Luna Dark
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I just got done reading this thread here and had to add my personal story into a thread of my own:
Lonely In A Relationship Thread
This is kind of a response, though it's my story too.
I am lonely even though I have a partner because we have been through a lot together over the last few years and after all of our shared dreams were crushed by circumstances beyond our control my partner came out as a transsexual. She's transitioning to live life full time as a woman now and I'm at a total loss. All of my dreams of having my last child and a nice, decent wedding are over. Sure I might have some kind of commitment ceremony in the future but conceiving my own child again will never happen. Only other people who have gone through the grief and sheer desperation of secondary infertility would even begin to understand that kind of pain.
At 32 years of age I thought I'd have a good partner that wanted (mainly) the same things out of life and be fairly emotionally stable. I waited many years to meet this man after my first failed marriage. I spent a lot of time doing all the soul-searching I needed to do (including turning down unsuitable offers for many years) to know what I truly wanted and for all intents and purposes my current relationship really looked like it was everything I hoped it would turn out to be. I'm still in shock, denial, anger and absolute bitterness over how I could not have seen this coming. There was just no way to tell, no clues, my partner didn't even cross-dress in all the years we were together so it was completely left-field when she dropped the bomb on me. Right up until that moment I saw her as my man. Because she was one.
The loneliness seemed to have always been there to a certain degree, but it got even more prominent when my love lost interest in 'us' and began to aggressively pursue her own womanhood. It is possibly the worst thing that could happen to anyone in a relationship that otherwise feels and looks healthy. I'm sure all women get insecure that they may lose their partner to another woman but most of us don't fear our partners actually becoming women. It's the most lonely thing living with someone who went from your (supposedly) devoted husband to some insanely narcissistic transwoman almost overnight. Everything that used to be about us is now just about her in her world. We no longer share a bed at night (even though we are sometimes intimate) and to most outsiders we appear to be living lives as single women not seeking relationships.
I have children from a previous marriage and as wonderful as it would be to just move on and meet someone else, I actually care about what it would feel like for the kids if I did that. I think they know my current relationship is doomed but they have come to love and cherish this person as a step-parent because we've been together so long and they have formed bonds with her that mean a lot to all of them. I don't want the kids to be the reason I stay with her but how they feel is important to me, especially when I'm considering a life-changing event or serious changes that will affect them. I actually did try breaking up with my partner for awhile and it was so lonely for us all that she ended up moving back in after only six weeks. We couldn't stop seeing each other or talking daily and it was clear that breaking up was the wrong solution for us at that time.
Having said that, I still don't know whether I'm coming or going in this relationship. Before her transition, my partner and I seemed to have common goals and enjoy the dynamic of our relationship as a man-woman couple. This lack of attention towards the commonalities in our lives and her refusal to give me any concrete answers about why we're still together after everything has changed has freaked me out beyond reason. I get that because she is in transition she can't answer some things honestly (without being sure she won't change her mind later) but I've found even trying to have a relationship with someone who can't decide whether they really want you or not takes its toll. Deep down I think she still loves me as much as I love her, but everything has changed so much I'm not sure I trust anything she says or even anything I say and do anymore.
The hormones she's taking seem to have affected her mind in subtle ways that even I can't read. I don't even know if she wants me to be her future or whether she will eventually decide she wants a guy. This is just another thing that screws with my head at times, though I try to put it out of my mind because dwelling on it only makes me feel crazy. I have tried posting in transgender support forums and talking to other women who are facing the same situation as me but if they all fear their husbands (now wives?) are going to leave them for a man, none of them admit to it. This kind of really sucks because it's one of those make-or-break things for me and I can't get an honest answer out of my girl yet because I think she truly doesn't know what she wants yet. Perhaps she's just afraid I will force her to leave if she admits to having changed her mind, but it would be truly sad if she's thinking like this too. I deserve to be free to be with someone who really wants me if she doesn't. It's only fair right?
I have found that I could not talk to my friends in real life about these issues because they are all straight folks (naturally - I didn't know any LGBT folks before I met my honey) and would either hate me or ridicule me if I tried to discuss anything about her with them. Absolutely every hetero individual that has given me a piece of their minds about her transition have all acted upon the belief that because I was hetero I would simply not tolerate her coming out (as though it was some illness I'm meant to recover from) and that my natural inclination would be to leave her to find a straight partner. Intellectualizing the seriousness of this situation and trying to ignore my feelings has done nothing but make me feel worse. I have nowhere else to turn but the internet, in hopes that I might find other like-minded, lonely souls out there who understand.
I'm sorry for such a long-winded post. I'm so sad and grieving this life I thought I had. In all it took 9 years to build something that I thought was solid and very very precious, just to see it all taken down and destroyed right in front of me by just a few words from my partner. Almost a whole decade is a long time to pass in your life for something you worked so hard to achieve to fail you so badly. It's soul-crushing stuff indeed. I have tried medication (didn't work) and I'm now on a waiting list for talk therapy, though I'm not sure I want to fork out hundreds of dollars to have someone tell me to just "think more positive, things will work out!".
I don't know if it is my age or my life circumstances that have driven me to be this lonely and angry-at-the-world person, but it's happened and all I can do is try to fight my way out of it. If you have had the time and patience to read my whole post before responding, you are a saint indeed. Thank you for reading.
Luna
Lonely In A Relationship Thread
This is kind of a response, though it's my story too.
I am lonely even though I have a partner because we have been through a lot together over the last few years and after all of our shared dreams were crushed by circumstances beyond our control my partner came out as a transsexual. She's transitioning to live life full time as a woman now and I'm at a total loss. All of my dreams of having my last child and a nice, decent wedding are over. Sure I might have some kind of commitment ceremony in the future but conceiving my own child again will never happen. Only other people who have gone through the grief and sheer desperation of secondary infertility would even begin to understand that kind of pain.
At 32 years of age I thought I'd have a good partner that wanted (mainly) the same things out of life and be fairly emotionally stable. I waited many years to meet this man after my first failed marriage. I spent a lot of time doing all the soul-searching I needed to do (including turning down unsuitable offers for many years) to know what I truly wanted and for all intents and purposes my current relationship really looked like it was everything I hoped it would turn out to be. I'm still in shock, denial, anger and absolute bitterness over how I could not have seen this coming. There was just no way to tell, no clues, my partner didn't even cross-dress in all the years we were together so it was completely left-field when she dropped the bomb on me. Right up until that moment I saw her as my man. Because she was one.
The loneliness seemed to have always been there to a certain degree, but it got even more prominent when my love lost interest in 'us' and began to aggressively pursue her own womanhood. It is possibly the worst thing that could happen to anyone in a relationship that otherwise feels and looks healthy. I'm sure all women get insecure that they may lose their partner to another woman but most of us don't fear our partners actually becoming women. It's the most lonely thing living with someone who went from your (supposedly) devoted husband to some insanely narcissistic transwoman almost overnight. Everything that used to be about us is now just about her in her world. We no longer share a bed at night (even though we are sometimes intimate) and to most outsiders we appear to be living lives as single women not seeking relationships.
I have children from a previous marriage and as wonderful as it would be to just move on and meet someone else, I actually care about what it would feel like for the kids if I did that. I think they know my current relationship is doomed but they have come to love and cherish this person as a step-parent because we've been together so long and they have formed bonds with her that mean a lot to all of them. I don't want the kids to be the reason I stay with her but how they feel is important to me, especially when I'm considering a life-changing event or serious changes that will affect them. I actually did try breaking up with my partner for awhile and it was so lonely for us all that she ended up moving back in after only six weeks. We couldn't stop seeing each other or talking daily and it was clear that breaking up was the wrong solution for us at that time.
Having said that, I still don't know whether I'm coming or going in this relationship. Before her transition, my partner and I seemed to have common goals and enjoy the dynamic of our relationship as a man-woman couple. This lack of attention towards the commonalities in our lives and her refusal to give me any concrete answers about why we're still together after everything has changed has freaked me out beyond reason. I get that because she is in transition she can't answer some things honestly (without being sure she won't change her mind later) but I've found even trying to have a relationship with someone who can't decide whether they really want you or not takes its toll. Deep down I think she still loves me as much as I love her, but everything has changed so much I'm not sure I trust anything she says or even anything I say and do anymore.
The hormones she's taking seem to have affected her mind in subtle ways that even I can't read. I don't even know if she wants me to be her future or whether she will eventually decide she wants a guy. This is just another thing that screws with my head at times, though I try to put it out of my mind because dwelling on it only makes me feel crazy. I have tried posting in transgender support forums and talking to other women who are facing the same situation as me but if they all fear their husbands (now wives?) are going to leave them for a man, none of them admit to it. This kind of really sucks because it's one of those make-or-break things for me and I can't get an honest answer out of my girl yet because I think she truly doesn't know what she wants yet. Perhaps she's just afraid I will force her to leave if she admits to having changed her mind, but it would be truly sad if she's thinking like this too. I deserve to be free to be with someone who really wants me if she doesn't. It's only fair right?
I have found that I could not talk to my friends in real life about these issues because they are all straight folks (naturally - I didn't know any LGBT folks before I met my honey) and would either hate me or ridicule me if I tried to discuss anything about her with them. Absolutely every hetero individual that has given me a piece of their minds about her transition have all acted upon the belief that because I was hetero I would simply not tolerate her coming out (as though it was some illness I'm meant to recover from) and that my natural inclination would be to leave her to find a straight partner. Intellectualizing the seriousness of this situation and trying to ignore my feelings has done nothing but make me feel worse. I have nowhere else to turn but the internet, in hopes that I might find other like-minded, lonely souls out there who understand.
I'm sorry for such a long-winded post. I'm so sad and grieving this life I thought I had. In all it took 9 years to build something that I thought was solid and very very precious, just to see it all taken down and destroyed right in front of me by just a few words from my partner. Almost a whole decade is a long time to pass in your life for something you worked so hard to achieve to fail you so badly. It's soul-crushing stuff indeed. I have tried medication (didn't work) and I'm now on a waiting list for talk therapy, though I'm not sure I want to fork out hundreds of dollars to have someone tell me to just "think more positive, things will work out!".
I don't know if it is my age or my life circumstances that have driven me to be this lonely and angry-at-the-world person, but it's happened and all I can do is try to fight my way out of it. If you have had the time and patience to read my whole post before responding, you are a saint indeed. Thank you for reading.
Luna