The Doorbell.
My wife had agreed that I could be me any time I was at home, but if anyone ever saw me, she would leave me. I was very careful to ensure the curtains to all the windows visible to people outside were fully drawn, leaving the curtains facing my backyard and side yard open. I had turned my phone to silent and made sure there was no other sounds like tv or music.
That ding dong sound froze me, then a knock at the front door sent me to hide in case there was a sliver of vision through my curtains. My marriage was on the line, embarrassment was a significant second. He rang the bell again, and I could hear him talking to another man, then they appeared to leave.
I felt a trickle of sweat running down my spine as relief washed over me, then I heard my side gate open. I could feel my chest throbbing, and remembered the family room sliding door was unlocked. I rushed quietly to lock it before they tried it, wondering if they were thieves, and knowing that it was possible to see me from the glass door and another window. I locked the door and fell quietly to the floor, considering running to my bedroom to get changed, but realising the bright red nail polish would take too long to remove. I was now starting to panic, thinking my marriage, which I would give my life for, could be over.
They walked past my sliding door to my backyard, and I was hiding behind a couch, shaking. I heard the guy on the phone telling someone this was a gas hot water service, not electric, so they wouldn't be able to replace it. There was some back and fourth on the phone before they realised they were at the wrong address! I froze until I heard them close my gate, then I rushed to the front window to see their truck pull away.
I collapsed, and bawled for 5 minutes. As I wiped my face, I realised that I was sweating over my whole body. It took another 20 minutes to compose myself, and I decided to have a shower. I dressed back in my male clothes and took off my nail polish, it was the first time I had ever felt better in male clothes. I was quiet for the rest of the afternoon, and my wife said she was surprised to find her husband when she got home.
I relived that experience a couple of times, and it made me nauseous, and I considered trying to avoid being me any more. My wife commented that I was very quiet, and I hugged her, knowing I had thought I had lost her. That night I cried softly into my pillow.
Any time that doorbell sounded from then on, I felt sick. A few months later I disabled it.
Hugs,
Allie