From Fail to Female

Month

December 2011

5 posts

Doubt and Regret

I’ve never been the type of person to put off decisions. When presented with a choice, no matter how difficult, I systematically narrow the options down to the best possible outcomes, and then if there is no remaining reason to pick one over the other(s), I pick a direction and run with it. Through much life experience of doing this, I’ve developed a good sense of danger, because I’ve ended up with both good results and bad results.

When going through a journey as large as transitioning, there is always the looming worry that transitioning is a mistake for me. Before you jump to the conclusion that this looming worry is an indication in and of itself that transition is a mistake for me, you should also be aware that I had this same looming worry about not transitioning being a mistake when I was at the point in my life that I was trying to make the decision of whether to transition or not.

Whether I had decided to transition or not, I was making an irreversible choice. The male body goes through multiple stages of masculinization, and in the late 20s, the body goes through another irreversible phase. At the beginning of my transition, I could feel the onset of these changes, and even in this year that is so full of feminizing changes, I could tell that I was fighting a war in my body to halt what the testosterone was working so hard to accomplish. This situation created a very real urgency about stepping forward in one direction or the other, committing to a lifetime of the fruit of my decision.

Faced with this choice of whether to transition or not, I carefully considered every outcome I could think of. I asked myself many questions. I spent many days and nights pondering every side of this that I could think of. If I didn’t transition, did I have any reason to think that my gender dysphoria would change in a powerful way that it hadn’t in nearly 26 years of struggling with it? Could I live with this for the rest of my life without it changing? If I did transition and regretted it, would I be able to live with myself? What if it actually solved the problem that it was the supposed solution for? Would I really be happier with the gender dysphoria problem solved even in the face of so many new problems that would be created? What do other people who have been through this have to say? What do other people who know me have to say? The list goes on, but I’m sure you get the idea.

Unfortunately, there is just no way to know the answer to all these questions without living through it. I would have to choose to move forward in one direction or the other. I decided to start transitioning, but I started with reversible changes and avoided permanent changes at all costs. I knew I was moving quickly, so I wanted to give myself as much time as possible to really feel what I was doing and to give myself ample opportunity to experience doubt and regret. One step at a time, I would select a change that would expose me to what I was doing without forcing me to make the permanent commitment.

There was a notable exception: facial hair. My hair is quite dark, and as such, even cleanly shaven, it has always been a major challenge to achieve a feminine appearance. Early on in transition, I discovered that it takes upwards to 2 years to fully remove facial hair permanently. I made the decision that even if I reverted my transition, I would be able to be happy without the ability to grow facial hair. I started permanent hair removal just weeks into my transition.

One step at a time, I made a change, and then stopped and asked myself, “How do you feel right now? Are you happy with the change you made? Do you feel regret? Do you feel apprehensive about the very next step in front of you?” I never committed to the whole process at once. I never once said, “I’m going to transition from male to female.” I had only decided that I liked what I had done and was going to take another step in that direction.

Over time, and not even very much time, I had changed quite a lot. Right from the start, I picked my new first name, Kelsie. Just two weeks in, I never presented as male again except when I had to grow facial hair for electrolysis. I built up a new wardrobe, learned how to do makeup, and began growing my hair out.

After about 2 months, I told my family what I was doing. Their responses were quite varied, but for the most part, everyone was very surprised and/or upset. I did not get the recognition, support, and approval that I had sought. They were so upset about it that they couldn’t even manage to really talk to me about it and express even the legitimate concerns they probably had. It took many months to even get to the point where we could talk about it. I couldn’t wait for them to come around, and frankly, I think them seeing me living as a woman was the catalyst that finally helped them accept it. If I had waited around for them to catch up to where I was before I continued my transition, I’m not sure it ever would have happened.

After about 3 months, I was running out of non-permanent changes that I could make. I was quite satisfied with myself. I was happy with every change that I had made. I was even happier with how my inner Kelsie had been released by these changes. At this point, there was simply no way I could justify not going further. So far, everything that transition had promised me had come true, and I was the happiest I had ever been in my life. My therapist was very much in agreement; she could see how much transitioning had done for me. I felt very alive for the first time, and it was shining powerfully.

I started taking hormones around that time. I knew hormones would take a while before any physical changes occurred, and I wanted to get an idea of whether I could handle the emotional and mental changes that hormone replacement therapy would cause.

Two months later, I changed my legal name to Kelsie my middle name to Nicole. Three months after my name was changed, I had a major facial surgery that changed two features of my face that absolutely inhibited my ability to appear feminine: my enormous brow ridge and my nose.

Three months after the operation, November 2011, I have been “full time” for most of the year, and was living with zero regrets about the steps I had taken. Hormone replacement therapy had proven to me that I absolutely wanted to always be on female hormones for the rest of my life. I did not have any physical changes from hormone replacement therapy yet, so I decided that it was time to do what I had to do to make that process really start. Because of my particular situation that I’m not going to get into detail on right now, I had already decided that an orchiectomy was the only good way to make this happen. Late November, I had this done.

As I recently revealed in a prior blog post, I now consider my transition complete. So let’s talk about how I feel now. Many of the inhibitions I feel are related to my beliefs about God, so I wrote a lot about it. I know that many of my readers don’t believe what I believe, but I hope you can at least understand the impact this had on me, knowing what I believe.

I realize that a lot of the good feelings I felt during transition was novelty. The novelty of transition has worn off. I’m happy with what I have done, but I would say that it is more like being brought out of the negative than moving into the positive. I feel like I’m functioning properly now, where before I was malfunctioning.

If I examine myself internally and reflect on my own desires, I’m very happy with what I’ve done. But a part of me feels the need to reconcile this with others. I grew up heavily participating in a non-denominational born-again Christian church. I lost every single friendship I had from there as a result of my transition. There are a few people who are still Facebook friends with me, but are entirely non-communicative, and the ones that I’ve reached out to consistently cannot manage to even talk to me. I still love God with all my heart, mind, soul, and strength. It is painful that I am rejected, and treated with contempt because they expect that I “knew better” than to do this.

An always-looming question is whether God accepts me as his daughter or if he still sees me as his son, an idea which I loathe. I am quite fearful that one day I’m going to feel spiritually compelled to de-transition on the basis that one cannot change what they are, and that God did not actually make me female, despite how I feel internally. This would be angering since I so heavily pursued his input before this was a permanent thing. This would be angering since the very people that I needed so badly to help me make the right choice based on our shared beliefs rejected me, so I had to make the decision alone. If there is one thing that I’ve learned over years of pursuing God, it is that two or more people are better than one when listening to God, because it helps sift out our own biases, filters, and selfish desires.

I recently went to this same church to see if I could get an input on how God sees me right now, without revealing to the people who I was. I found a man that has prophesied over me multiple times in the past, and I decided to ask him if he could just listen for a minute and ask God if he had anything at all to say. In my belief system, prophesy is something anyone can do; it is a fancy word for “listening to God and saying exactly what you hear or see in your mind to the person that you are prophesying over”. It is up to the receiving party to interpret what it means to them, usually, in my experience. The idea was that this man wouldn’t know who I was, and that if he referred to me as “daughter”, then I could have the peace of knowing that I was recognized as female by God. In hindsight, that would be a pretty poor foundation to base anything on because humankind doesn’t hear God perfectly, and it is quite possible that even if God said “son”, they might hear “daughter” because the person they are looking at is female. Prophesy isn’t a perfect and exact thing in my experience, and you have to weigh it every time and decide if you really feel that it is from God. My tendency is to shelf anything that is not crystal clear and obviously from God. The man recognized me immediately when I presented him with my request; my cover was blown. He did listen for me anyway though, and said, “God says, ‘I love you, my son.’”. I was immediately distraught, probably visibly so. He could probably see my face change, and immediately began defending what he had said with things like, “The last time anyone here saw you, you were male, and now you return and you are female. You can’t expect people to just accept that immediately. By doing this, you are basically saying that God made a mistake.” I immediately regained my composure when he said these things because I realized that he himself was so extremely biased that he could not be trusted to have really heard God clearly. Honestly, I should have walked away as soon as he realized who I was, because I expected that sort of response from anyone that knew who I was. Also, there is the fact that “I love you, my <son/daughter>” is a pretty damned generic thing. You could say that to any person on the planet. There is no check and balance in the message that resonates as confirmation that it really was God talking to me. So I shelved that experience, and I regret pursuing an answer in that manner.

I had a dream the other night where I was pregnant. In the dream, this was making me quite happy, and it was just a complete joy of a dream. When I awoke, I somehow retained the understanding of this desire. For the first time in my entire life, I suddenly know what it feels like to want to be a mother, to carry my child, to birth offspring, to raise them. This is totally out of nowhere. I have never experienced anything even remotely like this before, and I have zero understanding why this just happened now or why a dream is what brought it about. I’m not sitting here “wishing I was pregnant”, but I understand the desire now, and I simply cannot rule out the possibility that this might grow into something serious. I cannot bear children (yet? Medical science has some exciting possibilities in this area…). But that doesn’t mean I cannot or should not experience a normal and healthy desire (this is not to say that a lack of desire for offspring is abnormal or unhealthy).

At the end of the day, I do not believe I’m actually going to get any sort of a clear answer from God. I do not believe that people are going to prove to be a particularly useful input as to whether this is really right for me. I am really fucking happy with myself. I love myself now. I feel great. I do not want to revert this. I don’t want to go back, ever. I regret nothing, and the only thing that would ever make me regret it is if I decided that it was a mistake. I believe that God is the only person that has the influence to cause me to decide that this was a mistake, and I’m quite skeptical that will ever happen. I believe that more time in the place that I’ve travelled to will set things more firmly in my heart and mind that I’ve made the right choice.

I regret nothing. My doubts have no foundation. I am happy.

Dec 17, 2011
The Beginning and the End

A question that I am frequently asked is, “When are you getting the final surgery done? You know, the surgery.” I’ve mentioned my distaste for the idea that the state of my genitals has any bearing at all on who I am. But I think the question that people really want to know the answer to is how long I am going to be transitioning for. How much do I have left to go? What else do I have planned? When am I done? To answer this, I think it would be best to take a step backwards and talk about the beginning of all of this.

I grew up in a Christian household. My eyes and mind were shielded from the world so that I would grow to only have my parent’s ideas to consider. I quite simply was never exposed to the slightest possibility that there was such a thing as being trans-anything until I was well into my teens (15 or 16, roughly). My parents had imparted such a deep homophobia, transphobia, and rejection of alternative viewpoints that I was never open enough to consider that what I was being exposed to wasn’t just weird; a sexual fetish; an abomination to humanity. I recall being very anti-gay rights, with the mindset that if gay rights were permitted, more people would be gay, and our country would go to shit because God could never love a country full of gay people. But I didn’t come up with this stuff on my own. It was force-fed to me, and I didn’t know any other way.

Later in my life, within the last 5 years, I really began to question why I believed things, and essentially rewrote entire chunks of myself. My acceptance and love for the LGBT community was born in this shift of my heart and mind. In the process of accepting these new things, I also became aware that there were some things about myself that were different, too. But let’s step back into those years before these changes and look deeper.

If anyone had ever asked me at any point in my entire life if I wished I was born female, I can say with absolute confidence that I would have said that I did wish I was born female, without any hesitation. Okay, maybe I would have been too embarrassed to admit it. But the truth is, if I was being honest with myself or whoever asked me, it was undeniable. I’ve always wanted to be female, long before I realized I already am female. I could sit here all day and give you examples and evidence of this throughout my life, but let’s just gloss over it since I’m already writing a lot in this post. Just take this from what I’m saying in this paragraph: I, Kelsie, have been oozing out of the puppet that appeared male to everyone for my entire life, and I’m stunned that nobody ever called me out on it.

The reason I bring up my past is because I am frequently told that, “It must be weird for you to adjust so much from one gender to the other.” Or, “I’m sure that you still have a long way to go before you will be comfortable.” Well, actually, this transition didn’t hit me with surprise like it hit so many of you. I totally saw this coming. I’ve spent my entire life suppressing feminine mannerisms, personality, and preferences. I had a period of time for the first few months of being full-time where I probably went further than was really right for me on the super-femme end of the spectrum, but I was playing catch-up for a lifetime of being caged in. I’d say that I’m pretty damned comfy where I stand right now, and this is more or less how I have always actually been, hidden inside.

This is important in defining what transition even means. Transition does not mean that I became female. I already was, and I always have been. If you knew me before transition, you saw a best efforts attempt at survival, a puppet show. Bits of my real personality showed through the mask, for sure. But I fundamentally was not who you were looking at. Transitioning, to me, is very simply an external change to better reflect my internal reality. It is an emergence of the real me, discarding the fake and showing what is real. This includes social changes, physical changes, hormonal changes, and presentational changes.

Based on that definition of transition, I began transitioning sometime around the end of 2010. But when does it end? When am I done? I would argue that it does not end when I stop making changes. When are you going to stop changing? I feel that my transition ends at the point that I’m not hiding anymore, when who you see when you meet me is really me. My legal name change was a part of my transition. I could not be completely me without that change. Changing my wardrobe was a part of my transition because I needed to dress in female clothing to be completely me. Having facial surgery was part of my transition because I needed those changes for society to look at me and assume I am female. My recent orchiectomy was a part of my transition because I needed my hormone levels to be correct to be comfortable with myself. Sex reassignment surgery is not a part of my transition, because I do not need a vagina to be me. I want a vagina, and I will likely have that surgery as soon as I can, but I don’t need it to be me. I may have another facial surgery in my lifetime. This is not a part of my transition, because I don’t need it to be me. I want my breast tissue to fully develop, but it is not a part of my transition, because I don’t need it to be me.

You may have just realized already what I’m about to say: my transition is over. I’m already done. I am no longer transitioning.


Dec 10, 20111 note
Mom's Genitals - Continued

I’ve had a lot of people ask me to talk a bit more about this topic since my original post on the topic. There are actually a lot of flaws in the argument that genitals can define gender, more than I mentioned in the original article.

The thing I was saying in the original article about the singular “sex change operation” is really important. Unlike what a lot of people think, a lot of trans people never get genital surgery. This is especially true for female to male peoples, because the surgeries are not as good as they are for male to female peoples, so a lot of them just don’t see it as worthwhile. The procedures are also insanely expensive and risky. Some trans people aren’t particularly bothered by their existing genitals, and they just don’t play enough of a problematic role to the trans person to go through something so serious to get them changed. If you define my transition as complete at the point that I get my penis mutilated to function as a vagina, but I decide not to ever get that procedure done, it stops being a good place to make that line that you referred to.

You also have to consider people with intersex conditions. There are people whose biological sex cannot be classified as clearly male or female. Some of these people’s bodies are surgically modified at birth to conform to either male or female norms; others are not corrected. And this isn’t even rare. I’m talking something like 1 out of every 100 births. I have a friend who was born with a vagina and a penis. The doctors decided to assign them as male and surgically modified them to physically conform to this decision. But in their late teens, they spontaneously grew substantial breasts in a very short time. They have always felt like they were really female. Their body has partially masculinized due to testosterone production but has also partially feminized. Personally, I think the doctors made the wrong call at birth. She decided to transition to female. She still has a penis.

Then, you have that trans woman who recently was declined a gender marker change on her drivers license because she hadn’t had genital surgery yet. So she walked outside the DMV and took off her shirt and started flashing passerbys with her beautiful breasts. After only a short few minutes, she was arrested for indecent exposure. Wait a minute, how the hell does that work? You are going to say that she is male because she has a penis and then turn around and arrest her for exposing her breasts under the premise that she is female? I’m sorry, but that kind of double standard is completely unnacceptable.

I mentioned this originally as well, but I’ll say it here again to be thorough; do you personally think it would be appropriate to consider me a male right now? I live full time as a female. The U.S. State Department recognizes me as female. I’m hormonally female. People assume I’m female. There is literally not a single aspect of my life where I function as a male anymore, at all. But yet, I do have a penis. If the standard is “penis” or “no penis”, you have no choice but to call me male. And that doesn’t seem like a suitable conclusion to me.

I personally think the U.S. State Department has it correct, and I want to see every organization adopt the same guidelines. Basically, I was able to get a passport that shows that I’m female by having a doctor write a letter authenticating that I’m going through transition to female and that he is monitoring the process.

Dec 8, 2011
I Dodged a Bullet

I recently, after way too long, decided to fire my endocrinologist. Here is why:

  1. He took my first bloodwork on the day that he prescribed my hormones the first time. He looked at those results 3 months later. On that same day, he took more bloodwork and increased my dosage. 3 months later, he looked at that bloodwork. He had me on hormones for 3 months before he even knew what my baseline values were and 6 months before he knew what his changes were doing 3 months ago. If I was developing an issue that would show up on my bloodwork, he would have a 3 month delay to discovering it.

  2. He wants to put me on finasteride as an anti-androgen, but refuses Spironolactone or any other available anti androgen.

  3. He has me taking oral estradiol acetate pills instead of one of the many other available alternatives that are proven safer and more effective. He wasn’t really open to discussing changes in this area.

  4. He believes that sublingual administration is subject to first pass liver processing, despite a complete lack of corroboration and an abundance of resources that state exactly the opposite.

  5. He has me taking medroxyprogesterone, which has very little data showing that it is beneficial to feminization and a lot of data showing that it increases risks for bad stuff.

  6. His target ranges for my estrogen levels are on par with normal ranges for post-menopausal women. Post-menopausal women don’t even want to be on par with normal ranges for post-menopausal women. Those normal ranges are lower than a post-menopausal woman would ideally want because so many post-menopausal women don’t take HRT, so their estrogen levels are very low, and that affects the “normal” range. Also, if you look at the normal ranges for a young adult female (21-29), her estradiol levels can go 9 times the maximum levels of a “normal” range post-menopausal woman in the ovulation phase of her menstrual cycle and still be in the “normal” range.

Anyways, the nail in the already-nailed coffin happened today regarding that endo. And I apparently dodged a bullet, sort of.

I just had an orchiectomy a week and a half ago. 3 days before the orchiectomy, I got this bright idea of getting some blood-work done just so I could know what I was at right beforehand.

I just got the results back today on that bloodwork, and what I found was that my testosterone level was 33% higher than what I started with as the baseline before I started HRT. I knew what he was doing was completely ineffective, but I had never dreamed that he could have actually managed to send me the wrong fucking direction. I could feel it. I knew something was really “off”. This has been really validating to get numbers back that confirm how I felt. The T levels had dropped for a while, properly, but because he wasn’t up to date on my hormone levels, he had no idea there was a problem that had developed!

I don’t even know how to feel right now. I’m angry that he was such a fuckup. I’m angry that he told me he was experienced with trans folk. I’m angry that he was so careless with something so important to me. I’m angry that he wasted 9 months of my time for nothing, and even made it worse. I’m crying tears of joy that I’ve resolved this issue permanently. I’m so happy that my testosterone will never get that high again. I’m exhausted over waiting so long for nothing. I’m relieved to be walking away from this without him having managed to ruin my pretty voice because he couldn’t manage my testosterone properly. I’m scared to be entering the realm of DIY medicine. I’m angry that my therapist is not comfortable with me DIYing after what I just went through. I’m angry that my therapist wants me to find another endo. I’m never going to take another doctor at their word without knowing they are correct from my own research.

Dec 8, 2011
Perfection

Anyone that knows me well knows that I believe in the existence of a being that I like to refer to as God. I avoid labels such as Christian and others because I don’t like a lot of the baggage that comes with it. I also don’t really buy into enough of the whole package of any religion to feel like I’m a member of one. My beliefs are quite simple and I’m pretty damned unobtrusive about them. I won’t shove them in your face, and I am not trying to convert you. But I’m also not going to hide them and pretend I don’t believe what I believe. In a community that appears to me as predominantly atheist, this can sometimes be a little scary, because I’m surrounded by people that see my core beliefs as illogical and unfounded. But that’s okay. I believe what I believe, you believe what you believe, and we can coexist peacefully. I say all this as a preface to this post because my beliefs are the context for what I’m writing about today, and I want you to have an idea of where I’m coming from.

Somebody recently said this to me:

The problem you’re going to run up against is in changing your sex your saying “God made a mistake when He created me” – therefore God makes mistakes and is not perfect.
Or you might be saying – I just want to be female and not male (personal choice apart from God). Or your thinking could be something else. As you’ve stated, all this is your choice and you have to live with it.

I don’t feel that I’m saying, “God made a mistake” by changing my sex. If a man is born with a missing leg, and medical science can give them a prosthetic leg, is it fair to say that the man’s action of accepting that prosthetic leg is the same as saying that God made a mistake by giving him a missing leg to begin with? I really don’t believe that is fair to say. I believe that man’s fallen state is the root cause of a great many terrible things, and I believe being born with a mind that is gender-mismatched with one’s body is one possible thing that can happen. I believe this is how I am and have always been; a female mind born into a male’s body.

I also do not see this as a personal choice. I have made a personal choice to transition, but that is not the same as me saying that it is a personal choice to be female. I can’t help being female; I am what I am. I can only choose whether to do something about it.

Dec 6, 2011
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