Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Twenty Trans People Tell Us What Dysphoria Feels Like and How It Makes Them Feel

By Sabrina Samone, TMP

A simple definition given for gender dysphoria is, 'The condition of feeling one's emotional, and psychological identity as male or female to be opposite to one's biological sex." While the definition sounds simple enough, it's far from being so simple for millions of trans people. In fact it's one of greatest factors in the high numbers of suicides within our community, along with social prejudice, lack of access to fair employment, housing, and opportunities.

I recently asked some of our most devoted Friends of TMP to share with us, and our cis allies, in their own words what dysphoria feels like to them. While America determineT where we use the bathroom, and speculate on our intentions, 20 trans people tell us how they feel on a day to day basis.


"Dysphoria for me is living on a small Caribbean island, and everybody knows who you are. When it comes to having an open relationship with a man, it becomes very difficult. Even though I am passable, it's hard to find a man who is comfortable dating a trans woman, openly in public."

Tori Culmer





"Dysphoria is something I've never not  had. Growing up, I hated looking in a mirror due to it being disassociated from my reflection, and my body...still don't. There is still utter disgust at seeing my body in a mirror, and panic when out, when I have to use a toilet, and paranoia that they can tell I'm binding."

Tiernan Tomlinson



"Dysphoria for me is like....I'm being crushed. I can't breathe...can't feel...can't empathize. These feelings of hopelessness, and despair are overwhelming.
I get it really bad at work, it's fucking terrifying. I don't really wanna go into it. I can become very violent. I've not yet started medically transitioning, and really want to start HRT. I'm waiting on uncertain letters, from uncertain doctors, in uncertain times. All I can do is wait."

Nathan Greig



"Dysphoria is like an out of body experience. I feel lost, confused; like I don't know what I'm doing.
 I feel so doubtful of who I am. I know I'm definitely not a man, but feel so far from a woman. It makes me look at all the things I hate about myself: my too-wide shoulders, my too-small hips, my too-small breasts. It makes me hyper aware, comparing myself to every girl who walks by.
It kills me."

Anais Majewski




"It was hard for me because I knew I wasn't lesbian completely. I hate my boobs, but I was willing to carry my partners baby because, she doesn't have the equipment, being a trans woman. We got engaged, and though we can't afford our surgeries yet, we still give each other the freedom. Instead of calling her 'Brandon', like her parents do. In front of them I call her 'Abby', she's my wife, and I'm a pregnant daddy, not a mommy."

Jaimmy Jury

"Dysphoria feels like a bad pair of fitted pants. You look at yourself in the mirror, and your not happy. Your initial thought is to remove the pants because you look bad in them. For me, that's what it feels like in my skin. I was born female at birth, and I hate looking at my chest everyday. I bind all the time, and I can not step out of the house without wearing one. I won't feel OK in my body until I have top surgery."

Aiden DiRe




"My dysphoria for what's between my legs is the worst. I'm not able to get surgery to fix it yet, and
everyday feels like torture. On my most dysphoric days, I feel like 'Wesley from the Princess Bride', when the machine was turned up to 50 in the 'Pit of Despair,' and like Wesley, the only thing that keeps me going on those days is the love that I have for my girlfriend."

Regina V. Gallico


"It's definitely gotten so much easier since time has passed. I've learned a lot. I won't always pass to everyone, and that's okay. If I look feminine sometimes, that's okay too. I'm kind of feminine for a transman, and at first it was so embarrassing, and uncomfortable, but I've really come to embrace it, because we are all  unique parts of a large community. I used to have terrible dysphoria. Some days, I would even wear two binders at once, (don't do that, it's not safe), but now I don't even need to wear one most days. I'm so much happier now."

John Neu


"I get a lot of specific dysphoria. Especially over my voice, feet, and hands. I have to really work to
remind myself my extremities are proportional, and do not make me stand out any more than any other tall cis woman. There are lots of cis women, even popular celebrities, and my cis sister, that have deep voices. I worked hard at changing my voice, and this is as good as it's going to get. Sometimes it just gets overwhelming though, and it feels like I'm being suffocated."

Erin R. Alexander



"Dysphoria, for me, is hard to describe. In pre-HRT days, I really didn't know what was going on with me. I just felt disconnected from myself. I could never really relate to my guy friends, and I wanted to be included in the activities my girl friends did. When I tried befriending another girl, she would interpret it as flirting, sometimes to the point where they thought I was creepy, because I was always enthusiastic about hanging out with them. I drank a lot in my 20's, and did a lot of cocaine. It wasn't until I was 33 that everything started to make sense, especially after a dream I had, where I saw myself as a woman, and felt so empowered, and full of life. HRT did away with a ton of that dysphoria, but now it's more specific. Now, I sometimes feel like I'm some kind of alien consciousness stuck in a human host that doesn't reflect who I know myself to be. I'm so much happier now though, despite those moments."

River Laurie

"Dysphoria for me feels a bit like this photo, it is confusing or was for me. I still look a little like 'The Hunchback of Notre-Dame', cause I slumped my body a bit so my t-shirt would fall from my chest. Also walking against the wind was not cool, I'm talking pre binder time, and since there were no packers, I also stuffed myself with socks, in the crotch that is. I am all post op, and still can feel it at times, but it is less invading, and less depressing. Like some women here, yes I wanted to have kids. I mourned that lost opportunity, but now at 55, I've accepted it. When the dysphoria got less, and surgery certainly did help, my mind opened more, and I could appreciate being trans a lot more because it also gave me things like inner strength. I am more open to things I don't understand right away, and more of this."

Sam Omen

"I'm 28, MtF pre-everything. I've always been like this. My mumsie, a war veteran, has always been supportive of me. We have mainly lived in 'ironclad red states', due to the cost of living being within
the  budget as it were. In an effort to protect me though, considering what I am, my mumsie home schooled me entirely. She is extremely sharp witted with a massive intellect, so my whole life has on the one hand been like a giant 28 year college degree. She has taught me a fiercely strong faith, assuring me that God loves me, and that the hate that is spewed at trans people is a corruption of Jesus's teaching, and to treat all people with love. I will say this though, I have no friends except for mumsie, because of what I am. I have never been on a date because of what I am. I have never had sex, or one bit of a romantic relationship because of what I am. Dysphoria is the reason that I don't fear hell, because I already know what hell is like. Hell and Dysphoria are the same thing, because in the words of Jesus on the encounter film "there is no love in hell, no kindness, no happiness. Hell is torment, a torment that eats at you from the inside."...in closing , let those who would raise cane against this post look upon me, what they consider to not be human or even a woman."

Grace A. Ashcraft


"My dysphoria, means boys will never date me because I haven't had any surgeries. Dating is impossible, because I always have to throw out a disclaimer for what they're really getting into. Trans pride feels more like a defective label, since I'm never good enough for anyone."


Jaelyn A. Harris





"What Dysphoria feels like for you? For me it's the knowing that I'm not truly seen, like I"m constantly wearing a disguise. It hits me hardest when I'm perfectly content, and happy in what I'm doing, and then I catch my face reflected in a glass or a mirror, and I'm suddenly reminded of how I'm seen; that my face is that of a man. It's honestly completely jarring, then I'm suddenly aware of it,
and I think everyone is starring at me, and I want to just vanish from existence."

Lianne Hobbs



"Dysphoria sucks!!! As a 43 year old FtM pre-op everything, it's harder some days than others. It comes out of the blue on the weirdest of times. Some days it doesn't bother me at all. My triggers are also pretty strange. Sometimes going by women's clothes in a department store, someone not calling me by my preferred name, and or pronouns, or just knowing that I am still menstruating sets me off, etc. I cannot wait for the day that I am completely post-op. It gets so bad in fact, that I wish I could cut myself open, and walk out of this false shell in which my total male soul dwells. I have a support group in which I attend, and very close friend, an MtF pre-op everything, that helps me deal with things. Love them all dearly. As I have people who love, accept, and or understand me. I feel as I could rule the world. Thank you for giving me a chance to voice my side of this issue."

Mykel T. McCown

"I'm thankful I don't endure too many episodes of being mis-gendered anymore. When I do, it's some family members that just simply refuse, and it feels like someone just snuck up behind me and slammed me with a baseball bat. I literally jump, and feel like I've been knocked in the middle of an NFL stadium, full of people, bare naked. I hate it with a passion."


Sabrina Samone, TMP






"This past fall, I let my hair grow again. It triggered quite a bit of dyshhoria. I wrote about it on my 'Every Day Trans'.
blog '

C. J. Levine


"Dysphoria used to just be this overwhelming feeling that everything is wrong, and if I could just remove myself from this shell it could all be ok. It used to be rage, and self loathing, depression, and self harm. Since treatment, and for the six months of HRT, so far it's been more manageable.  The single most wonderful day of my life so far was when I got this cut, and color last Friday. I cried so much. It was the very first time that I could clearly see Alexia in the mirror. The very first time, I didn't worry about passing, or how anyone else in the world perceived me. I saw a beautiful woman looking back at me. Now I have that moment. Now I know my truth. It feels like a little lantern I can hold up against the daily dysphoria. I'm confident that I'll eventually have enough little lanterns that the dysphoria will become just a tiny nuisance."

Alexia L. Partridge


"Dysphoria is something I haven't had much of recently. Yet, the times I feel it are on the rare everyone is starring at my chest, and that they see me as female because of it. Also, I feel it when someone is extra "bro-y" to me. That's more with random people who don't know me though. I guess the way my dysphoria shows itself now is that I don't feel like I fit into male or female anymore, and I get flustered when someone asks what I am, mostly online because I live as male in day to day. Even when people say I'm FtM. I used to say that, but now I feel trans accurately describes me. It's like something at the tip of your tongue you can't express."
occasions I don't have my binder. I feel like

Remy Fecteau



"Dysphoria has caused me to hate myself much of my life, and self harm in more ways than one should from physically hurting myself. Doing things to sabotage my own life; to make things even worst for myself, and has kept me hiding away from people all my life. I kept myself at a distance
from almost everyone, though am taking steps to try to change my social anxieties, there's always going to be issues with that thing downstairs so long as it remains there, so it doesn't matter who I have in my life, or what activities I fill my life with, the pain I experience with living with a part that doesn't belong. A part of me will always be that thing to cause me to walk the edge of a chasm. So many countless times I thought, if only I can just do it, be rid of it, from cutting it off to smashing it, already tried, and failed several attempts, then I could finally get on with my life, and breath a sigh of relief, if I survive. The only thing keeping me from being rid of it myself, is knowing if I did, then I would never have any hope of being complete and that could be just as bad as living with the damn thing. If I'm on the estrogen, I am less likely to have thoughts of self destruction, than those times I was not taking it, but still every so often I still get those moments where I feel things will never change. A feeling of deep hopelessness, and that I will never be able to be completely at peace with myself. Someday I hope to be truly happy in my own skin, be able to see myself, every part of me and love it all, and also perhaps allow myself to be loved as well. There's that dream, I still hold onto that things will be right, that I will look down or look at myself in the mirror and smile, not just my face but every part of my being will shine, no more personal dysphoria, no more fears out there, no more needing to hide anything about me.

Megan Robers

"Dysphoria leaves it's mark with me daily. I'm reminded in every corner of my life, that I can't carry my  own child. My body wasn't designed to nurture life, as my natal-female friends were. I have to fight back tears anytime I read about a friend whose expecting, or weddings, or dreams, and the only light I can see in those moments, is the reflection in the mirror."

Jennifer R. Stevens


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JOIN IN ON THE DISCUSSION OF THIS INTERVIEW & MORE TOPICS ON TMP @