Thanks, Ashley. You are a great friend and mentor.

When I made the decision on November 12, 2018, to accept who I am and to stop being hemmed in by my concern for what people think I shoud be, I opened a door that has been shut for 54.5 years. There were cloudy skies, lightening in the distance, but I knew sunshine was somewhere over the horizon.
I made mistakes. I pushed hard at the start and there was no real gradual roll out of being a woman. When a mean gradual, I mean months or years.
I told my wife in a public restaurant. The strategy was she couldn't freak out in public and I was genuinely scared she would do exactly that. I secretly wore panties and make up while away and while at my in-laws on a trip. Both of these instances may have been misguided and they certainly massively upset my wife. Could I have approached this better ... yep, I could have.
Now, my wife and I had a broken marriage anyways (I recently learned she had an affair with my former boss, off and on for years, and both of them deceived and lied to me about it). Coming out was a "reason" to separate and work towards a divorce.
One other thing that is important about me. I had a major depressive episode 13 years ago and have worked diligently to build a tool box of skills to manage my mental health. This may be different than many others who come out and are trying to build that tool box at the same time. I had the skills and confidence built to make the decision to transition and move ar a pace that is comfortable for me.
So, there are consequences to our decisions.
My contribution is this ... you have to love yourself before you can love others and, more importantly, so others can love you. Fear is a huge barrier to overcome. Fear about what others will think about you. Fear you will lose friends, family, colleagues. Fear you will be harrassed, discriminated against, and bullied. Fear you may be physically or sexually assaulted. Fear you will be marginalized. Fear you may lose your job and benefits.
Some of this may come true, but hopefully not.
Passing is not important. Love and live authentically as you. People will notice and respond positively.
And the final lesson .. when you write a long reply, make sure you know which thread you are responding to.
I know I wondered off topic.
So, passing is not really important if you love yourself first. Some of us will not pass as cis-women, or what society tells us and we internalize what cis-women look like. Love and courage. Embrace these instead.
Hugs and luv Zoe xoxoxo
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