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Image from Wilhelm Gunkle on UnSplash. |
As I thumbed through my new feminine workbook, I sadly discovered there were no chapters on what to do if I got in over my head. In my well-built male world, I had been able to figure out strategies on what to do in times of duress. I could choose to stand and fight, try to bluster my way through, or just run from the problem. None of which was available to me anymore on the gender path I was on.
Even though I was blessed with a healthy male body which was
slightly bigger than the norm, I had hated the changes testosterone made to it
when I had no choice but to go through male puberty. Very quickly, I grew past
the sizes of my mom’s clothes I was trying on and had to find other ways to
build my wardrobe on the very limited budget I was on. My newspaper route
money, along with the small allowance I got for helping around the house, just
didn’t go far. Still, I was able to sneak out of our rural home under the pretense
of visiting my grandma who lived downtown and do some shopping for makeup and
hosiery. I just remember how incredibly overwhelming the makeup selection was
and how much I was over my head with my selections.
After I was able to smuggle my purchases past grandma and my
family, then I needed to work earnestly on how to apply the makeup I bought and
not look like a clown. After looking in the family mirror and feeling like a
clown in drag, I knew I was in over my head and just had to find a way out, or
in as it turned out. I wanted out of the male world and into a feminine world. The
mirror was wearing off, and I needed to improve my presentation, or I was
doomed to forever occupy a male spot in the world where I knew I was not in
over my head. The white male privileges I was building up were just too easy to
not take advantage of. Ironically, all the good I was accomplishing in the
world with my family, friends and job was frustrating me because, deep down, I did
not want it.
What was happening was my frail mental health was being destroyed
by all the gender ripping and tearing I was going through. One day I was a successful
man and the next I was working to present my self as a woman was very destructive
to my everyday existence because the whole process took me back to my gender
fluid days when I was a kid. Back in those days, no one knew about the gender
fluid term, or used it which put me in over my head before I even really
started in life. Remember, I grew up in the pre-internet dark ages when anyone
who cross dressed was considered mentally ill. At least I knew, even though I
might be alone as a transvestite (another term from the dark ages), I was not
mentally ill.
I barely survived the dark ages when I did learn there were
actually individuals like me who wanted to dress as women. I would be remiss if
I did not mention Virginia Prince and her Transvestia publication at this
point. It was my lifeline to the cross-dressing world and opened my closet for
the first time. When the light came flooding in, at first, I was blinded, and
it was difficult to find my bearings. My first transvestite-crossdresser mixers
I went to left me more confused than ever before. I knew I was in over my head
when I saw and occasionally chatter with a few of the ultra-feminine women who
I could see no masculine traits at all and on the other hand, I knew I was innately
more feminine than many of the cross dressers I met. So, I left with more
questions than answers.
I was caught in the same place for years as I explored the
world looking for myself. Surely, along the way, I found myself in over my head
as I transitioned but I kept going anyhow. Too stubborn to quit and waste the new
feminine privileges I was working so hard to gain. To use another example, I
threw myself into the deep end of the gender pond before I had learned how to
swim. I gave myself no choice but to make it. Fortunately, all the mirror time
working on my presentation as I wanted to be like the beautiful cross dressers
I saw in Transvestia came back to help me. If I could present myself to blend
in with the world, it gave me one step up to make it as a transfeminine
person.
I certainly was in over my head enough to earn my right to
play in the girl’s sandbox, and fill out my gender workbook.
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