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Image from Andraz Lazic on UnSplash. |
Around here, in Southwestern Ohio at least, we have been in orange barrel season on the roadways for months now. As we drive through the new road construction, it is time to be ultra cautious and buckle up your seatbelt for safety.
As I always do when I travel, my mind drifts towards the
transgender side of life when my wife Liz does the driving. This time, I
equated all the orange barrels we were driving through to my life as a transgender
woman.
Even if I had ever had a choice (which I did not), I wonder
if under the old if I knew then what I know now if I would have ever embarked
on the gender path I took. Initially, it was fun playing in my mom’s clothes
and makeup, until suddenly it was not. It seemed too quickly I passed through
the stage of wanting to look like a girl, straight to wanting to be a girl.
To hell with the mirror, I wanted more out of life. Very quickly, my new attitude
was causing problems which I needed to buckle up to and attempt to tackle.
Sadly, there were many times when I swerved when I should
not have and hit several orange barrels throwing me back into my mirror to attempt
to learn what I was doing wrong. What happened was, I simply needed more time
and experience to be successful with a very complex move I was trying to make.
Change genders as a human being. All along, I knew women were different, but
I did not know how different until I was allowed behind the gender curtain. Plus,
just being allowed behind the curtain required special navigation skills to get
around the orange barrels. Not only did I need to appear as a woman, I needed
to move and communicate as a woman also.
Putting the image from the mirror into focus and into the world
proved to be very difficult for me. Since I was trying to live a life spanning both
main binary genders, living one day as a trans woman and one day as a man was literally
killing me mentally. The pain I was suffering I would not have wished on my
worst enemy and worse yet, I was veering off my path and hitting many barrels. Fortunately,
after a failed suicide try, I righted the ship and was able to continue towards
my dream of living full time as a transgender woman. Without taking out any
more orange barrels.
As I became better at being a confident woman from a
different background, I began to see life differently. I was able to
look other women directly in the eye and tell a lot about what they were
thinking. As I took lessons from other cisgender women on nonverbal
communication. From then on, my life began to improve markedly as I began to
buckle up for more gender challenges. Such as, losing all my male privileges I
fought so hard to gain. I nearly had major collisions when I did not plan on
losing all the security privileges I had as a man. One night I had a big
problem with a large man I could not fend off at a party I was at and needed my
wife to rescue me and on another night, I was walking alone on an urban sidewalk
after leaving a gay venue when I was approached by two men wanting money. They
took my last five dollars and went on their way. Lessons learned from both
evenings. One way or another, these two near misses made the loss of my
intelligence when I talked to men seem to be very petty.
The next set of orange barrels I needed to navigate came
when I began gender affirming hormones. The first major hurdle I had was
finding a doctor to prescribe them at all. Back when I was looking for hormones
back in the 1980’s in Ohio. Once I had passed the test of being on a minimum dosage
for a period of time, I was allowed to take bigger amounts of HRT, and the changes
really started to happen. Then, I had a whole different set of barrels to drive
around. Such as, what would I do about my rapidly developing breasts and softer
facial angles. The entire process moved up my transition timeline into the
transfeminine world.
I finally had had enough with the whole gender dilemma, gave
my male clothes to charity and set out to build a new feminine life at the age
of sixty. Being a late transitioner had its benefits to me because I had more
than a little idea of what to expect. Mainly from the time I spent navigating
around all the orange gender barrels I saw on my path towards a future I so
dearly wanted. As I always point out, it was never easy, and I needed to buckle up to make it.
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