case, Kerry is very supportive and I do not ask for anything more. There are some things she will not let me do but mostly they coincide perfectly with things I do not want to do anyway. (We have very similar tastes in apparel.) In her own words, "There are many things worse than crossdressing that a man can do" She truly is a sweetheart about it all and I cannot ask for anything beyond than that.
Lawren, your Kerry is a very smart woman. There are so many worse things than crossdressing that a man could do. If everyone of the CDer's who feel ashamed about what they do could understand that, and if everyone else who has problems with someone who CD's just because they CD could understand it, then it would be so much more readily acceptable.
I liken this to a true story that happened to me when my son was 15. [he is now 25], anyway he wanted to get his ears pierced and I was brought up in a very strict household where boys, or men if you will, did NOT get their ears pierced, and back then it certainly wasn't as accepted for both ears as it was to just do one. Well I called my sister, the voice of reason, and expected her to give my son a stern lecture on why he shouldn't get his ears pierced. I had already told him not while he lived in my house! Anyway, I was the one who got the lecture. In no uncertain terms, my sister pointed out to me what a wonderful man my son was growing into, he didn't drink, smoke, do drugs, get in trouble in or out of school, was very respectful of others, peers and adults alike and was a great help to me, a single mom. In very short order she stated, "Think about all the other things he could want to do or be doing!" needless to say, I learned a very valuable lesson that day, and my son got his ears pierced.
Sometimes in life we are far to hasty to judge others, or ourselves based on societies notion of what is and isn't acceptable. I'm glad that my eyes were opened that day by my sister and that I can see the true worth of a person by who he/she is on the inside, not by judging the outside.
Relationships are about compromise
One thing that I've seen from my own parents and my friends marriages is that to make any relationship work there has to be compromise by both parties.
So when one partner has a strong compulsion to do anything that is excluding the SO to a great degree (and this could be watching football, out drinking with mates etc i.e. not necessarily CDing), are they able (not just willing, that's different) to compromise as much as the other person?
Surely in this situation that person gets more from their SO than they give? Just a thought ....
I think that we need to realise a GG can never really "participate" in the compulsion to CD as much as she might be able to in another (e.g. golf) as her head will never experience anything near the reality of it.