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| Image from Hoite Prins on UnSplash. |
Sometimes I think I give the wrong impression when it comes to my reactions to cross-dressing as a whole.
In reality, the last thing I want to do is put myself up on
some sort of pedestal because I have survived my own personal gender wars and evolved
from a young boy experimenting in his women’s clothes to living full-time as a transfeminine
person in the world. After all, I was the one who spent nearly four decades cross-dressing
my life away trying to make a final decision on which way my life would take me.
So, saying “just a cross-dresser” would be totally wrong for me to do. In fact,
cross dressing saved my life from taking off the overall pressure I was feeling
from living my gender conflicted life. Just the slightest glimmer of hope I got
from the mirror was all I had to get by and I used it to the max.
As I look back from the journey I took from wearing my mom’s
clothes when they still fit me, all the way to getting rid of all my male clothing
altogether (except my Army uniform), it was quite the lifetime of evolution. Sadly,
not all the times were good, but they were all deep learning experiences. Such
as all the times I was dressing to thrill myself. Not to properly attempt to
blend in with the ciswomen around me. Very difficult lessons to learn as I
needed to put my faux teenaged cross-dressing years behind me quickly if I ever
wanted to be a success. I was far from being a teen girl since I was in my thirties
with the testosterone poisoned body I was working with. I needed to evolve and
do it fast if I was ever would be able test the idea I could survive as a transgender
woman, leading a successful life.
Suddenly, out of the clear blue sky which was my existence
more or less back in those days, something mentally clicked in me as I was
preparing to go out into the world one night. As I slipped into my panty hose
and heels, put on my makeup and wig, my whole thought pattern changed. I was no
longer trying to just go out and successfully present well as a look-a-like
ciswoman, I was going out to fit right into their community as a novice trans
woman. The thought hit me like a thunderbolt and scared me to even think that way,
but I could feel my life making a seismic shift for the better. If I could be
successful, which still was a big question.
I am not shy about writing about one of the most exciting
nights of my life went I went to mingle with a group of professional ciswomen who
worked at a nearby mall. I don’t know what scared me worse, the fear of being
recognized as an intruder and embarrassed or the fear of knowing if I was successful,
I could never go back to the male life I was starting to evolve away from. I
just know I was so scared I thought I would need an oxygen tank to help me breathe
when I went in the venue to mingle with all those young attractive women.
You can probably guess what happened from there. I was very successful
and knew my future as a cross-dresser was behind me as I had evolved into a
novice transgender woman. Complete with two new straight venues I had established
myself in as a regular. Something I never thought possible just a few months
before when I was frequenting gay venues getting mistaken for just another drag
queen. I should be more appreciative towards the reaction I received from the
gay community because their attitudes sent me flying to places, I knew and
enjoyed as a man. If I had evolved enough as a trans woman to do it.
At that point, my evolution into being allowed behind the
women’s gender curtain was forced fed to me quickly. Mainly from other women
who I met and wanted to help me adjust to the world I so desperately wanted to
be a part of. Sometimes, I was overconfident and was sent back to my gender drawing
board when I tried to go too fast, too soon but I never had to go back to the
days when I was learning to adjust to the world outside my closet as a cross-dresser.
Every angle I pursued in the world seemed to be new and exciting as I learned
my feminine lessons well. You might say, I was the ultimate gender sponge
because I was finally realizing my gender light at the end of the tunnel was
not the train and a good life as a transfeminine person was certainly possible
if I kept evolving. All the years of worrying about my future I had wasted in
my life were just that…wasted and I needed to move on.
Better yet, I learned the world of ciswomen I was evolving into
was worth every bit of the work I had put into it. Sure, I did encounter a few
haters, bigots and TERF’s (ciswomen who hated me) but with my newfound
confidence I had evolved into, I could quickly ignore them and get along with
my life. If I got to the point where I ever needed my new friends to step up
for me, they would but I had made it to the point where I could fight my own
battles if I needed to.
In many ways, I see the evolution of transgender women and
transgender men as the future as now the genders seem to be blurring for the
younger generations. Maybe when the old white men finally die out, their bigotry
will die out with them. Right now they are scared of the potential a trans
tribe carries to understand what goes on both sides of the gender coin and we
will be allowed to evolve back to where we were with native American cultures
which honored us. But that is an evolvement topic for another time.
Thanks for reading!








