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| JJ Hart on Left, wife Liz on Right. |
Of course, with age came complexity in life which included a
military disruption of three years during the Vietnam War. My Army training
very much was in the way of expressing any of my feminine qualities. Drill
sergeants frowned upon any miniskirts or lipstick during basic training. So, I
needed to resort to deeply hiding my secrets away, not unlike what I had done
my entire life. I kept thinking against hope that someday I would be the pretty
girl in the new car I was saving up for. I did get the new car, but being the
pretty girl was very much up for debate and something I was always trying to achieve.
To remove the obstacles, I faced to living the transgender
dreams I had, I needed to do a lot of living I discovered. Life was never going
to be as easy as just looking the part of a ciswoman. If I truly wanted to go
through all the living to earn the title, I needed to get out of my shell and
into the world as a novice trans woman. Sadly, as I followed my gender path,
there was always something emerging to get in my way. Such as a wife, family,
friends and job which I did not want to risk losing. It seemed the better I did
as a man, the more I had to lose.
All along, I thought the gender curtain would be more of a
gentle barrier to cross to see how the feminine half of the population lived
without men. I was not prepared for all I needed to go through to earn my way to
having female privileges to replace the male ones I was losing. To begin with,
I was painfully shy and insecure about talking to any other woman at all. Plus,
as I learned all the different forms of communication women use, adding them
into my world was a challenge. Such as having to stay in the present when
someone talked to me and not try to anticipate what they were going to say. I discovered
it was much easier to anticipate what a man was going to say from all my years
as living as one, than a woman with non-verbal (eye to eye) communication
skills. Not to mention, a ciswoman’s passive aggressive behavior which I
misjudged several times before I adjusted to the new world I was in.
When I was able to get communication out of my way, I could
move on to other obstacles in my way. I was still having problems with putting
together a complete convincing picture as a transfeminine person. I had not practiced
enough to feel natural in my world of makeup and high heels to feel natural and
relax. Every time I was able to relax and enjoy myself as a transgender woman, I
would do something to give myself away. It was not until I quit thinking I was
fooling anyone into thinking I was a ciswoman did I do better. Mainly because I
was just being me. At this point, I needed to overcome another major hurdle I
had when I was a man. I never thought, or was raised to think, I was ever good
enough to excel in the world and if I could never make it as a man how could I
ever make it as a trans woman. It was a major boulder to move from my path.
It took a while, but I did build the self-esteem as a woman
that I never had as a man. I did it slowly with the explorations I took into
the world. I was able to build the all-important confidence I needed slowly but
surely with the help of a totally new set of friends and acquaintances I built
up who had no knowledge at all of my former life as a man. As my wife Liz told
me, very few people ever have the chance to start over again, so make the best
of it and I was able to. Soon enough, I was as comfortable in my tennis shoes
as I was in my high heeled boots, and I was able to build upon nothing being in
my way as I built my female privilege.
I knew then, I had made the right choice to follow my dreams
into a trans woman world because I felt so natural. The light at the end of the
tunnel was not the train as it beckoned me into a new world. It turned out, the
main thing that was in my way all along was myself. Once I got me out of the
way and for once was truthful with myself, I was able to move forward with a
mental clarity I had never known before.
It was certainly worth the struggle to make sure my second
chance in life was worth it. Sure, my gender issues were a major hurdle to move
but it was no big surprise when I considered how deep gender runs in all humans.
In many senses, discovering the true nature of me made life that much more
interesting.

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