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Amy Hepker embraces transgender identity, but at great cost

Started by Lara the Lover and the Fighter, November 02, 2014, 10:52:42 PM

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Lara the Lover and the Fighter

Amy Hepker embraces transgender identity, but at great cost

http://www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/amy-hepker-embraces-transgender-identity-but-at-great-cost/2204866

At about midnight, Amy Hepker parks her 1993 Nissan 200SX directly under a light pole in the very back of a strip mall parking lot. A skittish little black cat she named Shadow jumps in the back window to watch her grab a few extra layers of clothes from the trunk.

She feels old.

The 58-year-old — all 6-foot-1, 220 pounds of her — reclines the driver's seat and settles in for the night. Her knees ache from eight weeks of not being able to stretch out, her feet are swollen from a heart condition, her back throbs from an old work injury and she worries about her high blood pressure. But mostly she feels alone.

For most of her life, Hepker has lived as John. She raised two children as John. It was always easy to get a job, be in a relationship, build a life. And she could have those things back in a heartbeat, if she'd just put on men's clothes.

"I look like a quarterback in women's clothes," Hepker said. "It's hard for a lot of people to get past that."

But she can't go back to being someone she never was.

"I don't have a choice. It is who I am. It is who I have always been."

The world saw a hard-working, blue-collar guy.

John Hepker logged a million accident-free miles as a trucker, worked on the docks, drove a tractor, cut brush.. After work, John raced a '66 Mustang, tricked out and tuned up by his own greasy hands.

"It was all about proving to myself that I could be more male than them, but then I'm laughing to myself: 'But I'm female!' " Hepker said. "Overcompensating is a kind of a 'fake it till you make it' thing."

Faking had begun early. At 5 years old, Hepker abandoned plastic soldiers, trucks and toy guns to sneak off and dress Barbie with the girls down the street. At 18, Hepker asked a girlfriend: "Want to dress me as a woman?"

The teens walked around Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in the middle of the night. Hepker's heart thundered in her chest. "That was 1975. If anyone had seen us, I would have been put away to be 'cured.' "

But for the first time, Hepker felt free and right in her own skin.

She has never been attracted to men and always told anyone she was romantically involved with that she felt like a woman. They all bought her clothes and loved her for who she was, as long as she kept the secret at home.

Six times she purged her wardrobe of women's clothes.

"I felt I had to be the man I'm supposed to be."

Twice before now she decided to live as Amy full time. Both times she lost her partner and her job.

"Younger people can pass. With hormone therapy today they could pass you in the street and you would never know.

"But people look at us older transgenders like we're drag queens. Drag queens are performers. We just want to be who we are. We don't want to draw attention to ourselves," she said.

She swears this time she is Amy for good. She knew from past experience that it was going to be rocky.

Last year she told her employer, a local document shredder, she would start coming to work as Amy in two weeks. A week and a half later, she was fired for being rude to a customer. She insists she was not.

Shortly after that, her girlfriend of nearly two years said she would always love and support her, but couldn't stay with her.

"If you were John, it would be different, but that is not who you are," she recently texted.

Until eight weeks ago Hepker lived with a friend and tried without luck to get a job. When the friend lost her home to foreclosure, Hepker found herself homeless for the first time in her life.

She has settled into a lonely routine, spending days at a local park chatting with anyone who is willing. A local restaurant owner gives her ice in the afternoon to keep her sodas cold. Shadow, the cat, comes out for a few minutes now and then. At night she finds a quiet corner of a parking lot, always under the protective glow of a streetlight.

She begins her evening prayers the same way:

"God Almighty, Jesus Christ our Lord, Mother Mary Superior, thank you for the life I have and for the miracles you've granted me."

She prays for forgiveness of her sins. Then for family and friends. Then for herself.

"Please Lord, help me find a home. Help me find enough money to get by. Help me find a lady who will love me."

She believes God makes sure nothing lasts forever and nothing stays the same. She knows God will help her.

"I just don't know when."

Contact John Pendygraft at (727)893-8247 or pendygraft@tampabay.com.
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Jill F

Sad.  Gender dysphoria seems to be the only medically documented condition that you can be acceptibly persecuted for just because you want relief from it.

The world needs a fat reality check.
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Tessa James

And so more lives are documented and more people are exposed to the drama and hard reality of being trans in cisworld.  I know its a cliche but she is one courageous woman and so true to herself, thank goodness for her. 
Open, out and evolving queer trans person forever with HRT support since March 13, 2013
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JulieBlair

#3
I am Amy, and a thousand people just like her.  I am, and live my life, a woman.  That means in much of the world I can be killed, often without consequence or even notice.  That means that even here, I can be denied human rights, and ironically have that done in the name of God.  I am trans, which means that for many I am not even real.  It makes me weep, for the lost talent, for the frightened, the dead. 

Kate killed herself October 1, Nero is gone, who's next?  Later this month I will be at a candlelight service in remembrance of gender nonconforming women and men who died or were murdered for who they were. 

"How many times can a man look up, before he sees the sky?
How many ears.must one man have before he can hear people cry?
How many deaths will it take till he knows that too many people have died?"

I cannot let the answer, like yesterday's news, be blowin' in the wind.  For me it is personal and makes me both sad and angry.  I must be able to shout out who I am without fear, and I can - in Seattle, but not in Wyoming - they would find me hanging from barbed wire.  Not in a thousand other places either.

That is unacceptable to me! "I have been to the mountaintop, and I have seen the promised land."  A month ago I stood on the step where Dr. King made that exaltation, and I wept in the shadow of Lincoln.  I am tired of weeping.  I am tired of mourning the loss of beautiful talented people.  I am tired of the fear, and the pain, and the sadness, and the despair. 

I spend much time trying to convince young transgender men and women that it will get better, that this is the dawning of an era of justice, that they are beautiful.  I see Tessa and others reaching out and making those changes to the body politic real.  I do what I can.  I live openly, authenticity, and lovingly. I speak out at forums large and small, public and private.  And at 2:11 Am on a Wednesday morning I weep for the lost ones, and recommit myself to the living.

I love you,
Julie

I am my own best friend and my own worst enemy.  :D
Full Time 18 June 2014
Esprit can be found at http://espritconf.com/
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