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| Image from Ayesha Rosley on UnSplash. |
I believe the way to finding comfort in your own skin as a transgender person is having the confidence to do it.
Just think of all the time you may have spent in front of
your mirror as you gathered the courage to take on the public and work from
there. Like many of you, I experienced severe gender dysphoria every time I
looked in the mirror and saw a man dressed as a woman and was afraid to go out
into the world and face the public. To this day, on occasion, I still suffer
from my lack of confidence in who I really am when I look in the mirror in the
morning. I do my best to just ignore it and move on and take on my day knowing
I am doing my best with what I have to work with. Or as a transgender woman
friend once told me, I pass out of sheer willpower.
My willpower was tested during the many times that I failed
in public and needed to start all over again. At that time, I had very little
confidence that I was doing the right thing with my life. I had to go through
years of trial and even more error before I began to build the confidence I
needed to succeed in the world as a transfeminine person. When it came right
down to it, many times I was excited about the prospect of going through
another trial to learn if I could be successful. When I was a success as a
trans woman, I wanted to do more on my transgender bucket list of things to try
in the new exciting world I was in.
Most the major changes for me came when I began to really
look around at what all the ciswomen in the world were wearing and I needed to
put away the stubborn attitude of what I thought I should look like. As I began
to successfully blend in with the world at large, my confidence began to rise,
and I could relax and feel more comfortable in my own skin. It was the beginning
of a life-changing gender experience which I discovered I was along for during
a very bumpy ride.
In many ways, the ride to being comfortable was like my
favorite roller coaster ride at a big nearby amusement park. Often the ride up
was slow and uncertain to the top but was made up by the rush of going down the
gender hill. It did not take me long to appreciate the rush of coming down my own
personal coaster. Even though I feared climbing the heights I was climbing (as
well as the threat of falling) the risk was worth it as I began to carve out a
small life as a trans woman. Which I always wondered if I could do at all.
I found I could do it thanks to the welcoming embrace of
several ciswomen I was introduced to. It was scary yet powerful when I began to
receive invitations to special girls ‘nights out. Once I figured out what I was
going to wear, then I needed to figure out what I was going to add into the
conversation with the other women who I had never met. I desperately did not
want to act standoffish and worse yet bitchy by not joining in with the other
women who I had a chance to make friends with. Looking back, I think I was successful
because outside of one woman who kept glaring at me, I was treated well by
everyone else. All this sudden attention led me to a newfound confidence in
being in my own natural skin that I never had before in my old male life where
I always needed to be on the outlook for someone trying to take away the life I
had. I was always competing for what I had earned in a what you had done for me
recently world.
The reverse was true in the transgender woman’s world I had
found my way into. As I became more confident and successful in just being the me,
I always wanted to be, the only competition I ever felt was when I needed to
use the women’s room in a venue, I was not a regular in. And even that began to
fade when I learned the proper etiquette to use in the typical women’s rest
room. There was no thrill in doing just what came naturally, just the relief of
being allowed in women only spaces to do it. Taking away any sort of a
transphobe’s argument against me using the restroom of my choice.
In my case, becoming comfortable in my own skin was a
constant problem which started with the way I was raised. My parents were long
on material support and short on any emotional needs I may have had. Which led
me to be alone with my gender dysphoria. It was a very lonely, confusing place
to be and left deep scars on my internal confidence as I had no deep connection
to what my true gender skin really was. The male world I was forced to live in,
and the female world I wanted to be in. So, for me, the process of gaining any
sense of who I really was a difficult and time-consuming process. Plus. My confidence
was so fragile that the slightest problem could send me back to my
cross-dressing drawing board to look for solutions.
Over the years, I flat out wore that old cross-dressing
drawing board out until I began to figure out my problems were right in front of
me. All I had to do was have the courage to do something about them. One of the
problems was they were so much deeper
than just trying to look like a ciswoman. I was tired of thinking I was fooling
anyone into thinking I was a ciswoman and settled into trying to build myself
into the quality new feminine me I wanted to be as I had earned my womanhood
from a difficult, unique path.
I seized the opportunity to finally be comfortable in my own
skin.
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