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I was very self-destructive over the years, and I am frankly amazed I made it to the age of seventy-five in one piece.
I think my self-destructive behavior began when I was forced
into a gender mold which was deeply foreign to me. When I was very young, I did
not know exactly what was wrong, but something certainly was. I was somewhat
older when I had my first inkling of having a condition I barely knew how to
pronounce. I was gender dysphoric. As a teenager, many mornings when I woke up
for the day, I did not know if I was a boy or a girl. Not a good place to be.
My first object of destruction was the car. With it, I found I could seriously injure myself and sadly others. I could race my brother with a car and go way too fast at night for the road conditions. Many nights when I came home late and lonely, my mom was waiting up and, on several occasions, told me the angel riding with me was my grandmother. She may have been right, when I wrecked one of my cars going too fast and ended up rolling it several times into a house. Very easily, I could have been killed, along with my brother. But my brother and I walked away without a scratch. Even though the car was totaled.
I was just reckless as I entered my military years as I was frustrated
and lonely as I grasped at any straw to solve my gender issues. Never pausing
to realize the answer I was seeking was as close facing my own inner self. For
more years than I like to admit, I feared facing the truth about myself and stayed
on my self-destructive path. That made two paths I was on. One on my gender
issues and the other me trying to hurt myself.
To dull the pain, I resorted to self-medication with alcohol.
Drinking vast amounts of beer helped me to forget my male self on one hand and
made me too brave on the other hand. On nights I drank, I could see one path
from the other. So, I went back time and time again.
Then, my time in the military just made my habit worse as I was
in an atmosphere of supported alcohol abuse. I found I had to finally rid myself
of my destructive ways when I hit rock bottom and attempted suicide. Simply, I
was tired of fighting my overwhelming desire to be a transgender woman and the
possibility of hurting the loved ones around me. Most importantly, I felt as if
the world would be a better place without me.
Once again, my guiding angel was with me as I failed in my
suicide attempt with pills and booze. Maybe it was her who finally convinced me
to face my gender truth. I was born into the world as a male which was
completely wrong. My vibrations were always female deep down inside and those
vibes were deeply felt. Still my male self-refused to give up all the privilege
he would lose and did his best to stay the course he was on. All he did was to
prolong the certainty of my life. When he gave up and I could pursue the deepest
truth of my life, I committed myself to moving forward into my transgender
womanhood.
With commitment came a deep-down of satisfaction and
happiness I had never known in my life. I was fond of blaming my parents for
the lack of happiness I experienced when I was growing up. When, in fact it was
me who was at fault. I was not honest with myself, and it hurt me. I couldn't
follow my dreams, and it hurt me. The deepest cut of all came with the
dishonesty I felt. I was raised to be honest, and chasing my gender dreams
curtailed my honesty with the world when I was busy hiding all the time. Perhaps,
most frustrating of all came when I could not outrun my issues. First, I
attempted to pass myself off to me as a harmless cross dresser and, when that
did not work, I faced the possibility I was transgender. A big leap for my
honesty.
It was the first time in my life; I could face my truth and live
honestly as myself. With new women friends and my wife Liz pushing me on, I was
able to restore my confidence as a woman as never before. My progress was so
much more than my appearance and reached deeply into living a fulltime life as
a transgender woman. My gender journey of a thousand miles did begin with a
single step and I took mine.
Sometimes I wish I had made the journey sooner but then
again, all of us only have one life to live and I was able to live mine.
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