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| Image from Brad Starkey on UnSplash. |
More changes are coming to our house beginning today. Thanks to my wife Liz, we are tearing out one of our old bathtubs and putting in a new walk-in shower. Which is perfect for my immobile status and makes it less dangerous for me to take a shower.
You would think, by this time in my life, I would be used to
change but it seems I have just become more set in my ways as a senior citizen
transgender woman. As with many of you, our gender issues changed us for the
first time quite early in life. Mine manifested itself the first time I felt
the magic of trying on my mom’s clothes and I worked my way forward from there.
At that time, I labored under the impression my love for
feminine clothes would eventually go away but it was something I ended up growing
into rather than away from. The older I got, the more skilled I became at
acquiring key items in my wardrobe and hiding them away in places even my
younger brother would not find. I even increased the number of odd jobs I would
do (such as a newspaper route) to augment my meager allowance and allowed me to
buy items such as makeup and panty hose which felt so good on my legs I was
shaving earlier than probably half the girls my age that were allowed to do. To
shave them I had to use my mom’s electric shaver which I needed to carefully
clean after every use. Again, somehow, I managed to escape detection as I
continued to cross dress.
It wasn’t until my military days that I really began to push
for more changes in how I was approaching my femininity. It was a Halloween
party I went to when I only had about eight months left to serve that changed
everything. For my “costume” I chose a slutty woman’s look to go with my
friends looks. Further down the road, during a night of drinking fine German
beer, my “costume” came up in a casual conversation with three of my closest
friends, including my first wife. As we talked about the amount of time and
effort to look the way I did, I finally thought to hell with it, and told the
group I was a transvestite (the term of the day) and I liked to wear women’s
clothing. Surprisingly, no one cared and life went on normally for me even
after for the first time in my life I risked it all and told someone else my
deepest darkest secret. I felt like a huge weight had been taken off my shoulders,
but my freedom was fleeting because of what I did in the Army. If anyone of my
higher ups had found out about my secret, it could have easily caused me to
have be put up for a dishonorable discharge with less than the eight months I
had left to go. Which would have been heartbreaking with all the changes the
Army had put me through.
As I always write about, my newfound freedom to tell anyone
else about my ongoing male to female femininization project came to a
screeching halt when I tried to tell my mom. She rejected me totally and sent
me scurrying back to my closet as far as telling any blood family about my potential
transgender dreams. The only close person to me that I knew was my first wife
and surprisingly her sister who told no one. I think sometimes by coming out
the way I did at Halloween parties was a plea for the public to listen to me
and when I did ever transition, no one would be surprised. Surprisingly, I was
so macho in my male life, nobody ever did. Including the few people who were
still alive years later when I came out. All I got was surprise from the people
I knew. The main reaction was that I seemed too macho to ever be a woman.
All the changes I went through as a novice transgender woman
in my thirties and forties were immense as I learned what I was really facing
if I followed my gender path to my ultimate goal of living fulltime as a trans
woman. I kept being stopped by blind curves and huge Ohio potholes as I learned
the hard way what ciswomen must go through to live their daily lives. I had
become a social person later In life and desperately needed it to continue when
I went behind the gender curtain and emerged a better person. I spent so many
evenings planning to be by myself that the loneliness was really getting to me before
changes suddenly began to set in. It all started when a bartender at one of the
venues I visited often set me up to meet her lesbian mother to have a casual
drink where she worked.
We became friends and were able to see each other often
until another woman entered our little group and we became a friendly threesome
and gathered to watch sports on the big screens. Of all things, the third woman
was another lesbian who slid her phone number down the bar to me one night when
I was alone and I responded feeling much better about myself.
The most amazing experience I had was yet to come when my
future wife Liz responded to an online ad I placed. Predictably, I had to sort
through the ton of online responses I received all the way to being stood up on
pre-planned meetings with men I met online who I refused to not meet in
public. I met Liz on the other hand in one of the sites where I was advertising
in a “woman seeking woman” room and she responded to me and kept responding
until we set up our first date midway between our homes which were
approximately seventy-five miles apart. We went to a drag show then to a Renaissance
Festival and fairly soon she invited me to move in with her. That was over twelve
years ago, and I surely made the right decision.
With all this social success, I need to point out again how many
dues I needed to pay before I was successful. I look at it as a full circle
karma payback to all the lonely times I spent after my second wife died along
with most of my closest friends. I had nowhere to turn for comfort and was
forced to step out of my usual social conditions to look for connections. But
that did lead me right back to the old big sports bars I so enjoyed and felt at
home in as a man. Again, a full circle social moment. At least, the bartenders
would socialize with me if I did not cause any trouble and tipped well. At that
time in my life, any interaction was welcome as I went through the biggest
changes in my life.
Change is a natural part of life anyway, but it seems we
transgender women and transgender men have more than of our fair share of
change to deal with. To be sure it is difficult as we pay our dues to live a life
as our authentic selves.
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