My pet phrase for managing my dysphoria is "feeding the beast". I've come to believe that the beast will devour you if you lock it away and ignore it. When it breaks free, and it will break free, the beast will destroy everything you value. Calie's blog goes into this a lot, and a recent entry was very timely for me.
Saturday, I was chatting with my good friend Sylvia about my current crisis, and I said something about feeding the beast. Sylvia asked if the beast grows when you feed it. I've always thought of the beast as full-grown, but what if it's not? Could my giving in to the dysphoric urges make it stronger, more threatening? This had never occurred to me previously. I've seen it as a pressure cooker, where steam must escape from time to time, or the whole damn thing will blow.
But maybe Calie has the right idea. Perhaps completely denying that part of yourself, starving the beast, keeping it weak, is the way to go. At least for those of us who endeavor to resist transition. But I know I would never have the fortitude to deny the Leslie in me. She's stronger than she looks! I hope it works for Calie, but I won't be copying her plan.
I came very close to talking dysphoria with the missus tonight. But romance was in the air, and I don't want to kill that (selfish bastard!). We went out for "Italian" at Olive Garden. She wore her new sandals and a new skirt, and looked glorious. She's become much more feminine in the last six months, having dropped fifty pounds. She's wearing eights and nines now, and I think she's loving herself a lot more now. Maybe that's why she seems a little more open about me. When I first revealed my crossdressing to her twenty years ago, one of her fears was that she wasn't feminine enough, that I was compensating for a flaw in her. Ridiculous, of course. She's never been a fufu girly girl, but if she had been it might have made my dysphoria even worse. She is certainly not to blame for my gender issues in any way.
I offered to do some pedicure work on her tonight, to complement her shoes. She kinda slyly looked at my subtly painted toenails, and said she really doesn't like polish. She wasn't hinting or anything. She meant for herself. Well, I offered. Coulda been fun for both of us. Instead, I worked on my own toes, hoping this would feed the beast for awhile. Make the beast sleepy and lethargic, but, I hope, not larger.
Why Nights Aren’t Ours
23 hours ago