Quote from: Kadri on August 26, 2012, 06:03:37 PM
I wish had the privilege of having people not know. I might never have that, in which case I may as well stay put here where most people don't care.
Ideally I'd have passability over acceptance (for myself at least) any day.
I agree!
I live in Portland, Oregon which is known to be unusually tolerant of variation in people's appearance, presentation, lifestyle. I went full time very early in my transition because the opportunity presented itself, and because I really couldn't stand much longer presenting even as a very feminine, androgynous male. I didn't know if I would pass or how consistently, I just knew that I would be happier being myself to the world regardless of whether they could tell I was a woman born with a male body, or not.
Over time I have gone from expecting the worst and celebrating every moment when someone correctly gendered me, one good experience lifting me up for days, to expecting the best and dealing with sadness and discouragement whenever someone gives evidence that they consider me male or ambiguous, one bad experience bringing me down for hours or days. It is amazing how expectations can affect our happiness and how quickly we adjust to new circumstances.
Friday morning I got a call at 3 am from my stepdaughter, from the county jail. Long story, but she needed an adult to sign her out under their cognizance, taking responsibility for her obeying the terms of her release and showing up for court in a week. My wife lost her ID, so it landed on my shoulders to fetch her. Unfortunately it will be another week before my legal name and my ID will be female. So I went in drag. After three hours of dealing with the jail personnel, I was walking with my (very tomboyish) step-daughter and turned to her and said "this is the first and only time I have dressed like a man in four months, for anyone. you know how much I love you, right?" She stopped her still partly intoxicated ranting to say "Yes. Thank you. I should have called you first." At the jail, and later at the store, I was able to pass, barely, as a very feminine gay man. I was trying to look like my male self, but in a dozen ways I was still blaringly female and I take comfort in that.
It was a huge relief when I got back home and could change for work, back to my authentic self. As I put on my wig, makeup, and feminine clothing, I could feel myself taking off a very uncomfortable disguise. Phew.