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| JJ Hart |
For cisgender women or men, lives are set up to be lived in
a certain pattern from birth till death. Using a baseball reference, life
throws you a real curve ball when you are trans. Because you are different and
often pay the price. The sad part is, for the longest time, we have such a hard
time explaining to others our gender issues when we don’t understand them
ourselves. In my case, it took me years to come to the conclusion I was not a
man cross dressing as a woman, I was a woman cross dressing as a man, and I was
not stuck with some sort of a weak excuse such as I was a woman stuck in a man’s
body.
I grew up in a semi-dysfunctional family which valued being
different. Until it infringed on what mom and dad thought was right. So having
their oldest son want to be their daughter would never have been accepted. Or
that was way too different for them to understand. I basically went on with my
life knowing I was different and not knowing the information I needed to know
if anyone else felt the same way.
Before I knew it, I was on the path to male privilege if I
just did my best to earn it. The only problem was, I did not want to be on it.
It was as if some invisible force was keeping me there against my will. Sometimes,
it was easier not to expend my energy fighting my gender issues than to actually
begin to leave my mirror and seek out attention in the world. It was only then
did I begin to learn if my transgender dreams could ever become a reality or would
forever remain a dream until I die. I just knew, both of my parents had lived relatively
long lives so I should have time enough to do what I wanted.
In the meantime, I did what was expected of me. Such as
reproducing an offspring daughter, earning two college degrees and serving my
country in the military. I was not different than many of the other men around
me, and life was a blur during this time. The worst part was, I was still not
coming any closer to learning if I had any possibility of living my transgender
dreams other than the occasional Halloween party. I was still paranoid that
others around me would learn of my gender difference and often I would wake up
in the morning wondering if I was a man or a woman. Which certainly set my day
off on the wrong foot and I am not even adding in the vivid dreams I was having
when I was a pretty woman. It would often take me hours to fully return to the disappointing
relationship I had with my life as a man.
All the relationship did was continue to cement my unwanted
claim of being a semi-successful man. I often wonder what I could have accomplished
if I could have given my male self the full attention he sometimes deserved.
Not the partial attention he received when I was inwardly thinking of what my life
would be like if I could live it as a transfeminine person. It was as if
something was telling me to put the brakes on acquiring any extra baggage as a
man that I would have to get rid of when and if I was able to transition from
male to female. It turned out, the learning curve I went through as a male
helped me anyhow as a transwoman, because I was a stronger person. Which really
came in handy on those lonely nights when I was out trying to be myself and not
the self that made me different.
It was not until I made my gender differences an accepted
part of me did I begin to experience success with finding new friends in the
world. Since I could not deny what I was, why not utilize me to make me more
attractive and I don’t mean in the physical sense. I was like other cisgender
women who may not be the most attractive woman in the room but there was
something about them which set them apart with their inner glow. I knew if I
could harness my inner glow, I could go much farther in life and dispel for
good that there was any dreaming left for me to do.
Literally without thinking about it I had crossed the line
and transitioned again. I had went from being a serious cross dresser all the way
to being a transgender woman and then to being just me. I had spent all the
time around the cisgender women that I knew for them to accept me as an equal
behind the gender curtain and I did not have to feel any different any longer.
I did not have to seek out a mirror to reinforce in my mind who I was. I had
sorted my male baggage and kept what I wanted and discarded the rest, so I was
ready for my next big challenge which was being approved for gender affirming
hormones or HRT. When my body took to them so naturally, I was able to take
another big step towards doing away with what made me different from other
ciswomen around me. In fact, I wondered what hormones some of the mean women I
knew were on. They must have had an overdose of testosterone somehow in their
diet.
While it is often difficult to emphasize the differences
which make you different as a transgender woman or trans man in today's world, your
differences can still be a positive influence when someone gets to know the
real you.

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