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| JJ Hart, Trans Wellness Outreach. |
Time is a fickle beast which sometimes comes back to help us, and other times it comes back to haunt us.
Depending on how far you are in your gender journey, perhaps
you can remember your first experiences with the clothing of the gender you
desired so much. Then again, I have heard from several readers who started
their explorations at a much later age. Either way, time became a concrete reckoning
to be dealt with. Mainly because time is a finite way of restricting all of us
during our lives.
Since I have been fortunate to have been given a long/full
life to live (I am seventy-six), I have seen my life come full circle in
several areas. I have seen the joys of gender euphoria which kept me going when
I hit the deep depression of stop signs and blind curves on my gender pathway. Through
it all, I tried my best to learn from all my mistakes and successes. Little did
I know I would live long enough to take advantage of everything I had learned.
Or much of it as for much of my life I was always second guessing the decisions
I was making. Did I make the right decision on taking a new job, or more
importantly when I started to go out in public as a transgender woman and
risking it all, was I doing the right thing.
What I did not take into consideration I had no real choice
in what I was doing. From birth I was destined not to be the male person I was
supposed to be. I had bigger and better things ahead of me if I broke the mold
and was able to do it. I had the time to finally decide which path was right
for me as I diligently explored the world of all the cisgender women around me.
Then, a major roadblock arose when I was not allowed behind the gender curtain.
The only time I was really getting out in public as a trans woman in hiding was
at Halloween when nearly everyone knew me as a man. I badly needed other escape
routes into the public eye if I was ever going to have the time to achieve my
dream.
It turned out time was cheap in the middle years of my life
as they turned out to be a blur. More and more, I began to sneak out of the house
and explore the world around me as my transfeminine self. It was only then that
I began to be allowed to be behind the gender curtain to see if life there what
was really what I wanted. Spoiler alert, it was very much what I wanted as I even
though many times I was terrified (yet excited) when I explored. I thought I
had forever to do it and took my time trying to find new things to do as a
transgender woman in a woman’s world. Which at times, still had me baffled
about how it worked because I was still carrying around too much of my old male
baggage. His expectations for the most part of how a woman acted in the world
were formed from stereotypes he learned growing up as he watched women from
afar and for the most part putting them up on a pedestal.
What I did not realize was my indecision to go all the way into
the women’s world I was immersed in, was costing me years later on in life that
I wanted back. Like everyone else I had assumptions, and mine were that I had
plenty of time to research the difficult layered life of and being a woman, when I simply did not which
led me all the way to the age of sixty before I made the fateful decision to
throw gender paranoia to the wind, pursue HRT, and change my life forever. While
I still had the time because all the people I loved and respected in my life
were rapidly passing away around me. The finality of death became a very real
reality to me and if I was ever able to live my gender dream of living life as
a woman, I had better do it while I still had the chance to enjoy it.
All I had was time was quickly fading away with all the
people around me and I had very few people to make my own gender reveal to. For
the most part, except for my brother and sister-in-law, my gender reveals were
successful with most people telling me they were happy to see me happy. I guess
one way to look at it is, if you wait long enough for your reveal you can be
the last man standing becoming the last woman standing.
Going back to a theme which has popped up around here
recently, if you are transgender you have given up all your rights to be a second-class
citizen. And at least all you have going for you is that your journey has been an
interesting one. From the earliest days of admiring yourself in the mirror all
the way to earning your way behind the gender curtain, you have done it all.
Even though it maybe took a few years to do it, you know how
difficult it has been to do it and every step needed to be carefully planned. One
false move could send you back down your path and sometimes even worse than
that. Ridicule by spouse, family and friends can happen at the same time your
gender privileges were revoked. You feel helpless until you get your feet back
on the ground to where you can continue and begin moving to a place where you
always have known you should be.
For me, the time was now or never when I decided to live full-time,
I had taken working on my feminine presentation, as well as being out in as
many situations (good and bad) as I could. Anymore and I was just wasting my
time and kidding myself if I did not pull the plug on my male life and get on
with my future which I felt could be bright.
I saw the light at the end of the tunnel and for once it was
not the train. I had paid my dues and was ready to live my life the way I
wanted. Even though I ended up taking so long to do it, I was happy when I did.
Age turned out to be more than a number for me, it turned out to be the magic
time of my life.
Thanks to all of you for taking your precious time reading along!

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