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| Image from Mahreal Boutrous on UnSplash. |
As humans, I know we all experience quite a few first times in our lives. However, I think transgender women and transgender men tend to have more firsts than the average human.
During my life, every time I thought I had it together and
there was nothing else to learn, along came something totally different to
prove to me I still had a lot to prove to get to the next level of life I was
trying to reach. This happened to me as a man and as a woman. My prime example
was when I was in my twenties and totally out of control trying to drink my
gender issues away and my daughter came along. Causing me to change my thinking
about life radically because having a child was not something that I had
planned on. Let’s just say the “protection” gave out and here she was. My very
own daughter that I loved and love very much.
The initial problem I had as a first-time parent was what I
was going to do about my gender issues which were increasingly looking like
they were not going away, ever. What did I do? I tried to hide my femininity behind
a wall of false male bravado which as we all know was a short-term solution to
a long-term problem. So, I needed to set out to discover how long term my “problem”
was.
Using a well-known phrase that I learned at one of the
places I worked at, I did not have a problem. I had an opportunity to improve. To
do it I would have to have the courage to take a different approach to life
which would include a series of first times. The courage I am referring to was
when I hitched up my new big girl panties and went out into the world for the
first time as a novice cross-dresser or transgender woman searching for her
identity. In those days, my first times were filled with rejection in the
public’s eye and plenty of disappointment to deal with until I understood what
it would take for me to present well enough to get by in the world of ciswomen
that for the first time I learned really ran the world I wanted to be a part
of. If I wasn’t attempting to be validated as a trans woman by men, first I needed
to be validated by women.
Once I broke limits of what I was trying to accomplish in
the world as a transfeminine person, the challenges and first times came
quickly rolling in. The opportunity I had was trying to understand how deep my
gender urges ran or how badly did I want to sacrifice my male life and live as
a woman. What I decided to do was undertake a deep dive into what I “thought” a
ciswoman’s life was all about, and what it really was. And more importantly,
could I ever be allowed behind the gender curtain to see for myself if I wanted
to play in the girls’ sandbox.
For the most part, I was successful as I accomplished my
lists of firsts such as taking feminine vocal lessons, all the way to
attempting to carve out my own new life away from any vestiges of my old male
existence, Often, my life was a blur as I tried to balance what was left of my
male existence with my new exciting life as a trans woman. Not only did I have
to do my best to blend in with other women physically in the world, now I had
the extra pressure of communicating for the first not as a man, but woman to woman.
The last thing I wanted to do was come off during my final test with a stranger
as some sort of an evil bitch just because I did not want to talk.
For some reason, during this portion of my life I was not
having any problems attracting attention from ciswomen. After a lifetime of
basic rejection from women, I tried to reach as a man, all of a sudden for the
first time, I was having success as my transfeminine self. Even though I did
not completely understand what the reason was for my success, I did not want to
jinx myself and do too much and go back to rejection and loneliness again. So,
I kept up what I was doing and for the first time built a new base to my life.
I had two reasons for my success as I looked back on those
days. The first was, my inner feminine self-had so long to sit back and observe
what I was doing with our lives that she knew exactly what she wanted to do when
she had a chance to run the show for the first time. And the second was told to
me by a person much wiser than me long ago that very few human beings have the
chance to stop their lives and begin again, so don’t screw it up if you do. I
was able to listen to both.
Sure, I went through two lifetimes of first times with all
the bumps and bruises which normally come with such adventures. When I think
back to all those early days in the malls when I was getting laughed at for my
weak initial femininizing attempts, I don’t see how I made it at all. I guess
something deep down inside of me kept telling me that this was just an example
of the first times I would be facing my whole life if I continued along the gender
path I was considering.
I was far from deciding if I could ever slide behind the
gender curtain to learn if I really wanted to be there. But somehow, I knew I
would never forgive myself if I did not try. When I did, for the first time I
found myself off the self-destructive male path I was on and on to a rewarding
and healing path I loved as a transgender woman.
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