The way I understand my feelings and experiences has changed so much pre vs post transition.
I wanted to see what other small misconceptions you all had from pre-transition that you see differently now, or that maybe you wish you had understood before.
There are so many to choose from, but I'll start:
Probably as a coping mechanism I never saw the gendered components to my self-loathing.
For example, I hated my breasts because they were malformed-looking, to me. I would sometimes think, if I were a woman it would be worse (like the same, but larger), but I never once thought having a flat chest would be better. Instead I seemed to need to feel having female breasts would be worse, so I could feel better about my situation.
Or how I always loved how little hair was on my body, but never thought that was abnormal. I never got back hair and only had thin hair on my belly and a small, thin strip on my sternum. I never thought of this in terms of gender, I never thought about how my body ideal was curvy and hairless, or feminine. It bothered me when I was compared to male beauty icons, but I never could quite be honest with myself as to why.
I ignored (or repressed) the gender in everything, but it was still there.
So my misconception was about gender itself, I thought of it as primarily social and malleable, and thus was some great social evil, gender was The Enemy or The Problem.
Now gender is extremely important to me, but before I would say being a man was irrelevant to me, or even obviously unwanted - it was a moral choice, to be a woman was to be a better person in my mind, to abandon a toxic social role in favor of an enlightened one.
Now I think you can't really choose, that we have these implicit gendered feelings that we can't really change, and so being a woman feels good to me because of what I am, and now being a woman is just a precious gift, rather than a moral imperative.
I totally botched this post, I wanted this to be succinct and lost my sense of purpose and have rambled along.
Looking forward to hearing from you all. 💚
There was a common sentiment of "you'll never pass if you don't transition before 20" when my egg cracked. I thought, fuck it I'll do it anyways.
And I pass perfectly fine!
I had this misconception too! I decided to transition without any hope of ever passing, and within a year I was passing full-time 🤯 It took a lot to get there (including luck), but I really never thought it would ever happen, and I still have a hard time accepting or believing I pass (constantly afraid people will notice).
I affirm the therapeutic value of transition even if you don't ever pass (it made my life so much better in many ways, even before I was passing), but it's nice also that I got there.
Do you remember when you started to pass or what that process was like of that misconception being reversed?
I think for me it was the first time I was called "Ma'am" in person. I was in line at the mall shopping for Christmas presents, around 9 months after I started HRT.
The guy tried to call to me and let me know there was an open register, and it took him saying "ma'am" like four times for me to turn and look, and realized he was talking to me!
Was honestly shocked.
I still get "sir" mostly on the phone, but very rarely am clocked in person.
that was around the same time I started to pass too, 8 - 9 months was like a tipping point and it became more frequent for me, and by 12 months on HRT I was passing well enough that the nurses helping prep me for my orchi were running pregnancy tests on me, and I had to explain I was born without a uterus 😅
I am fairly vocal dysphoric and I started weekly voice therapy sessions with a speech language pathologist shortly after starting HRT, and weirdly 8 months was around the same mark for my voice passing on the phone consistently. I could pass sometimes before that around the 6 month mark, but it took a lot of practice to get there (and I still don't feel super confident in my voice, and I have lots of voice dysphoria - but my voice doesn't seem to out me anymore, and I get "miss" and "ma'am" and "dear" etc. on the phone now).
I looked at your profile and wow, you're passing in all of your June photos. Was June 2022 before you started HRT? You seriously look like a woman in that photo, but if you had been on HRT for three years, you wouldn't have been on HRT for long at that point? Either way, congrats 😍
Thank you so much! 🥰
I started on March 1 2022, so that was 3 months in