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When I considered “purging” (getting rid of all my feminine makeup and clothing) the consequences felt like a double-edged sword.
For a few days, the pressure around gender lifted, and I had
one less major worry. But before long, the familiar desire to live as a girl
returned to my everyday life. I realized that cross-dressing—and perhaps
something beyond it—would not be easy for me to give up. Even in that short
time, I had learned a great deal and understood how far I still had to go before
reaching my dream of living full time as a transgender woman. I was not even
sure whether I could make it happen.
Then there were the brief moments of gender euphoria. The
time I spent hiding from my brother and family was enough to keep me going
until male puberty—and what felt like testosterone poisoning set in. I was
unhappy that my body was becoming more angular while the girls around me were developing
curves, but there was nothing I could do to stop it.
Even as those changes continued, I could not face the
consequences of giving up. I learned to take what I could get until I was old enough
to leave the mirror and closet behind and explore the world. What happened next
was brutal. I discovered that the mirror had been lying to me when it suggested
I looked like an attractive woman. If that were true, why was I laughed at so often
when I tried to go to ordinary places, such as nearby shopping malls?
Eventually, my frustration pushed me to look around and notice how most of the cisgender
women I saw were dressed. Even if it meant adopting the casual styles I
dreaded, I knew I needed to do it to blend in and be accepted.
The more acceptance I gained, the harder it became to return
to my old life and face the thought of giving up on my dream. For the first
time, I even felt excited about where my future might lead. I just had the
glimmer of hope that I might be able to make it to the transfeminine life I always
wanted to lead.
At that point, my male life began to creep in with a vengeance.
He was becoming very successful with a small family and good job and the risk
of giving it all up loomed large over everything I did. Not a day went by when I
didn’t consider the consequences of what I was doing. I always say, I wish I
could get back just a fraction of the time I wasted worrying about how I would
be living my life if I was a woman. What would become of me if I jumped off my
gender cliff for good.
What I decided to do was experiment in the world as a trans
woman. My second wife called me a “terrible woman” because I had never paid any
dues that ciswomen pay, and all I was concerned about was my appearance. I knew
deep down she was right but I still at that point did not know how to fix the
problem by paying my dues as a novice feminine person in the world. It was like
if you are applying for a job, the employer says you don’t have enough
experience but will not give you the job so you can get it. I am sure my wife was right about my feminine knowledge,
but I was having an impossible time getting behind the gender curtain to learn more.
As I slowly got behind the gender curtain, the consequences
of giving up almost completely went away. Why would I abandon all the effort I
put into being a complex transgender woman and throw it all away during a time
when I was finally being successful. For a change, I was the one making sense
in a gender situation which very few understood. No longer could I be accused of being a
terrible woman as I matured into my new self when I was allowed into women’s
only spaces. Sure, I was still making mistakes, but they were getting smaller
and smaller as time went on.
The mistakes I usually made came from when I miscalculated how
complex a ciswoman’s life really was and how far I needed to go to be allowed to
fit in. To eliminate all my mistakes, I needed to give up all the negative consequences
of a male to female gender transition and just make the plunge. Fortunately for
me, the water was not that cold, and I jumped into the deep end of the gender
pool. Plus, I can never forget the soft feminine gender hands which helped me
to survive the impact into the water.
I know many of are thinking seriously of making your own
gender plunge and what would be the consequences of possibly losing everything
you hold dear in the world. I know advice is easy to give, but the turning
point for me always was how natural I felt as a transfeminine person. Something
kept telling me I was born the way I ended up. And with some effort, I made it
to where I always needed (not wanted) to be. Hopefully, that is a starting
point for you too and the consequences of giving up become too much to
consider.
If you are further along, I am sure you recognize the consequences
of never giving up and somedays even being perceived as being selfish. As I was
when I was headed all out to fully transition into a transgender woman, all I
could think of how fast I could make it to my goal. So, I am guilty as charged.
It is probably the reason my second wife called me a terrible woman. In all
fairness to me, I did mature out of it and found my way into a better world.
All the purges in the world did not work for me and I put up
with all the consequences I lived through. I am not a gambler, but in this instance,
I played the odds and won.








