![]() |
| Image from Vinicus amiz Amano on UnSplash |
When I thought of the subject of this post, I thought that was an easy topic. From the very first day I had a glimpse of myself in the family’s full-length hallway mirror I partially thought I did not recognize who I was looking at. Sadly, even with all the work I was doing to look like one of the pretty girls I admired so much, I still looked like my male self-wearing a dress with makeup. Most likely, the biggest problem in looking like a girl back then was the lack of access I had to my hair. I was cursed in being raised in an era when young boys’ hair style was short or shorter and a crew cut was considered a longer style. Dad took my brother and I to the barber with him every couple of weeks and we got our burr haircuts without question. If you don’t know, burr means almost no hair which was decidedly not what I really wanted on my head. I had no choice but to go along with the program, and had to use my imagination, along with a towel when I cross-dressed as my authentic self. Who was just learning to express herself. Even if it was only to be to myself.
It turned out to be years later that I began to be skilled
enough to begin to match my exterior self with my feminine inner feelings. I
had help from a professional makeup artist I will never forget who had the
skill set to show me what I doing wrong with my makeup and the verbal skills to
explain to me how to improve my life through ideas such as foundation basics to
cover my beard and contouring my face to bring out the highlights I did not
know I had. When he was finished, I truly did not recognize who I was looking
at in the mirror. Plus, I really enjoyed all the compliments I received on my
appearance from several of the attendees at the transgender-crossdresser social
mixer I was attending. Once I was given that basic skill set to make myself up,
I was able to start buying higher end cosmetics which flattered me even more.
In many ways, for a while when I did not recognize myself in
the mirror, it scared me. Because I was losing touch with all my male past
which had made me…me, for my entire life. I was shocked the first time I lost
some of my basic male privileges I had always taken for common I would have
such as my intelligence when I talked to men and my personal safety when I
found myself in contact with a toxic one. Quickly, I needed to come up with a
plan to support my new life as a transgender person without the old ways which
I had been successful with until I could develop new ones.
Of course, too, there were my usual problems dealing with
gender dysphoria when I thought I had done a wonderful makeup job only to see
my male self-looking back at me in the mirror. Then, to add insult to injury,
if I was being successful in navigating the world as a transgender woman, my
impostor syndrome would set it. Impostor syndrome to me made me feel as if I
was an impostor in the world of ciswomen and should not feel as if I belonged
there at all. Who knew, just being a trans woman would bring all the baggage
with it. When I ceased to recognize myself, I learned all the rest the hard
way.
Even with all the new roadblocks, I began to do more than
just survive in the new feminine world I found myself in. I began to thrive as
I started to carve out a new exciting life where no one knew anything about my
past as an unhappy man. I never let on to my past except to let strangers know
I had been married in my past and had lost my spouse to a heart attack without
ever mentioning which gender she was. As well as mentioning I did have a
daughter when it came to family discussions. Technically, even though I did not
birth her, I was in the delivery room for her birth which was as close as I could
come with the circumstances I had to deal with.
Finally, I arrived at the point when I cherished the times
when I did not recognize my old self and hated the times when I could still see
his image slipping through when I looked for the first time in the morning in
the mirror before I had a chance to put on any makeup. Rather than feel anymore
of the pain of gender dysphoria, I got to the point of thinking I was stuck
with what the world had given me as far as my appearance went. The idea I used
worked well because I felt I never looked as bad as I thought and certainly not
as good as I arrived at the point where I was erasing my male self for good.
I would be remiss if I did not mention the role gender
affirming hormones or HRT played in all my progress in my lifetime male to
female femininization project. While the hormones did not make me anymore or
less of a trans woman. They certainly made me feel the process more. Almost
immediately, as my skin began to soften and my breasts began to grow, I began
to feel emotions flow through my body that I had never felt before in my life.
My facial angles also began to soften, allowing me to do less contouring with
my makeup when I went out was one of the good things which happened. Along with
me not recognizing myself when all a sudden it was me who was reaching for her
coat saying she was too cold in a venue, and I was not making it up.
I guess you say I covered about as much ground as I could
erasing my old male self without going through any major (or minor) operations.
But I did make it to the point where I did not recognize any of my old self
anymore.
.jpg)







