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Image from Belinda Fewings on UnSplash |
After many years of looking back at my life, I began to think of my transgender experience as merely a detour in my life.
The problem was, there are many types of detours ranging
from major closures to small delays. I found I needed to be careful with my
navigation quite early when I was in the exploration stage of my mom’s clothes.
One speed bump could lead me to an impromptu visit with a psychiatrist who knew
nothing about gender issues and wanted to pronounce me mentally ill. Even back
then, I knew I was not crazy for wanting to be a girl.
As the years progressed, I became increasingly skilled at
sneaking around and dodging the detours in my life. Especially, the major ones
such as becoming a parent. Even though the whole experience made me extremely
proud, it still changed my life profoundly. I remember thinking at the time if
it would affect my desire to be a woman but if anything, the birth process
enhanced it. I was still in my detour mode, drinking heavily as I tried to find
the nearest exit to help me.
To make up for the detours, I began to leave my closet and
explore the world increasingly as a transfeminine person. The entire process
meant taking chances such as leaving the house dressed as a woman and dodging
many speed bumps along the way. It took me many more years before my path began
to smooth out and I could see a clear road ahead. However, I still needed to be
very careful with what I was doing. I had a long-term marriage and good job to
protect among other male privileges. I was stuck between a giant rock and a
hard place I needed to detour around. The rock was the better I did with my
male life, and the hard place was my female side resented any incursion into
her existence. To be sure, a very difficult place to be.
Then there were the times I crashed with my wife and was
caught coming home late from one of my nightly gender adventures. A prime
example was the night a lesbian was flirting with me and bought me a beer and said
she should take me home with her. I was flattered and ended up staying too long
and arriving home late. The ensuing fight lasted days after I hit that speed
bump. Sadly, there were other times when I crashed on my own by driving an old sports
car, which I bought that had the habit of suddenly not starting on occasion. Of
course, one night when I was at a gay venue approximately twenty minutes from
home, the car would not start. Fortunately, I had planned and left me enough
time to call a tow truck and arrive home before my wife did. I had survived yet
another close call.
My gender detours did not begin to go away until I started
to really be allowed behind the gender curtain. It was after I had placed the
gay venues firmly behind me in my rearview mirror and started to prove a
fulltime life as a transgender woman was possible for me. The only problem was
how fast I should dare to go. In those days, I still had my wife, family and
job to worry about. As it turned out, destiny stepped in and showed me the way.
Tragically my wife and several dear friends passed away leaving me alone to
decide my future. In addition, my road crew
removed other detours such as employment when I discovered I could take my
Social Security early and sell collectibles to make ends meet. My final indication
I had a clear path ahead was when the Veterans’ Administration health care
program approved gender affirming hormones for qualifying veterans. I was qualified
and made a big jump towards my gender transition.
By this time, even I could see my detours towards living my
dream were coming down, and I was in a now or never situation. I was sixty and
had put up with my gender indecisions long enough. I went into a double
retirement by quitting a job that I hated and gave away all my male clothes to
charity.
Looking back, if I had known all the detours, I would have
to take in my life just to survive, I wonder if I would have taken a different
path. On the other hand, I was locked into a route I was taking and had no
choice. Sure, I would have tried other ways around to get to where I was going.
Such as attempting to come out quicker than I did and stop lying to myself. One
way or another it is too late now to cry over spilled makeup.
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