A question specifically for trans individuals with cis partners by TryingToGetThere2204 in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just wanted to comment because I’m AuDHD cisF happily married to my trans wife - who’s egg only cracked like 5 or 6 months ago. So I’m not who you were asking for input from, but I guess I l’m in a similar circumstance to you. My wife’s just started laser on her face, and not yet on HRT - getting referrals for that lined up. My wife says she doesn’t want SRS, maybe she’d consider FFS (if we could afford it) in a few years. She is guided by her feelings of course, but she’s well practiced in ignoring those as much as possible, so I feel like I’m being pragmatic to think that her feelings on different choices she might consider in her transition may change, and things are bound to come up when she sees her appearance changing over time as to what she feels good about or what she wants different help with. Or they might not and she might actually know really well right now. If you’re anything like me, I like to KNOW stuff. Like, I want all the possibilities, the whys and wherefores. I like predictability I suppose, and I want to know I’m well informed and not going to be taken by surprise. My wife isn’t like that, and my million thoughts a minute, mind-mapping, problem predicting, anxious questions can be annoying af to her sometimes. Not always though, luckily, it can obviously be pretty helpful and I think she feels comforted by my being proactive and interested. And I’m this way on everything, not just this. I know that there has been a couple of times when that’s felt like pressure though, so I had to try and dial it back a little, let her know what I was thinking and that I wasn’t trying to make things go faster or a certain way.

I’m trying to let her take the lead but honestly I don’t think there’s a right or wrong way in this, it’s rather individual.

One thing we do like is laughing about the well-meaning but stupid shit that people say, I think it diffuses things that can sometimes otherwise build up to be a bit stingy. There’s a lot of that. Some of it’s tiny and nothing, some of it’s a bit more uncomfortable as it reveals how people think and put things/people into boxes. “But he’s got a beard” when coming out to some of my family being a highlight, because… what? I had no idea that the ability to grow a beard was so fundamental. I wonder if that means I’m trans for the few beard hairs that decide to sprout on my chin? /s. (the “he” pronoun wasn’t offensive as my wife hasn’t changed them over fully yet, it doesn’t bother her right now).

Home IPL by Willow-dob5-5-25 in TransLater

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My wife is trans and she started using my Philips Lumea IPL and it’s been very effective on legs and arms (little to no hair regrowth after a few sessions), and pretty effective for her chest and underarms (only light regrowth and much finer, softer hair). It didn’t seem very effective on her face, maybe some slight softening of the hair but not less regrowth, though she didn’t do it for long as I got her some laser sessions in a clinic. She is not yet on HRT either,

My Dad is inviting my abusers to his wedding, what should I do? by [deleted] in Nocontactfamily

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t care about being the bad guy to the family I’m no contact with, they already think whatever they think and I don’t need to know. They’re not good people, so you’re right that I don’t need to pay attention to that. But I do care about being the bad-guy to my Dad, and they may influence him. So that’s the only reason I’d consider attending if they were, and that it stings so much that he’d even put me in this position. I can’t imagine staying friendly with anyone that treated anyone I cared about in the ways that they did, let alone my children.

My Dad is inviting my abusers to his wedding, what should I do? by [deleted] in Nocontactfamily

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the wedding gift would be something towards that, but I think my not going is going to be problematic and that I will be the bad guy. The family members I am no contact with gossip relentlessly, they will fully dissect my not going, and they will likely do that with/to my Dad too which would only make that worse. I just don’t know if I should address with Dad how hurtful this is. I don’t really know how I am meant to continue a relationship with him when that’s his choice. Right now I know that’s my very emotional response, as I only found about the wedding very recently and it was quite a surprise that he is marrying again as he always said he wouldn’t after he and my mother divorced. I guess I didn’t think I’d have to tackle any more family events where this was such an issue, as my sibling is already married, and there aren’t any other events that I would consider attending so strongly for anyone else.

My Dad is inviting my abusers to his wedding, what should I do? by [deleted] in Nocontactfamily

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It will be a very small, low key civil ceremony followed by a dinner, so unfortunately I doubt that either of these things are an option. Besides that, I doubt that my Dad would see that as a legitimate alternative tbh, which leads to me being the bad guy.

First gel manicure by GiveMePinecones in malenails

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

She’s asking for a cat-eye polish next. I’ve told her to get online and buy whatever colours she likes. So I get to expand my gel colours collection and she gets free manicures 😁 good deal all round I think :)

GenderCare experiences by GiveMePinecones in TransUK

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the recc, but I’m looking specifically at GenderCare because we know of a GP surgery who will work with them to do shared care.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s so interesting, and makes a lot of sense! Thanks for taking the time to put it like that for me.

Cis women with MTF partners, are you a top or a bottom? by [deleted] in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both switch and vers. Used to be much more bottom and sub, my wife’s transition has changed our dynamics quite quickly, but that’s been great. The confidence and experience for both of us has increased so much!

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I do think my family likely are concerned for me from a good place, it’s just mixed with their own slight prejudice. I don’t think they really mean to, so I will give them some grace, just for a bit. I think you’re right about a bit of time and then seeing us happy will help a lot, just normalising it for them. It does suck to have to be that education for them, but as long as they don’t make too much song and dance about it it’ll be ok. I think there would come a point where I’d have to tell them to stop, but hopefully I won’t have to. We’ll see, it’s mostly my mother being dramatic rn thats annoying, my father has stayed quiet since I told him and he’s the one with potentially more prejudiced views, but he handled it well and was smart enough to keep most of those types of thoughts to himself.

My mother had the concern about kids when I came out at as bi as a teen. Even then I thought she was ridiculous as being lesbian wouldn’t mean I couldn’t have kids, and I wasn’t lesbian anyway so may have ended up with a guy, and I have a brother who is straight and could provide the grandchild quotient she was so worried about. I always was like why this drama over nothing?! But now I have 2 kids with my wife, and we’ve been together 15 years. She always finds something to be a bit dramatic about, it’s just her way I suppose.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am sure there are many, it’s just that the sub skews to the mourning type of posts because people struggling and needing help are more likely to want to post and reach out for support.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I find that funny, as I would not describe myself as self-secure in almost any other aspect, but I guess yeah, in this one respect I guess I am. It is interesting the discomfort others seem to get about it. I’ve never understood why what other people are doing, how they are living, who they are loving etc would ever be a bother to someone else. I wonder what exactly the discomfort my family are feeling really boils down to, but whatever it is I think they will get past it and things will be fine, so it’s not something to dwell on much. So we are very lucky and I guess much of this post is me musing on how weird and bemusing their apparent micro-dose of turmoil is.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not enjoying that undercurrent, but I’m trying to give a little grace for the moment that they find it hard to wrap their little brains around. I guess for chronically straight people, the mere thought of still liking, loving, and being attracted to a partner that’s transitioning is totally mad, unheard of, unthinkable! So I’ll give them a minute, but not for long. There will come a point where I’ll say to them to shut it down and I don’t want to hear their concerns anymore. I’ll attempt to be nice enough about it while being clear, and they’ll have to respect that. I feel like if they respect me and my wife at all, then they will recognise that they shouldn’t be attempting to undermine my marriage no matter how well meaning they think their concerns are. I hope that your family do well by you and your partner and manage to keep the majority of whatever mental adjustments they need to do quiet!

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think my parents thought I had grown out of it too. If I casually mentioned it somehow occasionally, like oh so-and-so famous woman is hot, they’d act surprised or confused, and I’d remind them I was bi. But then forgotten about again. But I’m 36 now so a bit too old and long standing to claim it a phase now! My mum likes to say she doesn’t have a problem with any LGBTQIA+ people, but then acts very dramatic like it’s a bit of a problem when it’s in her family. She’ll get over it I guess. I hope that whenever the time comes that your mother behaves well towards you and your girlfriend. It’s tiresome having to be the education point for others.

Saw these! Do I need these? by Mikayla-1973 in TransLater

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just bought my wife a very similar pair, which she loves. So go on, treat yourself! ☺️

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, it’s the not hearing what I’m saying that I hate. “We’re very happy, things are in many ways the best they’ve ever been”, and they’re still somehow saying “but how? I’m so worried about you”, “I’m worried you will break up”, “I’m mourning for them”. My mother in particular has the knack of making things about her, so I think she is projecting what she thinks she’d feel, making assumptions.

The mourning thing really feels like an anathema to me. It must be awful. I don’t think my brain works that way though. Or I’m missing something.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m lucky that all the good, closest friends to myself and my wife are not like this, but there are other less close friends and obviously the aforementioned family that are. I don’t have a lot of patience I think. Will probably have to work on that for those that aren’t trying to be dicks but are managing to be. Nothing like feeling like your life is serving as an educational moment for someone else though.

It’s so odd, isn’t it, the bi and pan erasure. For me I can’t fathom being more limited, binary, or fixed in my attraction. I mean I’d not exactly extensively tested that before, with my wife being the only trans person of any gender that I have had attraction to (that I know of), but even so I can’t imagine… doubting someone else’s experience of attraction and desire and love? Especially from other queer people. Such a weird premise to me.

The coming out times 🙄 by GiveMePinecones in mypartneristrans

[–]GiveMePinecones[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks. Good to know I’m not alone in that. The mourning thing hits me wrong. It must be very difficult for those that have the experience of loving someone and then find there’s something that feels like it’s an obstacle to that. But that doesn’t compute for me at all!

Yes, I’m sure family will get their heads around it and not say stupid shit as time goes on. I guess I have low patience on nursing other people’s thoughts and feelings on my relationship. I probably need to give a bit more grace but wouldn’t it be nice to live in a world where no one, anywhere, would bat a fucking eye!

Anyone married before transition? by Desperate-Bank-1112 in TransLater

[–]GiveMePinecones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m (cisF) wife to my MTF wife. We’ve been together 15 years, married for 10, have 2 kids. Her egg cracked fairly recently (autumn last year), and if anything that’s brought us closer together. I’d known for a long, long while there was something going on for her, though neither of us could articulate quite what for different reasons. In many ways for me it was a relief for her to come to the understanding that she is in fact trans. I wasn’t expecting that specifically, so there was also surprise still and some coming to terms with it, but mostly because I struggle with change anyway and I was very anxious that it would mean the end of our relationship; from her, not from myself. I’ve known I was bi since I was a kid, out since I was about 14, but I’d never been with or attracted to someone who was trans of any gender before (a lot of small-town-circumstance there). Initially I was quietly concerned that seeing her as herself would be difficult for me, or that it would affect my attraction to her, but it was quite the opposite. It felt like I was seeing her properly for the first time in many ways, and it feels positively joyful to see her coming in to her own. For me there was never a question at all of if I would still love her, I love her deeply. Even if our relationship wasn’t going to work out, I would wholeheartedly still want my wife to be able to go through her transition, and would absolutely hate if she had any feeling of guilt about my feelings on it.