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| Image from Joshua Rondeau on UnSplash. |
Very early on, it became evident to me that my feminine self was very demanding. Who knows, maybe she took after my mom who had to be strong in a very male dominated family.
Wherever it came from, I always felt a strong push from her
to be let out into the world to live. Even so she would have to wait years and
go through constant trials and tribulations to do it. The gender journey I was
on proved to be much longer and challenging than either of her competing souls
thought possible. Nearly a half a century of trying before I got it right.
To make matters worse, my male self never was one to give up
easily and he fought every move intensely along the way. Making everything even
worse was that he was fairly successful in carving out a life he never really
wanted as a man. The more baggage he accumulated, the more difficult it became
leaving it all behind in a male to female transition situation.
Even more stressful was the fear of the unknown which followed
me everywhere. It started with the feelings of not knowing if I was a boy or a
girl when I was growing up and continued onward from there. Seeking gender
answers always took a lot of energy out of my life that I wished I could get
back. Of course, that was impossible and I needed to learn to live with the way
I was with my gender dysphoria until I hoped I could do something about it. What
I did do was get out of my closet/mirror and began to see what the world would
be like for a transgender woman like me. Would it be her way or the highway
after all. Following a rough start with my public presentation, I lost nearly
fifty pounds of weight and began to perfect my art of makeup. I put a
tremendous amount of work into my feminine presentation, more than anything
else I had ever done in my life.
As it turned out, all my effort was rewarded and my
transfeminine self-began to emerge and live her life. The days of just going
out to be alone in the world subsided as I was able to make new social contacts
for the first time as a trans woman. For the first time in my life, the gender
teeter-totter I was on began to favor my feminine side which proved to be a
real problem for my male side who still was working fulltime in the world and
bringing home a good income. I was actually ahead of my timetable in how I
wanted to work out the gender issues in my life and increasingly it was
becoming her way or the highway when it came to my life.
The pressure to change became enormous and wrecked my mental
health leading me to alcohol abuse along with self-harm (suicide) attempts. I
drove too fast and took too many chances hoping something would come along and
put me out of my misery. Nothing ever did until I realized the answer was
screaming at me all along. I should have never been born into the male world
that I was and now would have to overcome the testosterone poisoned past I had
lived to do something about it.
Her way became a real reality to me when my second wife
passed away unexpectedly from a massive heart attack at the age of fifty. I was
so disappointed that she never did anything about her health until it was too
late that I never properly grieved the loss of someone I had been married to
for twenty-five years. Instead, I turned to the waiting arms of my feminine
self for comfort in my times of severe despair and loneliness. She was all I
had as I sleepwalked through my life, and her highway began to look better and
better. My new timetable of a possible jump across the gender border dramatically
increased when suddenly the greatest barrier to stopping my leap had been taken
away.
Before I knew it, the new highway I had dreamed about living
on was upon me and it was fast and smooth since I had worked through most all
of the bumps and potholes earlier than I had experimented. For once, I was not
frustrated with all the time it took me to make my final gender transition decision.
I always compared the road I was on to the Autobahns I drove when I was in Germany which were always well maintained and built for high speed. I even had
to be careful that I was not going too fast as I had to figure out who was left
to talk about my authentic self. My daughter came first, which went exceedingly
well and then my brother which went exceedingly bad. Then I moved on to what
was left of the very few friends I had left or just began to not see them anymore
as I built my new life.
I am very glad now that it was her way or the highway in my
life. She kept telling me it was the way life should have always been and the brief
moments of life I saw which were so fluid and natural were only the beginning. Maybe
I had been too cautious for my own good when I tried to take the back roads towards
becoming a full-fledged transgender woman, but it was the only way I knew. Hiding
who I was started so early in life, I never saw my way out of it for so many
years until it was too late. I was stuck in a habit I could not get out of.
Until I woke up to the fact that her way or the highway was a realistic path my
life should take. I have enjoyed the highway ever since.
I was more like my mom than she ever knew.

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