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  1. #1
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    Loss

    Honesty’s the best policy the say but telling you wife (now soon to be exwife) just doesn’t seen to be the best policy to me. Needing help and being put on a appointment by priority list where yungers tg’s are seen as more important. Having to deal with this on your own no wonder so many of us choose to check out! ...
    how do you all deal with this turmoil? Any suggestions are welcomed

  2. #2
    Gold Member Lana Mae's Avatar
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    Sorry to hear about your wife! It probably would have happened anyway since she probably would have caught you in your"lie" (with holding the truth!) ! Suggestion: set a goal for when all this can take place and just live your life in between as they say one day at a time! Not easy but it slowly gets you through! If you can get a therapist or some one you can talk about it with, it really helps! Best wishes on your journey! (I don't know if that helped but I hope so!) Hugs Lana Mae
    Life is worth living!
    "Foxy lady! You look so good!!" Jimi Hendrix

  3. #3
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    Ley Lana Mae the therapist is the «*priority list I am on*» I know I need to talk to someone and fast but doesn’t seem like anyone understands... I saw a psychologist in February after a 4 month wait just to be transfered to a new center with this list! Thanks for your reply

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    Lisa,
    Do what you're doing and keep on talking here on the forum. Also find help or social groups to join .

    I separated just over one year ago and I'm happier now than I have been in a long time . I did get to keep the dog which is great , I made friends within days with some lovely people , they all know about me being TG despite what I said in a thread I do walk my dog in the afternoons as Teresa .

    As I said in the M/F section you can lead a horse to water but you can't make them drink , I lived with DADT , so it really doesn't matter if you tell the truth or a bunch of lies , they just aren't listening .

    I'm assuming Canada is like the UK , the gender clinics are overflowing , I'm not sure if age is the criteria , it appears to be more like pot luck .

  5. #5
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    Hi Teressa, I guess things are probably busy here also but focus really seems to be set on the younger ones.. in my opinion they can get any resource they need but being older I guess they figure you can handle it! I dug down really deep to come to my realization and when she asked I told her the truth ... now she doesn’t know how we could ever come back from where I have put us... and refuses to see a couple therapist because I insisted it be someone familiar with GD.

  6. #6
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    I’ve been,exactly where you are, Lisa, and not so long ago. Telling your truth was good and right. But your (soon to be) ex is entitled to her own truth as well. Mine simply could not stay with me when it became apparent that I wanted to live more openly as a transgender person. She was angry with herself, depressed and finally just had to move on.

    now, more than 3 years later, that still hurts. But I’ve come to realize that, although I loved her and she loved me, that...even sixteen years later, people can grow apart unexpectedly.

    I tried denial, I’ve ridden a roller coaster of emotions for years...in the end...time does ease the pain and life goes on. A therapist can help you challenge mistakening beliefs and self destructive thinking, but the real work goes on inside your head. It’s not fun, it’s not easy, but it’s a necessary part of healing, analogous to pain during physical therapy.
    Remember always that you not only have the right to be an individual, you have an obligation to be one.

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  7. #7
    Silver Member Aunt Kelly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lisalove1976 View Post
    Honesty’s the best policy the say but telling you wife (now soon to be exwife) just doesn’t seen to be the best policy to me. Needing help and being put on a appointment by priority list where yungers tg’s are seen as more important. Having to deal with this on your own no wonder so many of us choose to check out! ...
    how do you all deal with this turmoil? Any suggestions are welcomed
    I can see where it would seem like honesty was not a good idea. You believe that it led to the end of your marriage. Am I close? If your marriage had a chance of surviving, with you being who you are, it would have been more likely if you had been honest from the start. The deception only adds insult to injury.

    The best thing you can do now is to be kind to yourself, and honest to yourself. You are who you are. There is no shame in that. It is not some kind of "failing", no matter how many people will try to get you to believe that. Yes, that's asking a lot right now, but that's where the honesty comes in. You don't need to "get better" because there is nothing wrong with you. Yes, you might suppress it for a time, but at some cost. So take a breath and accept who you are. Counseling will help with that, and with finding ways to cope with a gender identity that isn't "standard issue". You can be who you are and happy. You will be neither if you give up.
    Calling bigotry an "opinion" is like calling arsenic a "flavor".

  8. #8
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aunt Kelly View Post
    I can see where it would seem like honesty was not a good idea. You believe that it led to the end of your marriage. Am I close? If your marriage had a chance of surviving, with you being who you are, it would have been more likely if you had been honest from the start. The deception only adds insult to injury.

    The best thing you can do now is to be kind to yourself, and honest to yourself. You are who you are. There is no shame in that. It is not some kind of "failing", no matter how many people will try to get you to believe that. Yes, that's asking a lot right now, but that's where the honesty comes in. You don't need to "get better" because there is nothing wrong with you. Yes, you might suppress it for a time, but at some cost. So take a breath and accept who you are. Counseling will help with that, and with finding ways to cope with a gender identity that isn't "standard issue". You can be who you are and happy. You will be neither if you give up.
    Hi Kelly,
    the problem with honesty and dysphoria in my mind is that when we started talking back 20 years ago (wife and I )I was a cross dresser or at least that's how I felt back then... since then my reality has changed and she never understood that GD is fluid so when she would ask me a question like "would you ever have the operation" the answer 20 years ago was NO... over the years that honest answer now became a lie and the fact that she doesn't understand or want to know really anything about it doesn't help matters... Did honesty kill my marriage, no living with this issue and hiding behind walls I had to out up so that no own would see the true me has caused issues that will be the end of it.

    hugs

    [SIZE=1]- - - Updated - - -[/SIZE]

    Quote Originally Posted by pamela7 View Post
    The reason that this particular honesty has not paid off is due to a full relationship's worth of lies and hiding. Honesty is the best policy. When I met my wife I said I wanted to wear panties (as that was as far as i had realised at the time). When I wanted to start wearing women's clothes, I told her that day - no problem. When I discovered my need to transition, I told her, that same day. She's been with me all the way, and will be. I recently told her I will need to go further in transitioning; again, fully accepted. Why? Apart from her amazing beingness, it is because there was no lie, ever.

    Starting a relationship knowing about one's proclivities, and hoping that love and time together will mean she does not want to split once the truth comes out; well, that is the foolish plan. Just. don't lie.
    Hey Pamela... as I replied to Kelly honest answer today can become a lie tomorrow... and the fact that my wife never really wanted to know (DADT) or find out about GD most likely didn't help.... I reached down really low to find answers to her questions and now she says there is no way back from it....

    [SIZE=1]- - - Updated - - -[/SIZE]

    Hi Kimdl,
    I really look up to your girls that have moved to your new life... I just can't get over the fact that this move will most likely mean taking what I have built up over the last 40+ years and scraping it. IO am trying to see a therapist and have been put on a waiting list which I have NO IDEA where I sit on the list and waiting is killing me. We really love each other but also realize we are both on different paths but that doesn't make it any easier

  9. #9
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    Lisa,
    I have to come to your defence over this .

    The honesty issue is a two way situation , how many wives are honest with us before the wedding day , I feel cheated at times by my wife when I look back . Also many of us believe that our CDing is a passing phase , we may no longer do it if we marry . The point you make is also a valid one , you CDing/TG needs have moved on as indeed mine have .

    The honesty issue can suggest we are doing something wrong or bad , we should feel guilty and ashamed , it's getting to the point now where it's flaunting human rights issues .

  10. #10
    Gold Member Kaitlyn Michele's Avatar
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    sorry

    First off... I lied... I was wrong... I totally hid my dressing....and it was a terrible thing to do to my wife...
    when I got married I loved my wife...I wanted to be married...I suppressed my feelings and I hoped they would go away...
    when it didnt it was too late... and I hid for almost 20 years...ugh..

    so I did not practice what I preach, and I deeply regret it... I can use the excuses laid out above, but I think that's crap...they are just excuses for not doing the right thing...
    maybe there are cases where the person literally doesnt know anything and it evolves after being married.... but that is not what we are talking about here.

    my behavior HURT HER..... BADLY.... over the years we have come to terms with it...she has grown and learned and accepted what happened and after our divorce we've raised our kids and become best friends talking daily...

    ++++++++++++++++++

    its true that our needs can change...we can identify one way or another over days and years...its difficult... but here's the thing...that's the truth...thats what you tell her..

    you have to say....there are NO PROMISES...I have GD....its BAD.... I cant function and it overwhelms my life, my feelings, and my productivity.... I have to deal with as best I can and I honestly don't know what's going to happen.... nothing is off the table.... that's it... that's the truth.... and she DESERVES this truth.....


    its not that its bad.... even tho so many of us feel guilt and shame, we also have to understand we are not bad ...but it is IMPORTANT...it crosses the big red line of things that are necessary to discuss and not...

    its not like cheating...some people say life is better if she doesnt know... but cheating is just a thing...a moment... a choice...an act...

    GD is meaning of life stuff... it impacts everything about your future and if you have it bad you will likely find that nothing can stop it other than expressing your gender, whatever that gender is...
    that's what wives need to and deserve to know...

    everything else is excuses, and bad ones at that...
    I am real

  11. #11
    Silver Member Aunt Kelly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lisalove1976 View Post
    Hi Kelly,
    the problem with honesty and dysphoria in my mind is that when we started talking back 20 years ago (wife and I )I was a cross dresser or at least that's how I felt back then... since then my reality has changed and she never understood that GD is fluid so when she would ask me a question like "would you ever have the operation" the answer 20 years ago was NO... over the years that honest answer now became a lie and the fact that she doesn't understand or want to know really anything about it doesn't help matters... Did honesty kill my marriage, no living with this issue and hiding behind walls I had to out up so that no own would see the true me has caused issues that will be the end of it.
    It's not a lie if you don't know something about yourself. Yes, it can feel like that to others. If I had known 23 years ago that I was TS, I might not be married today. I might not have been a lot of things, but I might have been a lot more. I spend very little time bemoaning what might, or might not, have been.

    When it comes to relationships, all we can do is be honest and loving, from start to finish. Megan is right, again. In these scenarios the only thing that deserves blame is deception.
    Calling bigotry an "opinion" is like calling arsenic a "flavor".

  12. #12
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    trust me I don't blame anybody other than myself for our separation... Yes she could have learned more about GD or even asked me and Yes she could have been more supportive but she never signed up for this and neither did I... she mentioned yesterday that she has no choice in destroying what we have built up in the last 20 years and she looses it all, I mentioned she was right but I loose all that plus possibly every friendship, family, career ect going back up to 40+ years.... I hate this uncertainty....

  13. #13
    Gold Member Kaitlyn Michele's Avatar
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    I get it..
    I know its rough to hear...

    she says "im losing everything..."
    your response is "im losing more..."

    that is not taking the blame...its really not about blame...

    its about the responsibility....this is 100 percent about YOU...and thats just the way it is...

    and so to me the way out of the vicious circle is to change that dynamic between you both...
    take the responibility for the action.. 100 percent of it..she bears no responsibility to your GD

    You have to explore this path...you may lose alot ....and that cannot change...that's not a negotiation.. and the outcome is not known... its a rough thing
    you are doing what you need to do

    she cant control what you are doing and needs the space to do what she needs to do... and for her to do that, she needs to know everything she can..
    and she deserves to have her feelings fully respected with no caveats or attempts to make her feel bad or keeping things from her...

    I know im brutal...im truly sorry for it... but it seems to me you keep going back to what she could have done, what she might have done, and how your feelings are hurt too...

    For your and her good I hope you can get over that

    I lived this, and learned as i went along, and it was harsh.
    The world is unkind to those of us that repressed our GD and tried to man up and share a family life
    So I will not sugar coat it... its also very unkind to our SO's who are even more scared, more upset and more confused than we are
    We all have to fight through that.

    +++++++++++++++++
    There is no guarantee, she will do what she does but the positive side is you can set the table for the future

    ...your honesty and strength right now could give her reason to feel like she can still be a part of your life even if today that seems impossible... it may help her cope with reality and give her space to come to terms with her feelings...it may help her remember why she went with you from the first place

    or you can keep secrets, feel sorry for yourself and set the table for bitterness and conflict for both of you
    I am real

  14. #14
    Call me Pam pamela7's Avatar
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    The reason that this particular honesty has not paid off is due to a full relationship's worth of lies and hiding. Honesty is the best policy. When I met my wife I said I wanted to wear panties (as that was as far as i had realised at the time). When I wanted to start wearing women's clothes, I told her that day - no problem. When I discovered my need to transition, I told her, that same day. She's been with me all the way, and will be. I recently told her I will need to go further in transitioning; again, fully accepted. Why? Apart from her amazing beingness, it is because there was no lie, ever.

    Starting a relationship knowing about one's proclivities, and hoping that love and time together will mean she does not want to split once the truth comes out; well, that is the foolish plan. Just. don't lie.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJFyz73MRcg
    I used to believe this, now I'm in the company of many tiggers. A tigger does not wonder why she is a tigger, she just is a tigger.

    thanks to krististeph: tigger = TG'er .. T-I-GG-er

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    Lisa,
    So much good advice has been posted, which I am sure not only will help you but it helps others, including me. Don't be too hard on yourself. Take one day at time and do not rush into decision making (I like to let some key decisions steep for a day or two or even longer). Believe in yourself that you can address the challenges ahead.

    I so relate to Sarah's and Kelly's explanations of the journey from the early years to today.

  16. #16
    Gold Member Kaitlyn Michele's Avatar
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    Lisa I have to say your openness and willingness to share is going to serve you well

    Just in a couple of weeks I have seen growth In your perspective and there has been a lot of really interesting sharing

    Kudos to you. This is really tough stuff.

    Keep working at it and I hope that your wife can find her own way to come to terms with this
    Being open and willing to listen is a great quality and will help her.

    I just wanted to give you that affirmation because I know you are going thru a lot
    I am real

  17. #17
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    In dealing with the issues we deal with, we must be brutally honest with ourselves.

    This Brutal Honesty with ourselves must carry over to those around us. Sure, we can be diplomatic in how we word things. But we remain Brutally Honest.

    This is an early truth I learned from here around the time I had my epiphany moment.

    The other truth I learned from here was that if we embark on this journey to Transition, we MUST be willing to loose everything.

    Sure, we can still hope for the best in all that we do. We should also expect the worst.

    I know this really doesn't offer much comfort because this journey we take is not one for the faint of heart.

    It does hurt. But, that pain brings something that is so wonderful and beautiful that words fail me.

    Everyone here is here for you if you can't get to a Professional right away. Feel free to lean on us, that's what we're here for. To lend support for each other.

    If you can find a group where you are, then by all means GO. Just keep in mind, there are more resources available to you than you realize.

    You just need to keep your eyes open for them and look.
    The source of fear is in the future
    And a person freed of the future
    Has nothing to fear

    "That's life. It's not always rainbows and farts. Sometimes the farts have a little something extra." -Emma

    Rock meet Hard Place.

  18. #18
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    One day at a time is the only way I can take it right now as the future is greyed out but with the help of you girl I am sure I will be able to get through it... I honestly am NOT usually the type of person that askes for help (didn't do it here) but some times really need it...

    With the support of this group and all it's fantastic members I'm sure the light will return soon... what side of the tunel I come out on is a totally other story to be followed.
    Thank you ALL
    Love you
    Lisa xoxo

  19. #19
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    Kaitlyn,
    This is one of the best advices I ever read. Can't think of a more eloquent way to say it.
    Katya

  20. #20
    Country Gal.... Megan G's Avatar
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    Kaitlyn as usual is right on the money with her response. Attempting to blame your former spouse for any part of seperating due to gender issues is completely BS.....They deserve to be happy also and asking them to stay in a relationship when you have transitioned is equivalent to asking a straight person to be gay for you. Like Kaitlyn my former wife and i are still best friends and co-parent our child very effectively and with love.

    Lisa the telling the truth may hurt now but in time it will get better. That day may not be tomorrow, next month or next year but eventually it will get better.

  21. #21
    Gold Member Read only Rachael Leigh's Avatar
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    Lisa to be honest it’s not easy, I’ve now been divorced for a year and a half and I still have days where I just wished I had
    never spoke a word of my gender differences with her and just figure a way to express myself in another way. Unfortunately
    the cat got out of the bag as it were early on and it was just to hard to suppress myself. I loved my wife and I was not a great husband mostly because she never could fully accept this side of me. So I’ve had my tough lonely days, tears and
    wonderings as to why me, why did this have to be me. It will take time but it will pass and you will find a way to move
    forward
    Blessings to you Rachael

  22. #22
    Super Moderator Jeri Ann's Avatar
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    Hey Lisa,

    Gender identity never goes away. It can't. It is the way you are hardwired. Unfortunately a spouse's nonacceptance can't/ won't either much of the time.

    My G.I. was a malignant tumor for twenty years in my marriage and resulted in the death of the relationship.

    The loss? Only my home, much income, 1/2 savings, friends, all family, reputation, etc. I think about my loved ones every day, including her. I grieve terribly.

    BUT, I have gained something that few people ever experience, authenticity. I am now free to be myself instead of pretending to be what I thought others expected me to be. I have often paused to think, could I go back? The thought of it makes me ill. So, actually, the was no choice for me.

    I do wish I could have known years ago what I know now, but that would have a whole new set of consequences too. I wouldn't be where I am now, with the incredible friends that I am blessed with now.

    The uncertain future? Yeah, that. You can't predict how others will behave in situations that haven't occurred yet, including yourself. However, there is a good chance that your future is brighter than you can possibly imagine because it can/ will be experienced by the real you.

    There are unique opportunities ahead for you. Can they replace the things you lose? Hardly, at least this is what I have experienced. It takes time, many days, just take 'em one at a time.

    Let me know if I can help.
    Last edited by Jeri Ann; 03-28-2019 at 06:00 PM.

  23. #23
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    It is incredibly hard for most of us to be open with a gender issue. When you grow up hiding, suppressing, denying, purging, etc., everything in you resists even the faintest whiff of truth. So I get that - and STILL fight it, in fact. Hard. I tend to immediately deflect any conversation about gender. Then I (usually) come back to it after my initial inner shock wave wears off. That took some training with a therapist, though.

    But you can never defend deceiving a spouse. They have both the need and right to know what’s going on, else you are depriving them of some of their own life. It’s tough, but own it.
    Lea

  24. #24
    Member Lisalove1976's Avatar
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    Wow such great insight...

    Rachael I really appreciate your honesty and hear alot of me in what you said especially the "why me part"

    Jeri Ann.. the realization that you can't beat yourself at your own game is a real hard one to swallow and I have been working hard to come to that truth... I'm a bad looser lol loosing everything is terrifying but also such a reality, the hardest part is knowing that If I stay in my mundane life the only one that gets hurt is myself, If I try to be in my happy place I possibly hurt many as you said I can't predict how others will react.

    LeaP I hear you and working on tearing down the walls I have put up to protect myself if the biggest issue but you are right she does deserve the truth and to be happy no matter the cost

  25. #25
    Country Gal.... Megan G's Avatar
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    Lisa,

    At your stage it’s going to be hard to think of “loss” in the way I’m about to describe as your in the infancy of your journey and mine is over and complete... so i view it in a much different way....

    Anyways when I look back at my transition and life so far the losses I experienced were actually blessings that pointed me in the right direction to an amazing life....

    Yes i lost my spouse in the sense of our marriage but we remained friends and our bond is just as strong as ever... more like BFF’s now... we are both happier and put more of ourselves into our friendship than we ever did as partners...

    Yep i lost my career, many years of building myself up and creating a reputation in the industry was taken away from me... but i rallied and went back to college to get a degree in nursing where i work at both a long term care facility and the local hospital. My colleagues and I at both places of employment are like my second families, we do so much together and I could not imagine living life without them.

    I could keep on writing about the good in my life but the point i am trying to get across is that by just accepting the losses, moving on and focusing my attention on rebuilding i created a better life than i ever could have if i remained in my old life with my former friends and former career. The old just holds you back from the growth you need to truly experience life as your authentic self.

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