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!

Learning to Hide


Jamey-Heather

Recommended Posts

I posted this in MtF, but I thought it might be helpful to some, especially younger folks. Essentially, my coming out journey started a quarter century ago, and I only really came out just before Thanksgiving USA:

 

I have no memories of not sneaking into my female relatives rooms and trying on their clothes (which of course never fit). I also have no memories of not knowing to hide this.

But at around the age of eight, a tv show called The Bionic Woman came out.

Up to and including that show, I loved Isis, Wonder Woman, and any and all representations of strong women.

But the bionic woman's name was Jamie, which happens to almost be my name. 

Now, none of the kids made fun of girls for being girls, but I was made fun of for "being a girl". I remember being nearly in tears and telling them "but I'm not a girl". Because, much to my disappointment, I wasn't (physically). But the message I heard was "it's okay to be a girl if you were born (afab) a girl; it is not okay to be a girl if you were amab". And boy howdy did I internalize that. At eight.

So I started to go by James (the name on my birth certificate) for a few years. That didn't feel right, so I switched to the hypermasculine Jim. No one I knew called me Jim. They always softened it by calling me Jimbo.

However, in the meantime, I continued to get messages that being amab but knowing you were female was not okay. Too many to list. I'm sure you all had similar experiences....

At 25, I started going by Jamey again. Although all my stuff was buried deep, this was really the start of my coming out journey.

Love and hugs ❤❤❤

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

A few months ago I was up at 3:00am so I flipped through the channels and found Bionic Woman. Later I ordered it on DVD. Since it only lasted three seasons, I went through the series quickly.

 

Link to comment
4 hours ago, Dana Michelle said:

A few months ago I was up at 3:00am so I flipped through the channels and found Bionic Woman. Later I ordered it on DVD. Since it only lasted three seasons, I went through the series quickly.

 

Was it any good? I remember loving at as a little girl, but it’s been a few weeks since those days 🥰

Link to comment
4 hours ago, Amber76 said:

Good for you! I know it's so hard and scary. You're just as heroic as The bionic woman. 🤗🤗🤗

Thank you 💗

Link to comment

I just remembered how I used to spin around on my driveway, hoping i’d transform into my own version of Wonder Woman. The more I open up about my authentic self, the more these memories trickle in….

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

First, it's wonderful you have been able to find the path forward as you've been coping with everything tied to your identity and who you are.  It sounds like it was a long, arduous journey.  Obviously my experiences wouldn't be exactly like yours, but what you said about thinking you had to be afab to be a girl resonates quite significantly with me.  I can't recall my specific thoughts on gender, identity, or where I felt it was right for me to be quite as early as eight.  I may have started that early, I just can't say for certain.  But I started keeping a journal when I was eleven.  I kept several off and on up into my late teens or early twenties.  In that first journal though, I spelled out quite bluntly in my own handwriting and words, that I wanted to be a girl.  The desire never changed or went away.  I got sucked into the same logic you mentioned @Jamey.  I had to be afab to be a girl and no matter what I did or how I felt, I would never be what I felt I was.  It's why I bought into the internal lie to myself about who I was and what I really felt.  Everything in my enviornment was pushing that concept.  I was amab, there was only one way for me to develop, only certain ways I could act, only certain things I could wear, and the list of activities I was supposed to participate in, or enjoy, all had rules on how I was "supposed" to do it as a boy/man.

 

I can sympathize with you over the the negative interactions with the other children too.  I've always been on the smaller end of the spectrum and was never much interested in many of the things the boys did.  I didn't have the physical capacity for it and wasn't really interested in being laughed at for sucking at things because I was smaller, weaker, and less aggressive than the peers I was "supposed" to be playing with.  I don't recall ever really breaking down over it, but I got those comments about "being a girl," or whatever variation of the statement they used.  Being rather sensitive and emotional didn't help with any masculine presence either.

 

The coping mechanism I found was one only made possible as computers, the internet, and venues like chat rooms were becoming more ubiquitous.  I don't know if you ever struggled or thought about your situation in any way similar to this, but, for me, I took every opportunity I could to take the female options, characters, and personas in anything I played or did when it was possible to choose anything for myself.  If I could choose, or use, a female character in a game for example.  In my mind it was *something* I could do to bring me closer to what I wanted to be and felt more comfortable with.  Even if it was a laughably infinitesimal step, it was still better than nothing.  Back before catfishing was such a major problem, I used to skirt around admitting my birth assigned sex.  If I never said I was "male" and/or never denied being "female," the people talking to me would make their own assumptions about me.  I felt that was a more accurate representation of who I really was if, for no other reason, the assumptions people were making about me came from their personal feelings about the way I interacted and presented myself in the absence of making any specific assertion about my assigned sex.  Once people got past the awkwardness of talking to me when they weren't able to categorize me in their own worldview, they decided where I fit and then interacted with me on that basis.

 

Unfortunately, the name I was working with wasn't as flexible in lending itself to anything besides a masculine identity.  There was no leeway or ambiguity it could afford.  Lying about my name was not the best choice I could have made.  I won't argue that.  At the time though, I was using what was available to me to get as close to feeling like the girl I wished I was.  But going forward from there, I thought I was doing all I could.  I believed my little forays into online forums and chat rooms and picking females to represent me in the games I played was the extent of anything I'd ever be able to do.  Which wasn't healthy.  Feeling like I was "supposed" to be something left me not bringing up or addressing everything I was feeling about my identity and place in the world.  Fortunately widespread understanding and support has blossomed over the years and the available resources for the things I felt gained more traction.  So here we are.  Yeah I wish I could have felt and believed the things I do now back then.  But I finally was able to realize what I was fighting against and find people able and willing to help me get to where I am.  How that went over with other people in my life...that's a different story and one still very much in progress.

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

I'm happy you're sharing your story with us, Jamey, and it's wonderful that you're blossoming into whom you've always known yourself to be! 💜

Link to comment
43 minutes ago, Katie M said:

I'm happy you're sharing your story with us, Jamey, and it's wonderful that you're blossoming into whom you've always known yourself to be! 💜

❤️💖💓💗💝

Link to comment

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   1 Member, 0 Anonymous, 110 Guests (See full list)

    • MaybeRob
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.2k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,051
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Luna29
    Newest Member
    Luna29
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. ciara
      ciara
    2. Jamieleann
      Jamieleann
      (62 years old)
    3. Lukey19252
      Lukey19252
      (22 years old)
    4. Maye
      Maye
      (66 years old)
    5. Spirefreedom
      Spirefreedom
      (21 years old)
  • Posts

    • MaybeRob
      In my case, at almost 9 months, most changes have been very subtle. I was 60 when I started, and overweight. Also, I am not very observant when it comes to changes. In the last 3 months I have been on T blockers and breast growth have definitely started having suffered irregular "ouchies", but at the same time I have been slowly losing fat, so Bust measurements have not changed. What has changed in the density, I can feel a difference. Face wise the skin feels softer, and my lashes seem to be more visible. Head hair regrowth is a maybe- maybe not situation.  I do have to select men's clothing carefully to camouflage the change in breast shape. I guess I'm still at the not passable as a female stage especially with no makeup. I'm also over 6 foot and well over 100kgs which I guess is problematic to start with!   Hope this helps somewhat   Kate .
    • EasyE
      I started feminizing HRT about 6-7 weeks ago. I began with what I called the beginner's patch. I immediately found myself wanting to level up to the next dose and did that this week (yay!). So far, I am enjoying the ride.   I've read everything I can find on this topic. For the HRT vets on here, what is reasonable to expect in terms of physical changes for someone starting in their 50s? I know "your mileage may vary." I guess I am curious if I stay on my current trajectory for six months, a year, multiple years, how pronounced will the physical changes be? Will I reach a point where it is totally obvious or will I land in a "middle zone" somewhere in which I could pass either way?   Thanks! Like I said I am enjoying the ride so far and always curious to know others' experiences. Not sure anyone else in my life will be excited about these moves I am making, but I have been over that in many places on here already so need to rehash... Love and blessings to all!   Easy
    • April Marie
      Sending prayers and love!
    • Birdie
      Being admitted into the hospital after a long ER visit. I started passing lots of blood and they are keeping me for observation.    Nurse came in to see about a condom catheter, that of course doesn't work on me. 🤣   She said, "I guess we will use incontinence supplies on you."  
    • Ivy
      Yeah.  I think this is what it is about.  Since they are not transgender, nobody else could possibly be either.  I'm not sure that a cisgender person can understand being transgender.  But that hardly means that a transgender person's experience is not real - just because it is not theirs. Why is a transgendered person's experience not valid, while a cisgendered person's is?  Why should it be the cisgendered person that decides? Nobody is forcing a cis person to transition.  What I do for myself is my own business.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      @maebe   It sounds exciting.  I hope all goes well.   Abby
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Decided to head for Lowes after work early and bought a new stove.Was in stock and put it back of my truck.Luckily a neighbor of mine whom does appliance repair did come to remove the connection and convert the stove to natural gas in the new one.Was set up for propane.Happy with it and the scrap metal guy came to pick up my old one.He was happy to get it,said he needed one more to make it a load in his trailer full of junk appliances
    • Maddee
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I've been thinking it is a matter of belief.  They simply do not believe someone can validly be transgender and should not be allowed to practice their beliefs, but should be forced to practice their belief, that is, that there is no such thing as transgender and it is all mental illness/sin/hormonal imbalance. 
    • KatieSC
      I am really kind of sick of everybody who is not transgender deciding on what we need and do not need in the way of procedures. They act like all of this is play acting, and we can just apply cosmetics to our entire body. It might be refreshing if someone asked us directly what services we need in order to transition. I could say more as I am frustrated, but I do not want to violate the TOS.
    • Emily Chen
      Thanks a lot for letting me know! Unfortunately, I'm not available during this time period. Have a great meeting!
    • missyjo
      April good it looks like you've been successful with it. I'm glad  sorry bitchy mood not related to you or here be well dear
    • Ivy
      I discovered her "Whipping Girl" when my egg first cracked.  It helped me understand some things.
    • Ashley0616
    • April Marie
      That is certainly exciting news!!! I hope the move goes smoothly and you find an awesome job!!!
  • 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...