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| Image from UnSplash. |
As I mentioned in yesterday's post, I spent much of my time
running from myself by changing jobs and moving my family. At the same time, I
was doing all of that, I was busy cross-dressing to keep my fragile mental
health together. I started the same way most of you with gender issues did by
trying on my mom’s clothes and moving on from there. The urge was so strong
that I even went out and got a newspaper delivery route (back when newspapers
were relevant) so I could make extra money to buy my own makeup, panty hose as
well as other feminine items I could afford. Before I knew it, I was becoming
fairly proficient at applying my own makeup. So good that the first time I talked
a ciswoman into making me over into a woman, I thought I had done a better job
with my makeup.
Those were during my college days which were split in two by
my military duty during the Vietnam War and all cross-dressing activities were
brought to a complete halt. When you are younger, years are more precious and
the time away from my makeup, dresses, and wigs seemed impossible to face. Somehow,
I made it through and even discovered the magic of attending a Halloween party
dressed as a woman while I was in the Army. The good news is I did it but the
bad news was the time was very limited, and I had a lot to go over in my mind
including Halloween was then another year away. What would I do in the meantime
to help solve my cross-dressing dilemma.
What I tried to do first was to drink my gender problems away,
which only partially worked because when I sobered up, my issues were still
with me and sometimes potentially worse when one night in the Army I told three
close friends I was actually a transvestite and like to wear women’s clothes.
Not just at Halloween. I was lucky, the word about my gender issues never got
out to my higher ups and I went on to serve out my time with a honorable
discharge.
When I rejoined civilian life, I had the chance to seriously
consider making the gender jump from a male life to a female one. Following
serious consideration, I felt the leap would just be too far to make, so I reluctantly
chose to stay on the cross-dressing path I was on. To do just enough in front of
the mirror to maintain my sanity.
Nothing changed until I began to leave my mirror behind and
experience life in the public eye as a novice cross-dresser. Or so I thought.
All was good, until the night something clicked in my mind when I was getting
ready to go out to the straight venues I was visiting when I left the gay spots
behind. As I examined myself in the mirror, I stopped and said what I was doing.
I suddenly felt empty and needed more
and then concluded I had taken just dressing as a woman as far as I could. I
needed to experience the next step which was actually interacting one on one
with other women as an equal. Even though the idea scared me to death, I needed
to hitch up my big girl panties and transition again into a full-fledged transgender
woman. The venue I chose was TGIF Fridays I was familiar with as a man and I
knew if I could make it past the hostess stand with no extra attention, I had a
good chance of finding a seat at the bar with the other women who were just
getting off work at the nearby mall. Amazingly, my plan worked to perfection, and
I made it to the bar and claimed my seat. The bartender waited on me without
showing any signs of gender disgust and I even ordered a second drink to
celebrate my successful major transition in life. From serious cross-dresser to
novice transgender woman. Even saying the word felt good to me.
By the time, time was flying by as I was trying desperately to
build a new transfeminine life while at the same time maintaining a long-term marriage
and successful job. I found I was not too successful as a juggler because the same
time I was feeling good and natural as a trans woman my male life would sneak
back it and ruin it for me. Eventually, it all became too much for me to handle
mentally, and a suicide attempt followed.
Maybe I spent too much time in my life obsessing over my
feminine appearance which I attribute into being a very serious cross-dresser.
Certainly, all the successful public appearances I made as a woman were not
helping me with my ultimate goal of living my dream. In the long-term, I never
bargained on going through two major male to female femininizations to even
come close to discovering if I could find my true life and live it as a
successful trans woman. Maybe I was too shy or scared to go too fast. One way
or another, it is too late now to cry over torn panty hose. Life gives us only
one chance to get it right.
Wherever you maybe in your gender transitory journey, I hope
you can steer clear of the major roadblocks’ politicians are attempting to out
in our way as transgender people. May your path be as smooth as possible as
your own time flies by as a cross-dresser or transgender woman.
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