I wrote in a previous post that I try to keep my antennas up for signs that my wife's acceptance of my TG leanings are weakening. Well, yesterday, after being apart for three nights, she mentioned that she's been feeling sad. Now, there was a time when I would have dismissed this as just normal variation of her woman moodiness, but not now. That's one of the things that PM has changed in me: my increased sensitivity to her feelings and those of others.
When I asked her if she wanted to talk about it, she hesitated, so I encouraged her to tell me what was making her feel sad. She said that she has been having thoughts of my eventually leaving her as my TG development continues to open up new worlds for me.
Well, she's right about the new worlds that my coming out has created, but I was rather taken aback that she thought there might not be a place for her there. I certainly have no designs along that line, but I had to admit that the future was not all that clear to me, either. It actually put me into a state of fright that something like that might happen.
So, we talked for an hour or so about it; I doing as much as I could to reassure her that things were not about to change between us; that, if anything, the outgrowth from my gender identity has been good for our marriage, and that I didn't see that reversing. I could feel her anxiety evaporate as we talked, as did mine, and I realized that these reassurances need to be renewed on a regular basis to keep things going smoothly.
I came away from the experience having learned an important lesson: Never take my wife's acceptance and support for granted.
Clara
When I asked her if she wanted to talk about it, she hesitated, so I encouraged her to tell me what was making her feel sad. She said that she has been having thoughts of my eventually leaving her as my TG development continues to open up new worlds for me.
Well, she's right about the new worlds that my coming out has created, but I was rather taken aback that she thought there might not be a place for her there. I certainly have no designs along that line, but I had to admit that the future was not all that clear to me, either. It actually put me into a state of fright that something like that might happen.
So, we talked for an hour or so about it; I doing as much as I could to reassure her that things were not about to change between us; that, if anything, the outgrowth from my gender identity has been good for our marriage, and that I didn't see that reversing. I could feel her anxiety evaporate as we talked, as did mine, and I realized that these reassurances need to be renewed on a regular basis to keep things going smoothly.
I came away from the experience having learned an important lesson: Never take my wife's acceptance and support for granted.
Clara