Voice lessons, dose speculations, shots and thoughts
So, on Saturday I did a shot... rather than keeping track of numbers I'm just trying to hit general days, so I can remember when I do the next one.
I've had a second voice lesson, but not a third, and probably won't until after the holidays. It's frustrating, because I know my voice won't fix itself for awhile, and until it does, the best thing I could be doing for myself is talking softly in a gentle falsetto. And everything this guy seems to be telling me goes directly against every tip I've gotten for how to make my speech sound male. I'm like dude I just learned how to make sure my voice goes down to end a sentence with finality; I don't need you to tell me I sound too monotone. (I'm mostly kidding. I'm not hung up on sounding macho, it's just that right now I can use all the help I can get.)
I've also been talking with a linguist friend about research into how men and women differ in shaping vowels— it's not his specialty, so he doesn't have a lot to tell me, but maybe if I listen carefully I can hear the difference and replicate it?
I'm thinking that when I see my doctor in January I'll ask her if she will increase my dose to maybe 75mg or so. I am getting impatient, but I don't want to make the decision out of impatience. I want to make the decision according to what's best for my body at this stage. And that may well be to just wait and let the lower doses work, or it might be to keep the momentum of the changes by ramping up.
Am I impatient for chest surgery? Yes. But I have no hope of getting that done anytime soon. Would a hysto help the testosterone work better? Yes, but see above.
All this, and some days I wake up telling myself I've made the wrong choice, that I'm just a confused moron who would be better off either learning to be female or maybe sinking into a quiet oblivion than trying to do this. Because it's really hard. It feels harder here than it was in Florida, because the people here don't know me. And they still don't see me as male and it's driving me up the fucking wall that every time I correct someone's pronouns they give me this confused look like "Wha--? Oh, yeah." Because this is queer heaven, right?
Oh, hell, I just want to fucking pass already. Please. I can't believe I ever thought I'd be okay living as an androgynous woman. And third sex was never an option for me, as much as I thought it was.
So why do I still have this terror, every now and again, that I'm making a huge mistake? Does that mean I'm making a huge mistake?
I think about these things a lot, when I'm alone, when I'm in the shower, when I'm at a party wishing I could for gods' sake find someone to dance with who thinks I'm sexy who isn't looking for a woman. Then I go out and someone refers to me as "she" and it hits me in the gut. I don't want to be "she" and I don't want to live as a woman, and going back to that would be intolerable.
This update has gotten a bit more personal than most. I feel like all the progress I made in Florida, where I felt so comfortable and confident about myself and my transition, has eroded away. And here, now, mostly I feel lonely, scared, and excited for the future all at once. That makes it really hard to take things slowly, concentrate on my studies and finding a job, and not push myself. It also makes me want to just hide in my room until all this is over.
That's not an option I'll allow myself. I have school, I will have a job, and furthermore the only way I'll be well-adjusted after all this is if I keep making myself interact with the world even when it's really tough to do that. So, I will do that. I will leave my room. I will even leave the house at times when it is other than strictly necessary. And I will learn patience.

2 Comments:
Were I in the same situation, I'd be really frustrated, too. It sucks that the people in SF aren't making much of an effort. I would think that there, if anywhere, people would be more considerate to you. Isn't it the gay and trans capital of America?
How's your facial hair coming? It's really hard to think someone's a woman with a goatee or something.
Well, I know you're a guy. You always were. Must've been a bit of a mix-up originally, but you're taking steps to get where you feel you should be, and you may have doubts now and then, but it's probably just because of stressful BS you're getting from society.
And this is a bad metaphor, but if you go to a store with your hopes set on something, and someone sells you something misleading, you should totally go back to the store and demand the product you wanted. Don't feel bad if customer service gives you a hard time, and most importantly, get what you'll be satisfied with. Egg beaters and flour sifters may be used to mix things, but there's only one you want to use when you're making an omelette!
hi kerrick
this is tom, popping in to visit you (i came across this blog a while ago, back when you were commenting on my blog).
the patience that transition requires is something i've been thinking about a lot lately. in one sense, i've wanted things to speed up (for me, it's mostly a case of me feeling something along the lines of 'get me out of this puberty and its changes - and the acne. i want to be a man, not a teenage boy.'). but, in another sense, sometimes i wouldn't mind slowing things down too. it all feels a little out of control sometimes, the body, life and identity changes. there are days when it all feels a bit like a crash course.
earlier this year, my then-partner told me re: transition that i can't speed things up so i might as well try to enjoy it. and she was right, damn her.
tom
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