Time Grew Short

Ohio River Pride from the
Jessie Hart Collection

I was just passing the age of sixty when I finally decided to retire my long unwanted male life and start anew as a transgender woman. Of course one of the main factors I faced when I decided a transition was the best and only way I go in life was my age. I wasn't getting younger. Since, all of the sudden, I was facing my mortality I felt it was time to make a decision on my gender issues.

Even still, with time catching up to me, I still had many decisions to consider when I looked at attempting a  major gender transition. Examples are the usual ones such as what was I going to tell my family and what was left of my friends all the way to what was I going to do about my finances and a job. On the other hand, I did have several benefits stemming from the life I had lived up to being sixty.

One of the main benefits I had was the fact I had spent nearly fifty years being a serious transvestite or cross dresser. During that time, I had plenty of occasions to leave my gender closet and experiment in a women's world. By the time I decided to completely transition (at least to living full time) I had managed to go through my second puberty clothing wise and began to dress to blend in with the world. Backtracking a bit, I don't think any transgender person ever gets a chance to transition completely until  passing away. Then their family must follow the trans person's wishes to be buried (or what ever) with the transgender person's chosen gender. Always a guessing game, sadly. Thinking of what was left of my future totally pushed me into getting started. I had no time to waste.

Since I had nearly completed the difficult task of learning the feminine arts of makeup and clothing, my biggest challenge was beginning to build a whole new person who could interact in the world as a transgender woman. As I worked on the process, I needed to learn to multi task. In other words, I needed to learn how to react to those casual observers of mine who may have initially thought I was a cis-woman. Then, there were all the others who knew I was transgender and may have reacted differently when they got to know me. The entire process was intimidating but exciting at the same time. My lack of male friends when I was sixty is well documented. I didn't have many to be concerned with because by that time of my life, they had nearly all passed away. So I was starting from scratch in the friend department. 

As time grew short, I found I needed more and more to relax and enjoy how my inner feminine person was reacting to her time to live.  She learned quickly how to react to other people and decide if she wanted to be friends or not. I also found a new level of respect I never felt as a man, probably because most other women knew I was being my authentic self and respected me for it. I was fortunate I had ultra supportive women such as my daughter and other very supportive women who helped me along when I started hormone replacement therapy in my early sixties.

Through it all I was humored when someone attempted to say they were more trans than I because I waited so long to transition. Even though I often think I should have crossed the gender frontier earlier in life, there were times in my male life I wouldn't give up for anything. The birth of my daughter is the primary example.  The rest of the time, I prefer to think I was just trying to make the best of an unfortunate gender situation. Finally, the pressure of attempting to live as two genders proved to be too much for me to handle. After much thought, I took the correct way out and chose to live as a fulltime transgender woman. I had put reality off long enough.   

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