I never found trans people funny myself, but I knew that other people found them funny, and this was painful to me.
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Replying to @e_urq
I blamed trans people for that pain. I viscerally wanted them to stop hurting me by being the object of ridicule.
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Replying to @e_urq
In addition to angry, I also felt intensely jealous. "Why do trans people get to transition when I secretly want to transition but can't?"
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Replying to @e_urq
I held all that inside because I was embarrassed, and I didn't want to be laughed at, and I was ashamed.
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Replying to @e_urq
The most freeing moment of my life was when I finally had the thought that no one was stopping me from transitioning but me.
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Replying to @e_urq
I literally stopped dead on the street with the thought "I could just say I was trans and transition. No one could stop me or say I wasn't."
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Replying to @e_urq
It was many months after that that I decided to go forward, but giving myself permission to just be trans if I was trans was a breakthrough.
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Replying to @e_urq
I think it's one that some people don't or can't have. For me, I'm immensely glad my fear of being laughed at wasn't so strong, in the end.
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Replying to @e_urq
Perhaps it's implied, but the greatest fear was of being an imperfect or unconvincing man. An effeminate man, a very short man.
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same here. I was on hormones for months but didn't change my presentation because I was afraid of being seen as trying but failing
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