![]() |
| JJ Hart Very Early On, Trusting the process in a rest room. |
One of the hardest things to do as a transgender woman or transgender man, is to trust the process as you continue along your gender path.
Especially when your path is lasting longer and taking you
places you never thought of going to. Then you have the probability of picking
up more of the gender baggage than you never thought you would. Trusting what
you will take with you and what you will leave behind becomes a huge problem.
As you build your new personality, you can use your old
gender baggage as positive building blocks if you can take the leap of faith to
learn from your past. Perhaps, more than anything else, you must trust in
yourself to believe in what others may think of you. This was very important to
me as I began to build from my small core of ciswomen friends and have the
courage to spread out into society. I
started following my new wife’s Liz lead and joining her spiritual group to
start and then spreading out further into other “Meet-Up” groups in Cincinnati
which matched our potential interests such joining writers’ groups for me, along
with craft groups for Liz. It worked well for me as I was able to work my way
out from being so shy around strangers and build more trust in myself.
Trust comes with a couple of drawbacks such as what if your
trust is betrayed and how you will ever build trust again. Going way back to my
second marriage, I destroyed most of the trust my wife and I developed over the
years by breaking the deal I made to never go out of the house alone
cross-dressed. I certainly was not proud of what I did but just could not stop
myself from doing it. Essentially, I felt as if I was cheating on her with
another woman who just turned out to be me and whatever she did was just not
good enough for me. As I was busy destroying her trust, she was correct in
telling me I made a terrible woman, and it had nothing to do with my
appearance. Which at that time meant the world to me.
During this time and beyond, it was difficult for me to try
to trust the process I was on during my gender journey. It seemed nothing was
going fast enough for me to ever see if I could make it to my ultimate goal of
living full-time as a transfeminine person. I guess if you take into account
all the years, I spent cross-dressing my life away from the male world I
disliked so much, it is no wonder I felt that way. From start to finish, it took nearly a half a
century for my male to female femininization project, which should have been
more than enough time to trust the process and have faith where I was going.
My excuse that I always hang onto is that my male life was
not that bad and my male self was a powerful ally with my second wife on me
ever transitioning into transgender womanhood. And did I trust what all of that
meant to me anyhow. I did realize any sort of a gender transition would mean I
stood a very real chance of losing all the materialistic male privileges I had
built up over the years. In an instance, my spouse, family, friends and job
could be wiped out and I would have to start all over again. At that time, I
did not think I trusted myself to do it, so my made the worst choice I have
made in my life and tried to juggle a life somewhere on the gender border
between male and female.
As I am always hesitant to write about, my choice to walk
the narrow gender line wrecked my mental health and led me to a self-harm
event. I was already diagnosed with being a Bi-Polar depressive person, so it
did not take much to send me over the edge. Fortunately, I had a good therapist
to help me realize my truth and help me through it. I was slowly coming to a
point where I could trust the process and understand where I truly fit into the
grand plan of my life the way it always was meant to be. I should have never
embarked on any path to being male at all. A place which was foreign to me and
I just did not belong. I was no wonder I felt the way I did around other men I
was with. Full of mistrust in them for the most part.
Once I was over that hurdle in my life, I needed to begin to
trust the world through the eyes of a trans woman which was hard to do. Mainly
since I knew the way toxic men treated women from my past. Once again, cis women
with their open minds to me joining their club were my secret to building trust
again. Even though I still carried the scars from attacks by passive aggressive
ciswomen, I was able to build my own new life with a feminine confidence I had
never had before. I felt so good, I went ahead with my long-awaited legal name
change and even longer awaited plan to be approved for HRT or gender affirming
hormones. By doing so, I effectively painted myself into a gender corner I
could not escape from. I had to trust the process and not try to turn around no
matter how attractive the idea sounded at times when I learned what I was
losing with my male privilege being taken away.
Primarily, I lost much of the knowledge of life I had
learned as a man as well as needing to keep a closer eye on my personal security.
Which was quickly at risk as a transgender woman joining the world for the first
time and learning first hand what ciswomen already knew about being around toxic
men.
As I said, trusting the gender process path I was on was
never easy, but it turned out it was the only path I had.

.jpg)






