Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

The Wonder Of Transition


pennyjane

Recommended Posts

ok, i'd like to get this forum off. transition for me is the most wonderful thing i have ever done, or am doing. it began for me on 18 mar 2004. on 17 mar i presented male everywhere all the time. on 18 mar i put on a dress, disposed of all drab and have presented only enfemme since. it was reactionary. i had reached a point of such disgust with myself that continuing to be a living lie left me no longer a viable human being of any gender. i had no idea of what transition might bring. it wasn't a plan, wasn't even thought out the day before, it just happened out of sheer desperation.

i, at the advent of the computer age in my house about a year earlier, had met a fellow gender transgressor on line. she is a most wonderful woman living in northwest pennsylvania. she is now my best friend by the way. she and i spoke often, sharing our feelings, mostly of despair on my part, but full of hope and optismism on hers. at some point we exchanged phone numbers, a serious expression of trust. we talked on the phone then, as well as on the 'puter. we kept getting to know one another better. she led a double life. a very respected professional "man" who had a whole 'nuther female persona she played out down in the big city of pittsburgh. she was accomplished at presenting female, went out to the bars enfemme with some frequency. but her life was compartmentalized. it was very hard on her, living like that, and extracted no small price. i never dressed up and went out. i had one dress at home, i called "happydress". i occassionally wore her around the house, but she'd become passe, i didn't get excited over it, i just felt comfortable in her. but i admired my friend for her audacity, her courage to at least take some time to be herself, to let all that stress go. inevitably we decided to meet in person. it happened in january of 2004. annie and i drove out to meet her in pittsburgh. she was everything i expected and more. a smile that would light up the night, and a personality no one could not fall in love with from first notice. she was the same girl i'd gotten to know so well on line. she was real.

she took us out that first day, showing off her pittsburgh to us. she's very proud of that place. took us out to dinner and showed us all the sights. that evening, as planned, we dressed ourselves up enfemme and went out to a favorite haunt of hers. well, i'd bought a skirt, a t-shirt top and a pair of sandal heels for this occasion. i borrowed a wig from stacey, she put makeup on me, i had no clue of how to do that. i must have looked silly. <giggle> that skirt aged out at about 20, maybe six inches above my knee. i think i was wearing black pantyhose to hide my hairy legs, no accessories....but i felt like a million dollars. i could not believe how i felt. it was amazing. i did not feel like a man in a dress, i felt like a woman. i was thrilled, exhillerated.....high as a kite! we sat at the bar all night and talked, stacey, annie and me. it was life changing, i have never been the same since.

in the middle of march stacey, who lives with her mother up on a big farm, invited me and another friend up for the weekend. her mother was going to be off visiting family, so she was to have the whole thing to herself. i drove out on friday with my skirt and t in my bag. we were going to go down to pgh fri night and do that wonderful dress up thing again. then go back up to stacey's and just commiserate sat and sun and all go home. we did. i dressed on fri and was still enfemme sat night. stacey even loaned me a nighty to sleep in......and....painted my nails.

i woke up early sunday morning. i was crying. i had no idea of why, but i was...and i couldn't stop. i don't mean i was tearing up, i mean i was sobbing uncontrollably. and i couldn't stop. i was embarrassed and i was completely confused. i was afraid. i had no idea of what was happening to me. i worried that stacey would wake up and find me that way and worry, or worse, think she had done something to bring on this despair. when i couldn't quit, i quietly packed up and left. i just snuck out.

i started driving towards home, still sobbing, my eyes were red and swollen and the tears didn't dry up, they just kept streaming. just before i got to akron on that sunday morning, the rain started to fall, and fall hard. between the rain and my raging tear storm i has functioning in near zero visability, on an interstate in a metropolitan area i was unfamilar with, so...of course i hit the gas....and then i hit it harder....then i just floored it and let the chips fall. sobbing, wretching, let go, let it all go...it's yours God, i don't care what happens now. and then, somehow, i came out the other side of that huge metropolitan area. how had this happened? God didn't even want me? i pulled into a rest stop and let the despair just consume me. but it wouldn't end. the crying wouldn't stop long enough for me to think, to make some kind of decision...i was at that point a completely lost soul, not even up to death. i drove off and somehow just kept it on the road until i got home that evening. the house was empty, my wife had gone over to her sister's. i went in and just sat in the dark house. sat there and cried, and cried...until i cried myself to sleep, there on the couch.

when i woke the next morning i wasn't crying. that by now was an odd feeling in itself. annie had come home and slipped quietly off to bed leaving me there on the couch. i got up and went to my desk. i had to be a work at nine and it was six thirty, time to start trying to get myself together for that. i got me a coke and lit a cigarette. that's when i noticed it. my nails were still painted. now, annie nor i ever wore nail polish so there was no remover in our house. so i started thinking about how i was going to get it off before i went to work. and then it occurred to me how unfair that was, that i had to find a way to get the nail polish off or everyone would think i was nuts. was i? what did it really say about me that i felt i had to take that nail polish off in order to survive the day? i started to get angry with myself. just what was i trying to prove? and to whom?

annie woke up and came out into the front room. she sensed immediately that something was very wrong. i knew it too, but i didn't know what it was. annie got frightened. she'd never seen me like that. i'd never seen me like that either, i was confused and only getting more so trying to think of some way to ease annie's concern. i fumbled around...."i don't think i can take this nail polish off," i said. she was comforted. she volunteered to go down to the store and get some remover. "no," i said, "i mean, i don't think i can take this nail polish off, i think it has to stay or i will die." bye bye comfort, now she was really shook up, and so was i. i don't think i knew any more about what i was talking about then she did.

my annie. my little dependent annie. the one who counted on me for nearly everything. she played the doting wife and i played the strong husband. my sweet vulnerable little annie. "get dressed," she said, "i'm taking you to the hospital." whoaaaaaaa....a little sense back in there somewhere said this is not good. we began to negotiate. i'm not going to let myself be put in a nuthouse, though, clearly that's where i belonged, so we settled on finding a therapist who might see me on an emergency basis. my annie got on the phone, in five minutes she had convinced someone that i should be seen and i should be seen now. i got dressed alright. i put on my little skirt and t, felt better already. away we went to see some strange therapist.

along the way things were clearing up. crazy as it sounded, i was a girl and that was all there was to it. what had me so messed up was knowing that inside and yet not recongnizing it on the outside. when i accepted it, it started making perfect sense. i got it! all i had to do was quit faking and the truth would come out. got to this strange, off the wall therapist that annie had found quickly in the yellow pages, she was so nutty she agreed with me. you're not crazy she told me, you just need to stop faking it. and as if that wasn't enough, two identically crazy people in one room, annie piped in her agreement. three of us....what are the odds?

so, i called in to work, sick, you know. told them it would probably be awhile before i was well enough to come back. and we went shopping. me in that silly little skirt. yes, people laughed. i laughed with them, more then them...i got it! that was 18 mar 2004. i have never looked back. granted, that outrageous act of spontanaiety has not been repeated, but i am free. i made a plan, with the help of that nutty therapist, carried it through, and on 18 mar 2007 i had my grs. transition has been, and is, the most wonderful experience of my life, may it last forever. lotsa love and hope, pj

Link to comment
  • Root Admin

Wow!, PennyJane. What a totally awesome story. Thank you so much for sharing it with us.

Hugs,

MaryEllen :)

Link to comment
Guest shannon

PJ- I loved your story :-) It almost made me cry tears of happiness. I'd love to hear more of Annie's side of this story as well. I've loved talking with you these past couple of days, you give me alot of hope. Thanks for sharing this story.

-Shannon

Link to comment
Guest karen_h

ok, i'd like to get this forum off. transition for me is the most wonderful thing i have ever done, or am doing. it began for me on 18 mar 2004. on 17 mar i presented male everywhere all the time. on 18 mar i put on a dress, disposed of all drab and have presented only enfemme since. it was reactionary. i had reached a point of such disgust with myself that continuing to be a living lie left me no longer a viable human being of any gender. i had no idea of what transition might bring. it wasn't a plan, wasn't even thought out the day before, it just happened out of sheer desperation.

i, at the advent of the computer age in my house about a year earlier, had met a fellow gender transgressor on line. she is a most wonderful woman living in northwest pennsylvania. she is now my best friend by the way. she and i spoke often, sharing our feelings, mostly of despair on my part, but full of hope and optismism on hers. at some point we exchanged phone numbers, a serious expression of trust. we talked on the phone then, as well as on the 'puter. we kept getting to know one another better. she led a double life. a very respected professional "man" who had a whole 'nuther female persona she played out down in the big city of pittsburgh. she was accomplished at presenting female, went out to the bars enfemme with some frequency. but her life was compartmentalized. it was very hard on her, living like that, and extracted no small price. i never dressed up and went out. i had one dress at home, i called "happydress". i occassionally wore her around the house, but she'd become passe, i didn't get excited over it, i just felt comfortable in her. but i admired my friend for her audacity, her courage to at least take some time to be herself, to let all that stress go. inevitably we decided to meet in person. it happened in january of 2004. annie and i drove out to meet her in pittsburgh. she was everything i expected and more. a smile that would light up the night, and a personality no one could not fall in love with from first notice. she was the same girl i'd gotten to know so well on line. she was real.

she took us out that first day, showing off her pittsburgh to us. she's very proud of that place. took us out to dinner and showed us all the sights. that evening, as planned, we dressed ourselves up enfemme and went out to a favorite haunt of hers. well, i'd bought a skirt, a t-shirt top and a pair of sandal heels for this occasion. i borrowed a wig from stacey, she put makeup on me, i had no clue of how to do that. i must have looked silly. <giggle> that skirt aged out at about 20, maybe six inches above my knee. i think i was wearing black pantyhose to hide my hairy legs, no accessories....but i felt like a million dollars. i could not believe how i felt. it was amazing. i did not feel like a man in a dress, i felt like a woman. i was thrilled, exhillerated.....high as a kite! we sat at the bar all night and talked, stacey, annie and me. it was life changing, i have never been the same since.

in the middle of march stacey, who lives with her mother up on a big farm, invited me and another friend up for the weekend. her mother was going to be off visiting family, so she was to have the whole thing to herself. i drove out on friday with my skirt and t in my bag. we were going to go down to pgh fri night and do that wonderful dress up thing again. then go back up to stacey's and just commiserate sat and sun and all go home. we did. i dressed on fri and was still enfemme sat night. stacey even loaned me a nighty to sleep in......and....painted my nails.

i woke up early sunday morning. i was crying. i had no idea of why, but i was...and i couldn't stop. i don't mean i was tearing up, i mean i was sobbing uncontrollably. and i couldn't stop. i was embarrassed and i was completely confused. i was afraid. i had no idea of what was happening to me. i worried that stacey would wake up and find me that way and worry, or worse, think she had done something to bring on this despair. when i couldn't quit, i quietly packed up and left. i just snuck out.

i started driving towards home, still sobbing, my eyes were red and swollen and the tears didn't dry up, they just kept streaming. just before i got to akron on that sunday morning, the rain started to fall, and fall hard. between the rain and my raging tear storm i has functioning in near zero visability, on an interstate in a metropolitan area i was unfamilar with, so...of course i hit the gas....and then i hit it harder....then i just floored it and let the chips fall. sobbing, wretching, let go, let it all go...it's yours God, i don't care what happens now. and then, somehow, i came out the other side of that huge metropolitan area. how had this happened? God didn't even want me? i pulled into a rest stop and let the despair just consume me. but it wouldn't end. the crying wouldn't stop long enough for me to think, to make some kind of decision...i was at that point a completely lost soul, not even up to death. i drove off and somehow just kept it on the road until i got home that evening. the house was empty, my wife had gone over to her sister's. i went in and just sat in the dark house. sat there and cried, and cried...until i cried myself to sleep, there on the couch.

when i woke the next morning i wasn't crying. that by now was an odd feeling in itself. annie had come home and slipped quietly off to bed leaving me there on the couch. i got up and went to my desk. i had to be a work at nine and it was six thirty, time to start trying to get myself together for that. i got me a coke and lit a cigarette. that's when i noticed it. my nails were still painted. now, annie nor i ever wore nail polish so there was no remover in our house. so i started thinking about how i was going to get it off before i went to work. and then it occurred to me how unfair that was, that i had to find a way to get the nail polish off or everyone would think i was nuts. was i? what did it really say about me that i felt i had to take that nail polish off in order to survive the day? i started to get angry with myself. just what was i trying to prove? and to whom?

annie woke up and came out into the front room. she sensed immediately that something was very wrong. i knew it too, but i didn't know what it was. annie got frightened. she'd never seen me like that. i'd never seen me like that either, i was confused and only getting more so trying to think of some way to ease annie's concern. i fumbled around...."i don't think i can take this nail polish off," i said. she was comforted. she volunteered to go down to the store and get some remover. "no," i said, "i mean, i don't think i can take this nail polish off, i think it has to stay or i will die." bye bye comfort, now she was really shook up, and so was i. i don't think i knew any more about what i was talking about then she did.

my annie. my little dependent annie. the one who counted on me for nearly everything. she played the doting wife and i played the strong husband. my sweet vulnerable little annie. "get dressed," she said, "i'm taking you to the hospital." whoaaaaaaa....a little sense back in there somewhere said this is not good. we began to negotiate. i'm not going to let myself be put in a nuthouse, though, clearly that's where i belonged, so we settled on finding a therapist who might see me on an emergency basis. my annie got on the phone, in five minutes she had convinced someone that i should be seen and i should be seen now. i got dressed alright. i put on my little skirt and t, felt better already. away we went to see some strange therapist.

along the way things were clearing up. crazy as it sounded, i was a girl and that was all there was to it. what had me so messed up was knowing that inside and yet not recongnizing it on the outside. when i accepted it, it started making perfect sense. i got it! all i had to do was quit faking and the truth would come out. got to this strange, off the wall therapist that annie had found quickly in the yellow pages, she was so nutty she agreed with me. you're not crazy she told me, you just need to stop faking it. and as if that wasn't enough, two identically crazy people in one room, annie piped in her agreement. three of us....what are the odds?

so, i called in to work, sick, you know. told them it would probably be awhile before i was well enough to come back. and we went shopping. me in that silly little skirt. yes, people laughed. i laughed with them, more then them...i got it! that was 18 mar 2004. i have never looked back. granted, that outrageous act of spontanaiety has not been repeated, but i am free. i made a plan, with the help of that nutty therapist, carried it through, and on 18 mar 2007 i had my grs. transition has been, and is, the most wonderful experience of my life, may it last forever. lotsa love and hope, pj

Link to comment
  • 8 months later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   13 Members, 0 Anonymous, 235 Guests (See full list)

    • Abigail Genevieve
    • Cyndee
    • Ivy
    • Jet McCartney
    • MaryEllen
    • Lorelei
    • Mmindy
    • Carolyn Marie
    • April Marie
    • Hcgreyson
    • MAN8791
    • Dolly D.
    • Elizabeth3197
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.2k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,095
    • Most Online
      8,356

    MossycupMolly
    Newest Member
    MossycupMolly
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Angelo christoper
      Angelo christoper
      (38 years old)
    2. Joslynn
      Joslynn
      (61 years old)
    3. Kaltia_Atlas
      Kaltia_Atlas
    4. Rika_Lil
      Rika_Lil
      (40 years old)
    5. Summerluv
      Summerluv
      (19 years old)
  • Posts

    • Carolyn Marie
      Very, very true.  The number of murders committed by strangers in 2022 was only about 10 percent, per the FBI.   Carolyn Marie
    • Carolyn Marie
      Courageous film maker, and amazing subjects.  That is an incredible journey to make in so many ways.  Thanks for sharing the link, @Davie.   Carolyn Marie
    • Mmindy
      Good afternoon everyone,   I often wondered why @April Marie and @Willowgot up so early in spite of being retired. Now that I have my own puppy as a house pet I get it. We haven't had dogs since before my oldest granddaughter was born 22 years ago this September. I've always had working hunting dogs, and it was important they became acclimated to the current weather conditions. While the kennels had large outdoor runways, they also had pet passes into the somewhat temperature controlled garage. Yes, they were allowed in the house but only for short periods of time. Fast forward to present time, and I'm potty training a puppy as well as crate training. The first night Parker Von Schwinegruber, slept from 10:30 until 05:30. Last night we went to bed and 10:30 and he started making noise at 05:00. Since I don't want to test his ability to hold his business, we got up and went outside. He took care of business and we went back to sleep. This time he had a dental chew bar and I filled his water bowl. We cat napped until 08:00 and then got up for the day taking him immediately outside. He took care of business, and we played fetch and tug of war with his now favorite puffball. We came in and I put him back in the crate positioned so he could see me cook breakfast. Did he NO HE WENT TO SLEEP! We ate breakfast, did the dishes, and finished off the pot of coffee I brewed at 08:00. Once he woke up we stared at one another for about 20 minutes, because he seemed content to be in the crate. I got up and we worked on some obedience training as well as getting into and out of the crate with permission. We don't want him to crash the gate or any doors we will be going through.   Hugs,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋  
    • VickySGV
      I have not heard about it here in California, but then again we have events of various sorts going on very often, and not just in the June Pride Month.  We have Trans Fashion Week going on at a hotel complex over in West Los Angeles for the next three nights featuring shows by Trans fashion designers and modeled by Trans and NB people on the runways there.  I missed a chance for some free tickets and while I know and love many of the participants I do not want to pay for the tickets which will be in the $50 to $75 range, and which at those prices are nearly sold out.  (Not to mention $25 valet parking each night at the venue complex.).  There will be actual high end fashion buyers there though and it is an area where we are gaining some good footing.  I also admit that NONE of the fashions are going to be anything at all that would fit my basic personal style but look fine if not crazy on my much younger Trans siblings who will model them. (Ok everyone else keep on @Mirrabooka's topic.)
    • Ivy
      TBH, Never heard of it.
    • Mmindy
      Welcome to TransPulseForums @gizgizgizzie    I hope you find this place as helpful as I do. I’m also in a slow transition living in the androgynous world. I’m out to my grown children and my extended family with mixed support from them. Some have cut me out of their lives and others want me to be their flamboyant family member.    Best wishes, stay positive and motivated    Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Davie
      To escape Gaza is already an achievement. And then to be trans?’: the women defying national and gender boundaries. https://www.theguardian.com/film/article/2024/may/16/yolande-zauberman-documentary-the-belle-from-gaza-cannes-film-festival
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Accidents happen.  So do heat-of-the-moment murders, without premeditation or trans-related hate.  It will take a trial to really figure it out.     One thing we can see from this is that it is people in our circles of acquaintances, friends, and partners who are the ones who usually hurt us.  Not someone random. We have to be careful who we trust.
    • ClaireBloom
      You look so cute in that pic Ashley!  
    • Birdie
      A bit of bra humour...
    • Mirrabooka
      Friday May 17th is IDAHOBIT (International Day Against HOmophobia, BIphobia and Transphobia).   Do you acknowledge or celebrate it? Do you do anything special for it, like taking part in any organized events or activities?   I'm not an activist and I prefer to fly under the radar, but I am slowly becoming aware of important dates. I have been aware of the date of IDAHOBIT for a few weeks now, but other important 'rainbow' dates have not been etched into my brain yet.    I will wear my favorite pride t-shirt as a token acknowledgement of the day, but it probably won't be seen; cool weather here will mean that it will be hidden under a sweater.    
    • Mirrabooka
    • Mirrabooka
      Happiness for me comes from being cognizant of the things that make me feel good.   Sunshine.   Pandering to my inner woman.   Knowing that some people in my life really 'know' me.   Vacations, and Eggs Benedict at an alfresco cafe.   My wife and I being telepathic.   Grandchildren.   Music.   Wine!    
    • Ivy
      True.  Every trans death is not a hate crime. There is so much hate expressed by some people, that we kinda get to expect it.
    • KymmieL
      happiness to me is being ME. At all times, and it has yet to happen.
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...