Get involved! Send your photos, video, news & views by texting WN NEWS to 80360 or e-mail us
3:02pm Friday 10th June 2011 in Health News By
Coming out can be a difficult process. Many transgender people worry about how other people will react and how they'll treat them once they find out.
For many people, it also means that they can be honest about how they feel and not hide that part of themselves.
Realising that you’re transgender or trans
The first stage of coming out is acknowledging to yourself how you feel about your gender. This isn't always straightforward.
Some trans people feel clear about their gender identity from a young age. But for others, it’s less obvious, and how they feel about their gender may shift over time.
Acknowledging how you feel about yourself sometimes involves overcoming feelings of shame and guilt or fear of disapproval.
If you feel a persistent discomfort about your gender and you can't work it out on your own, psychological therapy or counselling may help. Ask your GP what help is available in your area.
Who to tell
When you're coming out for the first time, it's best to tell someone who you trust and who will be supportive and understanding. This may be a close friend, a parent, a partner or another relative.
Lee Gale and Jay McNeil of TransBareAll, an organisation that focuses on issues related to intimacy and body image for trans people, give the following tips:
The next phase
"By the time you decide to come out, you've already had time to process how you feel," says Jay McNeil.
"You need to give other people time too. It's unrealistic to expect those who are close to you to come to terms with it immediately.
"But when other people do accept who you are, it really helps your self-esteem."
If you decide to transition (live full-time as the opposite sex), coming out involves more than just telling the people who are close to you.
Unless you move to a new area, you’ll have to tell almost everyone you know, from family and friends to work colleagues. Transition involves being accepted in your new gender by those around you.
Transsexual people who want to transition but haven't yet had gender realignment treatment face specific difficulties. They may have started taking steps to ‘pass’ as the opposite sex, such as in the way they dress, but find it difficult to convince people that they're a particular gender because they still look like the other gender.
Living full-time in a different gender usually means changing your name. People will have to change the way they talk about you, from 'he' to 'she' or 'she' to 'he'. Sooner or later, you’ll have to update your records with organisations such as the DVLA, the passport office, the tax office, banks and insurance companies.
To update your records, many organisations or official bodies will ask you to provide evidence that you've formally changed your name. The most straightforward way to do this is by obtaining a statutory declaration.
For more information on how to obtain a statutory declaration and inform key organisations about changes in name and gender, contact Press for Change.
Some people who transition decide to apply for a Gender Recognition Certificate. Official gender recognition means that you must be treated as a person of your new gender for all legal purposes. Find out more about legal help for Trans people on the Press for Change website.
Find your next job now In Worcestershire and beyond
Search Now »
Make a date in Worcestershire now!
Search Now »
Worcestershire homes for sale and to let
Search Now »
Cars for sale throughout Worcestershire
Search Now »