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Image from Natalia Rabinovych on UnSplash. |
When we are younger, time seems like it is less of a commodity. When we are in school for example, all we want to do is graduate into the world. For transgender women and transgender men transitioning, we often take time for granted. At least I did.
As I was coming out of my gender closet, regardless of not
having much guidance on where I wanted to go to achieve my dream of living as a
woman, I took my time. For a while, when I had finished serving my time in the
military, the only outlet I had to being out in the public’s eye were the
yearly Halloween parties I went to. Finally, I could see the writing on my
gender wall and knew I would somehow have to do something, so I did not have to
wait another long year to go out again. Time was being wasted.
It turned out, I could not see the forest for the trees,
because there was a huge world just waiting for me if I just had the courage to
do something about it. I needed to hitch up my big girl panties, not be a victim
because of the bigots, and do something about escaping my closet. The problem
was, I was always making excuses about why I could not do something as a novice
cross dresser or transgender woman. So, what if my ego was wounded when I was
laughed at early on, I just needed to go back home and figure out what I was
doing wrong and fix it. Time was going by, and I was not getting any younger.
Little did I know then, as I was in my thirties, how much farther I would have
to travel.
I had my own transgender biological clock I was dealing
with. Like any woman, I knew I only had a finite number of years to look my
best to try to socialize in the world. All of this happened before I learned
appearance was just the stepping off point when I tried to interact with the
feminine world. My wife tried to tell me, but I would not listen, and I lost
years in my male to female transition to learn for myself what she was talking
about. Again, I was spending too much time as a victim wanting my wife to explain
what she was talking about and not explaining it better to me. The problem was,
I would not have listened anyway, my old male ego was still too strong.
In the meantime, I was getting myself caught up in major
gender contradictions. I was spending up to three days of my week trying to learn
the basics of being a transfeminine person and then turn around and having to
revert back to the old male life I increasingly wanted no part of. It was no
way to live and often I felt as if I was one of those jugglers I saw on
television when I was a kid, keeping several plates balanced at once in the
air. Ultimately, the entire gender back and forth nearly killed me.
My suicide attempt, among other things, woke me up to the
fact I did not have all the time in the world. Especially if my self-destructive
actions were trying to take it away. If I ever was going to have a chance to achieve
my dream of living as a transgender woman, I might have less time than I
thought to do it. At that point, I shifted my transition plans into high gear
and began to explore in earnest if I could do it at all. Maybe it was my impossible
dream. One way or another, I was in my fifties and needed to decide what I was
going to do.
As I began to carve out my new life as a transgender woman,
I needed to quickly learn what worked for me and what did not. My biggest
move was when I worked my way out of gay venues where all they did was perceive
me as a drag queen and enter the real world where I needed to prove I was more
than just a man in a dress, wearing makeup and a wig. With more than a little
help from my inner female who had waited so long to live, I was able to
establish myself as a viable person to the public. As my trans woman friend
Racquel said, I passed out of sheer will power, which I did. I proved I was not
trying to fool anyone into thinking I was someone who I was not. For better or
for worse, my friends knew they were dealing with a unique woman who had used
her lifetime to arrive at the same point as they did.
Maybe I had spent my time wisely. One way or another, I learned a lot about the binary genders as time flew by.
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