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| Image from Lindsey Feanzke on UnSplash, |
Another major realization I had during my wife Liz and I’s vacation journey was how invisible I had become as a transgender woman.
It was not an easy realization to come by since I have been
out in the public eye full time for over a decade now. During that time, I went
through all the stages of going from sheer panic all the way to suffering from
impostor syndrome when I found myself in a feminine world for the first time. Along
the way, I had heard the term stealth applied to the impossibly feminine transgender
women I had seen who had passed the public perception of beauty easily. A
standard I never thought I could reach with the testosterone poisoned body I
had to work with.
In many ways, I found I never could but then I began to look
around me at all the other ciswomen in the world who did not achieve a high
standard of classic beauty either. And they found a way to lead successful
fulfilling lives as women. When I realized they had a path, I knew I had one
too. I could be secure in my own womanhood even though my path was different than
most of the world. The only real problem I had was dealing with the late start
I had dealing with my realization that I was a transfeminine person all along.
I was blessed with having the advice or criticism from moms or peer groups to
help me out of my gender shell. I only had a mirror which was highly capable of
lying to me on my feminine presentation. Even though I looked like a clown in
drag because of my poor makeup skills, my mirror friend kept telling me I was
pretty.
It was not until It began to have the courage to use the
world as my mirror did life begin to change for me. I needed to pay closer
attention to what the ciswomen around me were wearing so I could blend in with
them and not create unwanted attention to myself as a transgender woman. In
other words, I did not know it yet, but I had my first lessons in being invisible
in the world as the person I had always dreamed of becoming.
Little dd I know, the more I was out in the world, the more
lessons I would have to learn to just survive carving out a new niche in my
life. It was one thing to talk to myself in the mirror and a whole other to
communicate one on one with another woman n the world. Early on, before I
gathered much courage in what I was doing, I would lay back and let the other
person (normally a woman) take the lead in any communication efforts she wanted
to do. I found it was the best way to go as I learned what the gender I so desperately
needed to be a part of operated behind the gender curtain which men could only
guess at. I became comfortable in women only spaces such as restrooms and parties
where men were not invited. In doing so, I was making myself more invisible as
a trans woman and more visible as a well-rounded person.
All of this brings me back to what “stealth” as a transgender
person means to me. For the longest time, as I said, I thought the word applied
to only the upper echelon of transsexual beauties I saw online back before
anyone could use filters to make themselves look better. Back in those days, feminine
facial surgery was the way to go to re-arrange what you were born with in the
appearance department. Seeing how I could not afford any surgery and was still
working as a man, I was stuck with trying my best to improve my looks through
the miracle of makeup.
By this time in my life, I was approaching my sixties and had
managed to carve out a nice little life with affirming women friends, I decided
to take to heart again what my trans friend Racquel had told me years ago. She
profoundly said I passed out of sheer will power and I took it as it was intended.
That I would never be the most attractive woman in the room but I could survive
anyhow as I found my path as a transgender woman beyond the point of ever living
a male life at all and I was now invisible to the world as my former self. After
all the decades of attempting to live as a mix of the two main genders, I had
made it to the point of just being me. More importantly, I was able to show the
public around me who I was too. Now, it could be when one ciswoman on the trip
came up to me to tell me how much she respected me coming along on the tour, it
could have been she was referring to me making my way with my walker on wheels,
or the she sensed I was transgender. One way or another, I respected what she said.
It turned out she was not alone. To my surprise, I had
several other couples tell me the same thing and they were the ones I least
expected to do it. Which teaches me once again not to prejudge people ahead of
time. Shame on me, because I hate it when people prejudge me.
I guess becoming invisible for me came the same time I
learned to just be me and I my life’s journey just happened to include being transgender.
Now I need to keep trying to adjust to my new realizations. Since it took long
enough for me to do it.

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