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What it is like to live authentically full time.

Started by JulieBlair, November 25, 2014, 10:29:58 AM

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JulieBlair

I've been asked more than once what living full time as a woman felt like.  This morning at 3:00 AM, these were my thoughts:

Three years ago January I began to take the early and tiny steps to find myself. The notion of living authentically wasn't my dream, escaping the darkness was. Eight months later I began low dose HRT, and the dawn could be glimpsed if I looked carefully, but even that was too much for my bride. In fairness I did not discuss or involve her in what I was doing. I was afraid, and I was wrong. This choice, she declared, would not stand!

It was not a choice to change and to seek myself. The only choice was to live or to die.

Within months I was in transition to woman. Still she took my clothing, destroyed my medications, called me names, made me cry. Still I continued, without much hope, but because I could feel myself becoming. Bit by bit, day by day I changed and became something, someone new.

I saw myself in the mirror, I shaved my beard, a woman - child looked back at me. She did not leave me, she gave me acceptance and solace. In the spring, I quietly signed up for a trans conference. It was the end of my marriage.

My name was now Julie Anne Blair, my driver's license had the cherished gender designation.  I had contacted human resources in Washington DC and gotten nowhere.  It was discouraging. That trans people were recognized under the civil rights laws of the United States was one thing, finding the protocols be live and work within those systems authentically, was quite another.  An angel appeared from the office of equal opportunity.  She passed me to a brilliant lawyer who guided the process of becoming myself at a Federal Science Center, and together we wrote the process for transgender people to follow in federal service. A date was selected, the process was completed, miraculously I was embraced.  Today there is no daylight between who I am and how I live.

So how does it feel?  It's not all rainbows and unicorns, it is still life. I have moved from a five bedroom four bath home on acreage, to a three bedroom two bath home in the city, to an aluminum trailer parked in front of the house where I once lived.  I am often alone, and sometimes lonely.  My beloved library is mostly not available to me, but I keep a volume or two nearby.  But I have people in my life who love me and who I love.  I have shed the persona and embraced the person.  I have learned much and changed more.  Twenty eight months of HRT has given me a new and more comely shape. Sixteen months of electrolysis has mostly cleared my face of unwanted fur.  I usually feel pretty.  I usually feel whole.

I'm not fond of holidays, not because I have nowhere to go, but because I am still learning how to act.  Do I bring flowers to my hosts?  Do I allow myself to be embraced?  Do I tell my story one more time?  I think I do, not because it is mandatory, but because it is not.  I will be accepted regardless of my presentation by those who want to understand, and I will not be accepted regardless of my presentation by those who do not.

My larger issue is accepting that the years and decades I spent in denial were not squandered needlessly.  Some were wasted - The two decades of drug and alcohol abuse did nothing except keep me from my destiny.  That I waited until the psychic pain was debilitating did nothing to speed my arrival to self.  But in a larger sense it took all that to beat me into submission and to require that I begin to seek, to become a pilgrim on the road to who I am.

"Someday we'll find it,
The rainbow connection,
The lovers, the dreamers and me"

Thank you Kermit,
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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LizMarie

Parts of what you wrote resonates with me.

QuoteMy larger issue is accepting that the years and decades I spent in denial were not squandered needlessly.  Some were wasted - The two decades of drug and alcohol abuse did nothing except keep me from my destiny.  That I waited until the psychic pain was debilitating did nothing to speed my arrival to self.  But in a larger sense it took all that to beat me into submission and to require that I begin to seek, to become a pilgrim on the road to who I am.

Wise words.
The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away.



~ Cara Elizabeth
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arimoose

Awesome Julie.

Sent from my KFSOWI using Tapatalk

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Beverly

My perspective.....

I have been living full time for some years now. The administrative side of it, changing name, gender marker and so forth, was very simple and straightforward because of where I live. Compared to the USA, the systems in the UK are incredibly simple and I changed almost all my important details in one afternoon. My GRS is in the first half of 2015.

I found the lead up to transition very frightening and post-transition I wonder what I feared. The fear of fear was what held me back. The belief that no doctor would believe me, that no one would help me and that I would never get hormones or surgery held me back, but eventually the pressure to be me became too much and I had no choices left. So I became me, pre-HRT, pre-everything. To my utter amazement doctors, endos, shrink, surgeons and people in general have all been incredibly accepting. People tell me it is because I am authentic and genuine. For the first time in my life I am really me and it shows.

So how does it feel?

How does normal feel? It might be easier to say what abnormal was like ..... previous to transition I could not sleep at night because my mind would never stop going round and round like a washing machine or tumble dryer. It would think about everything no matter how trivial and how I should have dealt with it or what I would have said if only I was a girl / woman. Eventually I would sleep, utterly exhausted and only for 3 or 4 hours. I knew, so deep in my bones I could feel it, that I would die a woman. I knew what I should have looked like and in my mirror I never saw me, just my jailer. I never smiled much. I was full of bluster and anger and violence.

Now I am happy. Life is still life. I still have to go to work, deal with customers, do food shopping, argue with car mechanics. None of the everyday tasks of life have changed. Life is still life. Transition is very odd because so little changes and yet everything changes.

Now, nothing stops me. I never think about "should I do this?"  or "am I allowed to do that?". I just do what any other woman does. I am not really stealth, but I certainly do not voluntarily disclose my past. If I am asked directly then I admit it and then dismiss it as unimportant. It is there and there is not much I can do about it, but it is not relevant either. Not any more. I am past all that.

As for my new body shape, I love it and I ignore it. My breasts are my breasts - they just "are". I feels right that they are there. My legs have changed and I have cellulite on my thighs. That too is right. All the hassle of feminine upkeep is OK and I happily wash and style my hair each day, select my clothing and go off merrily to work.

I am just me. At last.
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JulieBlair

Quote from: ntppxx on November 25, 2014, 10:57:50 AM
My perspective.....

I have been living full time for some years now. The administrative side of it, changing name, gender marker and so forth, was very simple and straightforward because of where I live. Compared to the USA, the systems in the UK are incredibly simple and I changed almost all my important details in one afternoon. My GRS is in the first half of 2015.

I found the lead up to transition very frightening and post-transition I wonder what I feared. The fear of fear was what held me back. The belief that no doctor would believe me, that no one would help me and that I would never get hormones or surgery held me back, but eventually the pressure to be me became too much and I had no choices left. So I became me, pre-HRT, pre-everything. To my utter amazement doctors, endos, shrink, surgeons and people in general have all been incredibly accepting. People tell me it is because I am authentic and genuine. For the first time in my life I am really me and it shows.

So how does it feel?

How does normal feel? It might be easier to say what abnormal was like ..... previous to transition I could not sleep at night because my mind would never stop going round and round like a washing machine or tumble dryer. It would think about everything no matter how trivial and how I should have dealt with it or what I would have said if only I was a girl / woman. Eventually I would sleep, utterly exhausted and only for 3 or 4 hours. I knew, so deep in my bones I could feel it, that I would die a woman. I knew what I should have looked like and in my mirror I never saw me, just my jailer. I never smiled much. I was full of bluster and anger and violence.

Now I am happy. Life is still life. I still have to go to work, deal with customers, do food shopping, argue with car mechanics. None of the everyday tasks of life have changed. Life is still life. Transition is very odd because so little changes and yet everything changes.

Now, nothing stops me. I never think about "should I do this?"  or "am I allowed to do that?". I just do what any other woman does. I am not really stealth, but I certainly do not voluntarily disclose my past. If I am asked directly then I admit it and then dismiss it as unimportant. It is there and there is not much I can do about it, but it is not relevant either. Not any more. I am past all that.

As for my new body shape, I love it and I ignore it. My breasts are my breasts - they just "are". I feels right that they are there. My legs have changed and I have cellulite on my thighs. That too is right. All the hassle of feminine upkeep is OK and I happily wash and style my hair each day, select my clothing and go off merrily to work.

I am just me. At last.

To live, love, and play in the moment, and have it be normal is the dream.  Good luck with surgery next year.  In the states insurance is slow to come around, and I will have to wait a bit longer for coverage.  But it will happen too.  That I can even envision living as an intact and loving woman/person.  Makes my heart soar.

Peace,
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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Beverly

Thanks Julie. I hope you do not have to wait too long for your dream to come true....
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traci_k

Julie, I am glad to see you posting. Your words of wisdom give continuing hope to this 59 year old person and body that has longed to be female from childhood. Wonderful post.

Hugs and Love,
Traci Melissa Knight
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ImagineKate

Julie, thanks for giving us hope. Above all you show strength, resilience and grace.
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m1anderson

Julie, this piece (your thoughts, brutally honest) is one of a number of reasons you are mutually accepted on this site as an invaluable contributor. Kudos, and thanks forevermore!!

We will always feel for you, babe.
Audaces Fortuna Luvat ... Fortune Favors the Bold  ;D
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JulieBlair

Quote from: m1anderson on November 25, 2014, 01:14:03 PM
Julie, this piece (your thoughts, brutally honest) is one of a number of reasons you are mutually accepted on this site as an invaluable contributor. Kudos, and thanks forevermore!!

We will always feel for you, babe.

Thanks, I am one of the fortunate ones.  Dysphoria and addiction didn't kill me and with acceptance and courage the tunnel opens to infinite goodness and light.  Many others have not been so fortunate and struggle to climb out of the abyss.  That there are people here willing to catch them and listen, to believe them and act is an absolute good.

Peace,
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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