Last night I went to our local Gender-Free contra dance, because I want to dance as a woman and no longer feel comfortable dancing the man's role, but don't yet feel comfortable enough with asking people to treat me as a woman to go to my regular dances. (It was also my first attempt at dancing since I slipped on the ice in January and sprained my ankle and tore some muscles and such.) The last time I went, a few months ago, I found that I really enjoyed letting my partner lead me in the swings and courtesy turns and such and simply concentrating on being responsive and light enough on my feet to be easy to lead. I also liked having other people ask me to dance, rather than having to always be the one to put myself forward.
Anyway, to make a short story long, at the beginning of the evening I felt okay. I had some really nice partners who danced well, and while the dancing quality of the other people in the contra set varied, there were plenty who knew how to "give weight" so you feel more like you're floating through the figures instead of playing bumper cars. But as the evening wore on, I started feeling more disconnected from the other people there, until an hour and a half later, I started feeling like, "who am I kidding? They're being polite by calling me <new name>, but all I look like and all I feel like is a stupid ugly man in a dress." If I were capable of crying, I would have been crying by the end of that dance. When it was over and people started lining up for the next one, I gratefully put on my street shoes, said my goodbyes to the few people I knew who weren't in the next dance, and set out for the 2 hour trip home.
This is leaving me feeling pretty discouraged about my transition. I still know that all other courses my life could take are stale dead ends and this is pretty much where I have to go, but at least at the moment, the joy is gone. Inside of myself, when I'm alone and can forget anyone else exists, I'm just me, neither male nor female, but when I go out into the world, I have to decide who I'm going to be -- what role I'm going to play. The male role has proven to be a bankrupt dead end for me (and never fit me anyway), but to perform the female role, I have to believe in what I'm doing. I have to own it. If I go through this process believing at some level I'm just a fraud, it's not going to go well.