Transition Has Endings: Surgery Prep, Legal Progress & Becoming Myself cover art

Transition Has Endings: Surgery Prep, Legal Progress & Becoming Myself

Transition Has Endings: Surgery Prep, Legal Progress & Becoming Myself

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Episode Summary

In this life update, Rae reflects on the overwhelming middle of transition: preparing for gender confirmation surgery, handling legal transition paperwork, balancing teaching responsibilities, running a daily trans history countdown, and trying to stay grounded through it all.

This episode is about the reality behind transition milestones. Life does not pause for surgery prep, document changes, work deadlines, emotional check-ins, or dysphoria. Rae talks openly about nervousness, support, self-evaluation, and the difference between doubt and healthy fear before a major life-changing step.

She also reflects on erasure, why trans history matters, and the strange emotional weight of realizing that some parts of transition are not endless. Some forms get submitted. Some documents change. Some appointments happen. Some chapters close.

This is transition in real life: messy, practical, emotional, exhausting, and worth it.

Full Episode Notes

Hello internet, Rae is checking in.

In this episode, Rae talks about reaching a point in transition where everything feels like it is happening at once. She is balancing school, daily content, surgery preparation, business plans, and legal transition paperwork, while also trying to pause and ask: How am I actually doing?

She reflects on how her daily countdown series began as a simple idea while walking her dog, Tesla, but quickly became something much deeper. What started as quick trans facts has grown into research-heavy, emotionally demanding work that aims to respect trans history, resist erasure, and create something people can return to later.

Rae also discusses the pressure of doing this while still working full-time as a teacher. Exams, marking, review materials, and daily responsibilities do not stop just because transition milestones are approaching. This leads into one of the central ideas of the episode: transition is often imagined as a sequence of dramatic moments, but real life keeps moving around those moments.

The episode then moves into surgery preparation. Rae talks through the documents, appointments, travel plans, pet care, financial logistics, recovery planning, and emotional reality of preparing for gender confirmation surgery. She reflects on excitement, nervousness, fear-mongering, expectations, intimacy, depth, surgical outcomes, and why being scared does not mean being unsure.

A major part of the episode focuses on self-evaluation. Rae asks what has changed in her body, dysphoria, emotions, social life, empathy, and relationship with herself. She talks about feeling more grounded, while still allowing space for complicated emotions. She also emphasizes the importance of therapy, psychiatric evaluation, and support systems before surgery.

There is also a legal transition update. After months of calling the South African Department of Home Affairs, Rae shares that her case has finally been escalated, the needed documents have been clarified, and the responsibility has shifted away from her for now. It is not fully over, but it is progress.

The final section turns toward erasure. Rae connects her daily trans history work to larger patterns of historical, legal, medical, linguistic, family, scholastic, and cultural erasure. She reflects on how these systems can make trans people invisible not only to society, but also to themselves.

The episode closes with a realization: some parts of transition are lifelong, but some parts end. Documents get changed. Forms get submitted. Surgeries happen. Chapters close. Not every battle lasts forever.

Transition is not always cinematic. Sometimes it is paperwork, phone calls, lesson planning, medical prep, and exhaustion. But underneath all of it, Rae is becoming.

Follow Rae / RubyRaeD:

YouTube: RubyRaeD TikTok: @heatfromfire Instagram: @firefromheat

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