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| JJ Hart |
In many ways, this post is an extension of yesterday’s article. It involves the constant gender dance my second wife of twenty-five years and I had through in our marriage until she passed away.
Most of the problems occurred when I could not face the
truth about myself. I was much more than a casual cross-dresser and just having
the occasional chance to dress in front of the mirror in my feminine clothes
was just not enough to satisfy my dreams of becoming a full-fledged transgender
woman someday. That was when I entered
the most shameful time of my life when I like to say, I started to cheat on my
wife with another woman who happened to be me.
As with most cheating episodes, mine became very complex.
First, I started innocently enough with me taking short trips out of the house
by walking around our neighborhood. When I got away with that, I started
driving around as a trans woman to nearby cities where no one would know me. It
was when I began to gather the courage to get out of my car and start exploring
clothing stores, malls and book store to name a few. Before I knew it, I was
hooked and I was having lunch on my own, just to see how successful I would be
as a novice trans woman. Amazingly, I found the world was mostly nice to me and
I kept experimenting. Which put me directly in the crosshairs of what I pledged
to my wife. That I would never go out in public as a woman. She even went as
far as letting me have the money to rent a motel room where I could dress and
go out.
I even abused that privilege and still left the house on a
regular basis. The problem that I had was removing all the traces of makeup
that I was wearing when my wife was gone and I had to pass her strict inspection
when she got home. Before long, regardless of how hard I tried to remove all my
makeup, I was guilty until proven innocent. My wife knew I had been out, no
matter how much I lied and tried to talk my way out of it.
Once I started seriously down my gender path to trans
womanhood, I can confess I was never quite innocent. I would look for any
opportunity to get out and about and improve my worth in the world as a woman.
To be sure, I was not proud of what I was doing, but the whole process felt so
natural that I just had to keep going and challenge myself to see what was
around the next corner of my life. Even though the whole lifestyle change I was
going through was so scary, it was also exciting and natural. As if something
deep down inside of me knew I was on the right path.
As I always say, all of the lying and sneaking around took a
tremendous toll on my mental health. All of my insecurities came to light when
my normally honest life was torn apart by lying so much to my wife. I guess you
could say too, for a while I was lying to the world about who I was too when I
first started to go out in the world. I was guilty with strangers who did not know
they were interacting with who I really was, not some sort of drag act. In
fact, it took me several meetings with the same people to overcome that major
obstacle in my life. The last thing I wanted back in those days was to be
connected with any of the negative talk show press the cross-dresser
transgender community was getting. Or even worse when we were being compared to
someone who was up to no good by disguising themselves as a woman to commit a
crime. As a group back then, we were guilty
until proven innocent.
I was fortunate in that I managed to purge my feminine self
about six months before my wife died, so at least, I could do the right thing
and honor my promise to her for a short time. For a number of reasons, it was
the longest six months of my life. It
turned out when she passed, I would never have to consider purging again.
Except when I made the major decision to finally give away all my male clothes
for the last time. The best and most complete purge I ever made.
As I reached that point in my life, I vowed that honesty
would always be the best policy and I would always be innocent until proven
guilty. It turned out my inner hidden female had always thought the same thing
and when she had the chance to see the light of day, she made a honest attempt
to do the best she could to take the ball and run with it. When that corner had
been turned, it was like I had been freed from a giant weight on my shoulders.
I could breathe again and be fully proud of who I had become, a whole
transfeminine person.
I can’t say it enough, the days and years of lying and
deception on my part was totally my doing because I did not have the courage to
face who I really was. I have no excuse for my cowardice except for my male
self just did not want to give up what he worked so hard to obtain.
Certainly, I would not wish any of the gender turmoil I went
through on my worst enemy and if the politicians who keep passing the anti-transgender
bills across the country had to walk a mile in our shoes, they may have a whole
different understanding of what we transgender women and trans men face on a
daily basis. Then we would be judged to be innocent until proven guilty, which we
rarely are.

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