this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2025
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CW: transphobic boomers. This is going to be a rambling mess. Sorry

So I've definitely had some form of gender dysphoria for as long as I can remember. It's usually manifested as relatively mild things like having significantly more female friends than male friends, choosing female video game characters, and liking more traditionally female hobbies like baking fancy cupcakes. But I never really "acted like a girl" or dressed up and have absolutely no interest in makeup or clothing.

I'm also very much into girls so I never really gave gender much thought. That being said I was always very envious of my lesbian friends because I'm of the opinion that there's nothing more beautiful than two women in love. Although I mostly had bi girlfriends so maybe I give off certain signals.

Now when I mentioned choosing female characters, I mean exclusively. The only male character I've chosen was my avatar on stardew valley and then only because my SO wanted to play with me as me. And to be honest I never saw myself as a girl/woman, I just really wanted to be sometimes. I'm given to understand that when most guys look in the mirror they think things like "I'd look better if I got shredded, or grew a beard whereas I was always more of the opinion that big pillowy tits, thick thighs and an ass so big you can see it from the front would definitely be better.

And then there's all the ways testosterone fucks up my life. I'm constantly angry over nothing and it makes me hate myself. As well as feeling like a bono on crack the whole time. I just want to talk to my friends without constantly daydreaming of ploughing them.

So all that has been building for some time but recently I discovered that an acquaintance from highschool had gone through a transition since we lost touch, and she was living her best life in the fullest sense of the term. I found out because my mother had saved a clipping from a newspaper talking about her novel being nominated for a prize. Not because she thought I would want to know that one of my classmates was successful, but because she thought it was hilarious that someone I knew had transitioned (my mother is a toxic woman). These sentiments were echoed by my father (another deeply flawed individual). But in spite of their obvious amusement, I felt nothing but admiration towards her. She had done this big thing and done it in a rural community. I wish I had the ovaries to do that. So I decided I'd buy her book since my parents had advertised it so effectively.

So recently I was sitting at my desk in my shitty office doing my shitty job and I was brought to the verge of tears by the realisation that being a man was something I never wanted and was making me deeply unhappy. I haven't been happy in as long as I remember. I realised that the first half of my life had gone by and I'd not enjoyed it. It was actually reading through the posts on blåhaj that told me why.

The issue is that I have built a life around my male self. And while it's humble, I don't want to loose everything. I'm sure my partner and kids would be fine with it, but I'm also sure that some degree of prejudice would also follow them if I embraced my true identity. I desperately want to do hrt but I'm apprehensive.

Thoughts?

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[–] tanisnikana@lemmy.world 27 points 5 days ago (1 children)

You know what you want.

Go take it.

[–] Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world 26 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I sort of figured it out while typing. I guess sometimes you just need to see something written down.

🩵🩷🤍🩷🩵

Journaling is also something I can really suggest to start doing. Especially in the early stages of your egg cracking. It really helps sorting out your thoughts and feelings and also it creates a record for you to point at when the "am I just faking it" thoughts are hitting.

[–] quantumgenderino@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

First off, I didn't see anyone link the gender dysphoria bible in the comments, and it was absolutely massive for me to read. Linkie

As someone who just cracked her egg a few months ago, I can tell you talking to my wife was the biggest aid for me to figure out what I wanted. A lot of your experience aligns pretty closely to mine, so you're not alone there. My wife also thought she was bi, but without telling me, determined she was straight because only male me turned her on, but after I worked out that I was trans, she had to rethink her own sexuality and realized she's actually demi, because the idea of me as a woman still turns her on and nobody else does. I won't lie, it was a rough week for us, especially seeing as we're coming up on 10 years being together, and we're eachother's only adult relationship, so the possibility of our marriage ending was terrifying, and seemed like it might happen. Coming out was the most anxiety enducing experience of my 31 years on this planet, but I would do it again in an instant if I had to.

Miraculously, my wife and I wear the same size clothes despite a full foot difference in height, so she got me to try her clothes, which really helped cement in my mind that I wanted to dress feminine.

[–] Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Thanks for the link. And sharing your story. It's very encouraging. I'm actually pretty sure my partner is demi as well I'm just worried her feelings for me would change if I do. As for clothes, I already have plenty of flannel shirts 😂 they'd just look better on me with a more feminine figure. Actually what I'd be wearing would only be minimally different from what I'm wearing now (I think). My partner likes it when I role my sleeves up so I'd be foolish to not keep that.

[–] quantumgenderino@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

If you want the feminine figure fast, I got shapewear with hip pads and silicone breast forms because I'm an impatient little freak. 😜 The hip pads definitely help with a curvier shape and support a tuck really well, and I have found breast forms make my incredibly broad shoulders basically a non issue. If those are things that make you experience dysphoria, those are options if you need a crutch.

Thanks for the advice, I'll definitely look into it. My mental health is somewhat sub par at the moment so I'm not sure how soon I'll be comfortable with being myself in a public setting. So I think the plan as it stands is boymod until I start getting correctly gendered. It's not like I live in a super conservative city or anything, but I have a fair bit of baggage from my early years that needs to be dealt with. I don't have a burning need for society to accept who I am, I just want to feel like I belong in my own skin and accept myself. Or rather that's the most important thing for me.

[–] inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world 21 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Okay most importantly, the only person who can answer this question is you. You gotta look deep into yourself and see what truly makes you happy. I know that's not helpful but the real answer is always going to be baby steps and lots of self check-ins.

Once I had my own egg crack moment, I just started trying on different type of clothes, see what made me happy, what made feel bad and especially what made me feel nothing at all. Then after deciding on things that made ME happy, I went out by myself to see how it felt to be viewed differently. I won't lie, there was good moments but there were lots of scary ones too. But every time I got back home, I just wanted to do it again. Things got better slowly not because the world had changed, but how I have changed when I interacted with it. Again privately, I started adding make up, jewlery and wigs. Every new thing just made me excited to go outside and less scared of anyone who made me feel crappy, because I just felt so damn good myself. Going to the grocery store, to the movies, etc. Eventually a stranger called me "miss" and it damn near stopped my heart. So I made the next step of telling the people in my immediate circle that I wanted to use "she/her" and that took them some time, but the people in my life that valued my happiness stayed, those who didn't... well clearly I wasn't a priority to them, so why were we even friends? That's fundamental to ANY relationship.

Then came a month of me deciding on names.

Then a month of trying on labels, like "trans woman", "non-binary" or "femme".

Then starting HRT.

Then changing those labels and names when I realized a better fit.

Then a year or so legally changing my name.

All slowly, all baby steps, all finding out what in your heart-of-hearts make you happy. There is no wrong answer to happiness. Only what harms other, and dressing in a way that makes you happy ABSOLUTELY IS NOT harming anyone. Existing is not a crime.

Here I am several years later, still following the things that make me happy. Movies and TV will show trans people as "getting the surgery" and then blamo, brand new person. That's fiction, it's always a slow, delibrate and introspective process.

I've love friends, relationships, but I have a new family I know cares for me and a new wife that loves me for exactly who I am, not who she wants me to be. I haven't stopped looking for new things that might make my happy... but why should I ever? Why should you ever? Should anybody!? That's life! So go start experimenting with what makes you feel joy! You owe it to yourself, and you owe it to the people who care about you. Realizing that something makes you happy and then NOT depriving yourself only fosters resentment.

So whoever you are, I'm excited and delighted that you're asking these questions. I hope this is the start of something big, that five years from now you'll look back on and laugh. Like I do half a decade later. And if you decide that all of this was a mistake, that's okay too, well now you know! That's an amazing achievement too!

[–] Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world 5 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I'm glad you have such a positive response. I find it very encouraging. The only thing standing in my way right now is broaching the subject with my SO. She is very left leaning and bi. But she fell in love with the man me and is bi not pan. So during the androgynous middle ground which might take years to get through, she will not find me physically attractive in the slightest.

[–] inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Understanding yourself as trans, and deciding to transition are two very different things. I have the privilege to go out in the world as myself, but trans folk in various middle eastern countries would be killed for doing so. I am no more or less trans than any of them purely because of my context. Lots of trans women are not out to their jobs, so the are only themselves on the weekend. It's tragic, but maintaining personal safety will always take priority.

Which is why I think moving slowly and making sure you KNOW what makes you happy, before deciding to let others know this aspect of yourself. Worrying about her reaction is putting the cart before the horse.

But let's say the day comes where you do KNOW and want someone you love to know who you are. That's also a baby step.

So during the androgynous middle ground which might take years to get through, she will not find me physically attractive in the slightest.

Well, that sounds like fear and anxiety talking to me but I won't presume to know your wife. However if she is bi, than I can't imagine she is so rigid in gender roles that she would hate you for stepping outside of them. And even if so, have you considered perhaps not changing your gender and place in the world right this moment, but just changing yourself? Doing something FOR yourself. You already mentioned wanting to go on HRT, but that doesn't mean coming out. The majority of trans women on HRT for years before talking to their family.

Just know that are options for life post-egg crack. None are wrong, or better than each other and I couldn't tell you what is right for you. But I do know that that it's not selfish to find happiness. If you are posting here, then I think you owe it to yourself to begin exploring. Just for no other reason to understand yourself better.

You're right of course. I do have a lot of fear and anxiety around it. I grew up in a very unforgiving place where people would find any difference at all to pin the bullying on. So I learned to keep any thoughts to myself and not really express myself or let anyone in. So exposing myself in any way seems overwhelming. But, yes it's just a product of the conformist environment in which I grew up.

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Is not liking androgynous people something your wife has actually told you about her sexuality? Because all the bi people I've heard have represented it as liking both "same and different" rather than "binary men and women". It can, as you say, take time to adjust, though.

Also note that HRT can be more like an exponential dropoff: it can take years to get the full effects, but a HUGE amount will happen in the first six months or so.

She's said as much

[–] ordnance_qf_17_pounder@reddthat.com 15 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I'm not telling you what you should do or anything but..

Trans girl alert 🚨 trans girl alert 🚨

Yay! (hopefully)

[–] Zoomboingding@lemmy.world 6 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Play some D&D. Roll up a female character, and just see how that feels.

[–] Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Well I've not played d&d but i know that i always play as a female character in computer games unless there isn't a choice. But then I preferentially play the games with female protagonists. I'm really happy with the new hazelight game split fiction, because both the characters are female. (my partner always insists on playing the female character in it takes 2).

[–] Zoomboingding@lemmy.world 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

The difference with D&D is that you're not just controlling a character's actions, you're role playing AS that character. It's one thing to be immersed in a game and be blasting enemies as Mio, it's another to say "I'm going to head into town to get a fancy dress for the mayor's banquet." and have another person react with "Damn girl you really clean up good!"

D&D is a low-pressure roleplaying exercise so you don't have to worry about what people think about how you sound, how they perceive you, etc. It's just a game after all. But if that feeling really clicks for you, you can pursue it further.

Thanks. That sounds like a logical next step. All i need now is some friends to play with 😂

[–] SinAdjetivos@lemmy.world 10 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Is there a reason you couldn't be a man with "big pillowy tits, thick thighs and an ass so big you can see it from the front"?

It seems to me like you're caught in a gender binary and falling into the trap of having to "choose" from a false dichotomy. HRT isn't a binary either and assuming you have access to medical professionals within your area you can describe the specifics that you want and a good doctor will work with you to help meet those needs.

If you have the means and haven't yet, a good first step could be to find a therapist to help understand, define and articulate what exactly those needs are. It's not a decision you need to make in a day, HRT isn't going to magically transition you to hyper-fem in a single day and force you to change your name and start life from scratch. There's doesn't even have to be any sort of "coming out" thing if you don't want there to be. If you've got bigotted parents/coworkers/community/etc. you can totally just deny it to them and play it off as getting old or whatever.

[–] Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

I chose my line of study based on the insane ADHD notion that I could clone an xx version of myself and upload my mind via a brain to brain interface and start over as a woman. (As a side note that can totally be done but its in a very dark place ethically and would require billions of euros) So I gave up on that notion but not before getting a masters degree in a relevant field. So yeah I'm pretty sure I want to be a woman. Of course that sounds batshit crazy (largely because it is) so I'd never admit to that IRL

Also I totally get that hrt is a years long process, but I'm honestly not off to a bad start. My thighs are already relatively thick and i am actually starting off with a b cup or something because the fancy cupcakes are mostly icing lol.

[–] SinAdjetivos@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)

So it's the fear of rejection/bigotry/etc. that's your primary hold up?

that can totally be done

Alternatively HRT is kinda magic in its ability to reprogram your body. It's not quite "full body swap" but if it eventually gets you 60-80% of the way there then why not?

That's kinda where I'm ending up. I can always use cupcakes as a supplementary treatment.

[–] lwhjp@lemmy.sdf.org 8 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Sounds like you figured it out already! I suggest you go live as the person you want to be and pay no mind to any potential haters. Good luck <3

PS HRT is indeed awesome

Honestly if it just helps me be less angry all the time it'd be a massive win.

[–] dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 5 days ago

+1, HRT practically saved my life

[–] manxu@piefed.social 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I don't want to loose everything. I'm sure my partner and kids would be fine with it

It sounds like you might be best off talking with your partner about this, don't you think? They sound supportive in general and might not be too surprised to find out how you feel about yourself and your situation. They probably know you better than anyone else and can help you find yourself more precisely.

Also, if your concerns about bigotry center around their safety and that of the kids, maybe involving them might give you more clarity. That's all on the premise that you consider them supportive, of course.

It's more that they already have their own stuff to deal with and whilst the adults around us are going to be civil in person, they'll still talk freely in private and their kids will be less restrained at school.

[–] knightly@pawb.social 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

At the risk of breaking the trans prime directive, you sound a lot like a trans tomboy or maybe an enby. Hormone therapy might be right for you~<3

Looking into it, around a 7 on the futch scale?