Hi mickie. Lots of what Kate and others have had to say is very good advice. We all do this in a variety of ways. I would have been better off if I had followed the plan Kate used, but I had transitioned most of the way, and was hiding at work as Mike. I couldn't stand it anymore, and Marcy and I both agreed that it was time, and that I should not wait any longer. Only one of my friends at work knew about me, and begged me to go slowly, start 'femming out' slowly.
That's not my style, and as I said, I had already been through most of my transition. By then, everyone was gossiping and speculating about me. So, I went into this thinking that it would be no big surprise to anyone. I cannot say strongly enough, that no one knew, and I was a complete surprise to everyone.
I went to my HR manager the next day, and told her about me. She was super fine about it, and wanted to know how I wanted to handle it. She said she was willing to do anything for me from make a plan, to "here's your new name tag, Bev".
I chose the "here's your new name tag Bev" route, and went out that moment on the sales floor as Bev, in slacks, blouse, flats, earrings, necklace, light makeup and lipstick. I figured it wouldn't be so very different, as they already knew I was wearing foundation and powder. I could not have been more wrong. Bev was thrust upon 15 or so other salespeople as something they would just have to deal with.
This is the "learn to fly on the way down" method, and I don't recommend it to anyone. I went from having 15 or so friends and a best friend, to being pretty much left alone. A few other newer people developed a friendship with me, over time, and many other people in the company who I didn't work with came by, and gave me their support.
I put myself in the position of being suddenly Beverly, no turning back. I had to do my voice training on the job, on my way to the job, on my way home from the job. I lived, ate, drank, and slept Kathy Perez voice feminization CD's, and it was tough.
I guess what got me through all this is a tough psychic hide, a sure sense of 'true self', and more than anything else, a loving wife-now-partner who supported me in every way she knew how.
All this started in March of 2007, and life for us now is really pretty wonderful, but it was the most difficult thing either of us had ever had to do. With love, and the grace of God, we came out the other side of this intact, still making a living the hard way, and happy in a complete loving relationship. We beat incredible odds.
In the final analysis Mickie, you'll end up doing this your own way, and I wish you all the very, very best
Bev