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Image from Ava Sol on UnSplash. |
Almost daily, I feel as though I am not the man I used to be, and it feels great!
In many ways, I was a man’s man as I went through life
desperately attempting to survive in a male world. To do it, often I needed to
bluster my way through life confronting other men I met. Although nearly all my
confrontations fell way short of being physical, I still was able to win more
than I lost. As I said, I hated the life I was living because deep down it did
not feel right.
While being a man’s man took the life right out of me, it
seemed being a transgender woman put it back. As I settled into my own woman’s
arms, I instantly felt better, and I did not care if I was no longer the man I
used to be. However, what was easy in the beginning became increasingly difficult
as I went along up my gender path. It seemed like each wall I scaled on my path
was a little higher as I stopped to look around to see if I still wanted to
keep going.
By now you know I never stopped moving away from the man I
used to be, and I had many lessons to learn. Particularly around personal security
which I always took for granted as a man. I was always over average size, and people
usually left me alone. It got to be so bad I couldn’t even scalp tickets to a
football game I wanted to attend with my wife. The illegal scalpers thought I
was a cop and would not sell to me. I had to let my wife approach them as the
tickets were not illegal but where they were selling them were back in those
days.
Other aspects of life I hated about being a man was always
having to make the first move. All the way from being the one asking the woman
out, all the way to where we were going for dinner. Then being told somehow my
choice was wrong. Through it all, I could not wait until I was the one who did
not make all the decisions. It was all I did at work, and I felt I shouldn’t
have to at home which did not work well with my wife. On the other hand, I did
learn always being the one who asked someone out was not the popular way to go
with everyone. Just waiting around to have someone ask you was just as bad for
the woman.
Finally, as I began to put all of that behind me and was
beginning to put together a new life as a transgender woman, my life as a man
began to fade in my rearview mirror of life. Not being the man, I used to be a
welcome change and was where I was headed anyhow. I was trying to find specific
small things I used to do as a man and change them over to feminine ones. Large
examples included how I walked all the way down my gender path to learn how to better use the nonverbal
communication women routinely use between each other. Very quickly I learned how
one glance from an employee at a regular venue I went to meant I was in
possible trouble if I stayed. In an instant, my gender world changed as I knew
I could not stay and fight my way out or try to neutralize the situation with a
male scowl. So, I picked up my purse, paid for my tab and left. Along with my male ego.
Then there was the ultimate challenge to any remaining masculinity
I had left. It came when I was approved for and started gender affirming
hormones. Very rapidly, HRT caused what was left of my male strength to fade
away. I used to put trucks away in my busy restaurants all the time and move
very heavy beer kegs around with no help. Not a chance of that ever happening
again since I was on the hormonal medications. As I learned I was not the man I
used to be, my body started to change, and androgyny began to set in. All
before I made the fateful decision to give away all my male clothes and live fulltime
as a transgender woman.
For me, deciding to never go back to the man I used to be
was a simple decision I should have made years before. Out of all the decisions
I had to make as a man, I was unable to make the biggest one and set my life in
the right decision…away from the man I never was.
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