It all started about 37 years ago. I was born male and I was content. Sure, I was a bit disconnected, like I was just along for the ride and not really part of my own life. “That’s just how life is,” I thought. “Everybody feels this way, right? So why question it?” I certainly couldn’t talk to my verbally and physically abusive, mostly-absent father about it.
I did well enough in school, made mostly male friends, never got bullied, and I was content. Sure, I wanted desperately to know what being female would be like, and jumped at every opportunity to pretend just a bit. “But that’s normal, right? Who wouldn’t want to be a different gender, at least for a day?”
In my 20s, I met a wonderful woman, we got married, and about 4 years ago, we had a baby. The moment I found out we were having a girl, my heart soared and my mind raced, thinking of all the fun girl stuff I’d finally be able to do using my future daughter as an excuse. “I just wanna be a good, present dad,” I thought. “Of course I’ll get have to do girl stuff with her!”
Earlier this year, I had a major epiphany and came out as nonbinary (take a look at my post history for that whole story).
I’ve been trying to figure myself out since then. I defaulted to nonbinary because I’m a dad and don’t want to confuse my young daughter, and it meant I could feel comfortable finally embracing my femininity, if only a little. I started wearing skirts and dresses to work, even out into the world at large, and it felt wonderful. I kept my shaved head and big beard, though, because those were my armor.
But I’m a bit impulsive, and a few days ago, I shaved my beard and bought a beautiful, long, colorful wig. I wore it to work earlier this week, and the utter euphoria of my wonderful coworkers referring to me as she/her sent me places I’d never been emotionally. I’d never felt so seen.
But I was still Dad at home, so I couldn’t allow myself to consider a full transition.
Being endlessly curious, and definitely not because I wanted to fully transition, I researched gender dysphoria and HRT, and the impacts they can have on the mind. When I got to the section about DPDR - depersonalization and derealization - I was floored. The description reflected exactly how I’ve felt my whole life up until I started embracing my femininity. “But that’s normal, isn’t it? … Everyone doesn’t feel this way?”
I had a long talk with my partner yesterday, and she helped me to feel comfortable with the idea of being a trans woman. She assured me that our daughter would adjust and would still love me regardless - that I could still be her dad, even if I wasn’t a man.
We went out to a restaurant and did some shopping yesterday, myself in my full feminine attire, wig and all. She wanted to show me off, and I wanted to let her.
I may have a masculine jaw, a pesky beard shadow, and a bit too deep of a voice, but for that brief time that we were out, I was unabashedly a woman. I’d never felt so alive, so present - I was no longer a passenger in my own life.
I was a content, binary male. Then I was nonbinary. Now I’m making my way back to the binary, but this time as a woman.
The next step is scheduling a visit with a gender counselor to get a prescription to start myself on HRT, and I couldn’t be more excited.
All the doubt I had about myself is gone, replaced with conviction. I know, finally, what I am. I’m a woman. My body just didn’t get the memo.
Edited for typo correction.
Just wanted to chime in that all of these are absolutely within your reach. Your jaw will absolutely be obliterated after a year+ of HRT. Learning color correction with makeup can make a beard shadow vanish, though laser/electrolysis is a permanent solution that your insurance (if you have it) may even cover. Lastly, I promise that if you don’t like how deep your voice is, you can absolutely modify it through training to sound exactly the way you would like it to.