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!

It Had to Be Tails


AllisonGenesis

Recommended Posts

Hi, my name is Allison. I'm 24 years old, a woman, and it feels good to be able to say that with confidence. This is a story that's been in my head for the longest time but nobody else has ever seen, and I feel it's worthwhile saying it now - this is the story of my life that I omit from stories of my life.

I was born in 1991. The doctor flipped a coin, it landed on tails, and I ended up with a penis and a male name. That's where my story, and my life, begins.

My first tastes of stepping in a girl's shoes came from childhood. A lot of my friends were female as a kid, and already began entertaining the ideas in my mind that I was born into the wrong body.

A was the first. She was my childhood girlfriend. Through innocent playing, it was through each other that we discovered our bodies were different. We would occasionally clothes swap, and were already wishing we were each other's genders - something which I believe meant nothing serious to each other (she still identifies as female). But I feel it planted the first idea that maybe I was a female trapped inside a male body.

Me and J weren't big friends, the only notable thing from her is that she had two kiddy nurse costumes, which we would don and play nurses.

E remains to this day one of my best friends. She will be one of the first I come out to, if and when I decide the time is right. But even back then, we were great friends. Perhaps three nights a week her father would bring her over in their distinctive vehicle - I'd hear it pull up outside the door and get all excited about it.

At this point in time I was maybe 8-11 years old. We were both big Pokémon fans at the time (admittedly, I still am). We also liked Cardcaptors, some weird short-lived animé thing. We would always play pretend. And I would always be a female - Sabrina was my favourite Pokémon character, and I daydreamt of being in the Pokémon, as Sabrina, running her psychic gym, or I'd be Sakura from Cardcaptors while E was... well, the girl with black hair, I forget her name.

The world of pretend left, but a new world of curiosity began. B, a male, was my best friend when I was 12-ish. He lived up the road, so he could visit constantly, and we'd play videogames - all the time.

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater was our main export. The series was the first in which I was able to play as a female - Elissa Steamer in THPS2, and I did. Always. But me and B played THPS3 more often. I would play as Elissa, while he created a female "sister" skater. We'd switch on free skate, and we'd talk to each other as if we were the two people we were playing as. This was the last time I ever really socialised as some form of female, to my disdain.

So my feelings were demoted to playing as females in videogames for some time. In Pokémon Ruby, I picked May. In Ape Escape 3, I picked the girl. In any game with a creation mode, I would always go female, and make someone modelled on the version of myself that was private and in hiding. To other people, I was just making a similar character every time - to me, I was making me.

At mid-teens, I got a girlfriend. This was the point at which me as a girl was most dormant. It didn't last a huge amount of time, but she was confirmation that I was still attracted to girls. It made me doubt if I was actually female inside or if it was just crossed wires with my attraction to them.

I got a job shortly after reaching 18, and was there for around half a decade. I had decided in my (non-religious, non-spiritual) mind that reincarnation was a thing, and was something where you could choose exactly who you were in the next life - I could then simply be born as a cisgender girl in my next life and be happy. I would blank out planning out my next life as a girl, from major events down to all the little things that XYs don't get to experience, like periods.

But halfway through this job, my girl side was screaming. She wanted out. She wanted to be me, and the guy me wanted to give her the body with open arms. I could have, and should have, seen a gender therapist there and then. The one problem is that the sector I was a part of bizarrely had an above-average amount of people coming out as transgender, and you'd hear people sneering behind their backs. (Not to a serious extent, but still, mocking behind their back because of something as difficult as coming out like that is just not something I could handle)

I bought a wig and some girl clothes - a dress, a pair of tights, and a pair of panties. I would don the outfit in my room privately. Something just clicked. It felt right being female. I wanted, and still want, the ability to go to a clothes shop and pick out a nice dress.

It was mid-2015 and I'd left the job to create a start-up business with a fellow deserter. I knew I was a girl, I just didn't know my plan. I moved back into my parents' house until the startup began making money - I'm still here now, but it should be viable to move within 2016.

Fallout 4 was what finally made me snap. I got addicted to that game beyond reasonable belief - but it wasn't just the gameplay. I made Allison, with her medium-length brown hair, her curvy figure and her lipstick. And as I played, I realised she was literally just me in a Boston Wasteland. I wasn't playing the game to unlock a specific ending, I was making each decision honestly because I am Allison. I would stop playing the game, but I wouldn't stop making Allison's decisions, and I wouldn't stop having her appearance, and everything else, because I'm Allison.

I since bought more female clothes and got some women's shoes to match (by the way - holy heck, men get short changed in the footwear department - these things have faux fur on the inside. My feet are in heaven right now!)

Which leads into now.

I believe my friends will accept who I am. Some of them might take a little while, but as has been stated by smarter people than me on many an occasion, anyone that can't accept me isn't much of a friend anyway. They're not the big hurdle I need to jump.

I love my parents, but I don't think they'll appreciate their only child becoming a girl out of "nowhere". Especially my dad - he refuses to watch or regard anything in which someone is transgender in real life, plays a transgender person, or even is simply playing a character of the opposite gender. I think he would eventually come around in my case, though. My mum isn't so much intolerant as just not really clued in to anything. She'll make off handed remarks that would most certainly offend a lot of trans people, but I honestly believe in my heart she doesn't mean it and will be okay with it. But that doesn't mean I'm not petrified of coming out.

It might be days, weeks or months, but I owe it to my real self to do it when the time's right. Until then, I'm going to sit here, with my long wig on, in my dress, my black tights (also a thing that men miss out on - soo comfy!) and my shoes, being Allison to the one woman it's most important to - myself. :)

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hello Allison,

I know it's hard when you believe your parents won't be accepting. But, you might be surprised. Hopefully your dad loves you and your mum would come to understand as well. It's hard for my dad and I accept that. He loves me and time will help. When you do tell your parents, give them time. You've been living this life for a while, but its brand new for them.

You'll most likely have great success with your friends and since they will form the majority of your social network going forward, this is good news.

Jani

Link to comment
Guest Clair Dufour

Let's start with the coin toss. There is a very big difference between being intersexed and

transgendered. The first is about having a body and brain that has parts of both sexes in many possible

combinations visible or invisible. The second, transgendered has to do with the mind, regardless of

ones body type which, sometimes is the exact opposite of how one sees themselves. Therapy for both is

very different and requires skilled doctors to sort it out. To make the point about mind and body,there

is a very small percentage of people born without sex or gender and they ( from what I have read) don't

care about it one way or the other.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Thank you for sharing your story. I can certainly relate to parts of it but the circumstances and games were different when i was young. I would certainly recommend seeing a gender therapist at this point. It helped me a great deal as did writing and reading about others here. Glad you've joined us.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment

Hi Allison,

I can say that I certainly relate to more than a few things in your story. The video games (arcade games in my day) where they finally had female characters. Virtua Fighter 2 was mine (looking to buy it for PC right now), but it certainly had me hooked for a time. Then Tomb Raider, but what was strange for me was that threats to Lara Croft... felt like threats to me. I mean, I would have an emotional reaction (strange).

More girl friends when I was young, more guy friends in my teens. College years, and a few after... were the hardest, just trying to figure out who I was... and what these feeling were all about.

It seems you have the friends issue understood. If they truely are friends... it won't matter (though a few of mine took weeks to finally respond). Not sure if you are a fan, but "Black me out" by Against Me was what finally got me over that little bit of worry.

Parents are really hard.... dads I imagine are much harder.

Your story is familiar, and you are not alone. As previously mentioned, a gender therapist is the right place to start. Despite pretty much all of us wishing to get to the finish line in a big damn hurry (I can't be the only one right?)... sadly, it doesn't work that way. Transition is a long process, and if that's the path you choose.... it's very much worth it, just ask any of the amazing people here on LP.

Good luck sweetie,

Kaylee

Link to comment
Guest Kayla Grace

I'm a 90's child as well, and I know of most of the things you refer to. Sabrina was one beautiful girl wasn't she? I think I smiled reading all of your topic. It seems you have a good mental grip on being trans. Have you seen a therapist yet? That should be your first goal. Then there's HRT, and becoming full time, and so on. But baby steps. This isn't an overnight thing.

Link to comment
  • 4 weeks later...

Welcome to Laura's Allison! Another 90's kid here! I really enjoyed pokemon growing up, but it was actually Mimi from digimon that I really wanted to be. I think I enjoyed the idea of being a girly girl and being able to wear pink. I'm just starting to take baby steps right now to feel more feminine myself, so you're ahead of me.

From what I've been told, speaking to a gender therapist is highly recommended. Keep us posted on how things are going. I've only been here a couple of days, but I know that everyone is more than happy to help each other out. Keep us posted on your progress~!

Link to comment
  • 4 weeks later...

Hehe, you're story is similar to mine! My first memories of realizing I was trans was playing cross-dressup with a girl that I was friends with when I was little, it's actually where I decided I liked the name Angie, it was her name too and we swapped names as well when we would play :P and videogames were a huge outlet to be myself, every time I got to make a character or choose I always made a girl.

I'm still in early transition but at this point I've come out to most of my family and a few close friends. It has been overwhelmingly positive for me, and I hope it goes that way for you! Everyone has been supportive of my transition, my father is still lagging behind a bit but he's old fashioned so I'm gonna give him his time.

So congratulations on taking your first steps! I'm glad you have accepted yourself like you have, it was really hard for me!

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

The games part of you story really hits home here myself. I play skyrim heavily i've been a es fan since morrowind. Every character has been female usually breton and more often then not has had dark brown hair, blue eyes named Rylie. I tend to play em with my personality just feminized. Ive even got the game so heavily modded its just like real life I have to east, sleep, drink, i sweat when its to warm or freeze to death when its to cold, I have a full metral cycle can have sex and get pregnant plus a myriad of other things.

Link to comment
  • 2 months later...

Hi Allison,

I'm quite a bit older, but I relate to your story somewhat. They didn't have video games when I was growing up, but I do play them now. Since the earliest games where you could create a gendered character, I always created a female, who looked like me on the inside. Most of the time I named her Hannah, but lately have used more regal names like "Princess." Like you, like in Fallout 4, I made choices according to who I am inside, and continue to be her after I quit the game. Elder Scrolls, a relatively new game, (Hi Rylie!) allows a great amount creativity in character generation and I have created a Breton who looks so much like me, it isn't funny.

I'm happy to hear you have the kind of friends who will accept you for who you really are. Mine will have a hard time, I'm sure, because of how long they have know me as my male identity. I like what you said about real friends will accept you. That will be something to be seen, and I hope I do.

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   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 143 Guests (See full list)

    • Betty K
    • Vidanjali
    • VickySGV
    • Timi
    • Ivy
    • Abigail Genevieve
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.5k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,029
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Selkimur
    Newest Member
    Selkimur
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. BraxtonLee
      BraxtonLee
      (26 years old)
    2. Bryanna
      Bryanna
      (45 years old)
    3. Jayde1
      Jayde1
    4. Mireya
      Mireya
      (66 years old)
    5. Shellianne_Kay83
      Shellianne_Kay83
      (41 years old)
  • Posts

    • Abigail Genevieve
      I have read numerous accounts of trans folk no longer being welcome among evangelicals.   I am here for help and fellowship not to rebuke anyone.  I can take a pretty high degree of insult, etc., and you haven't insulted me, to my recollection anyway :) and I usually let it go.  But I thought I would let it all out there.   I am sure I disagree with you on numerous issues.  I appreciate other people's viewpoints, including those who radically disagree with me.  Intellectual challenge is good. One thing I appreciate about @MaeBe.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Congrats!
    • Sally Stone
      Post 8 “The Ohio Years” We moved to Pittsburgh because of the job with US Airways.  The job involved classroom instruction and simulator training, but no actual flying, so I kept looking for an actual pilot position.  A year after signing on with US Airways I got hired to fly business jets.  The company was located in Cleveland, Ohio, but I was flown commercially from my home in Pittsburgh to where my aircraft was located, making it unnecessary to live near company headquarters.    My flight scheduled consisted of eight days on duty with seven days off.  Having seven days off in a row was great but being gone from home eight days in a row was difficult.  For the first few years the flying was fun, but after a while the eight flying days in a row, were taking their toll on me.  Those days were brutal, consisting of very long hours and a lot of flying time.  Usually, I came home exhausted and need three days just to recover from the work week.  Flying for a living is glamorous until you actually do it.  Quickly, it became just a job.    After five years as a line captain, I became a flight department manager, which required we live near company headquarters.  That meant a move to Cleveland.  Working in the office meant I was home every night but as a manager, the schedule was still challenging.  I would work in the office all week and then be expected to go out and fly the line on weekends.  I referred to it as my “5 on 2 on” schedule, because it felt as though I had no time off at all.   About the same time, we moved to Cleveland, my wife and I became “empty nesters,” with one son in the military and the other away at college.  Sadly, my work schedule didn’t leave much time for Sally.  Add to the fact that while Cleveland is an awesome city, I just never felt comfortable expressing my feminine side.  Most of my outings, and believe me there weren’t enough, occurred while I was on vacation and away from home.   One of the most memorable outings occurred over a long weekend.  I had stumbled across an online notice for a spring formal being held in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, hosted by a local trans group there.  I reached out to Willa to see if she was up for an excellent adventure.  She was, so I picked her up and we drove to Harrisburg together.    The formal was held on Saturday evening and we had the absolute best time.  It turned out that organizers were a group named TransCentralPA.  Everyone was wonderful and I made a lot of new friends that evening.  We learned the spring formal was one of the group’s annual events but for the following year, instead of a spring formal, the group wanted to do a local transgender conference.  That local conference would become the Keystone Conference, and I would attend every year for the next 12.  My move to the west coast was the only reason I stopped attending annually.  I went to the first annual Keystone Conference as an attendee, but in subsequent years I served as a volunteer and as a workshop presenter; more about those in the next installment.   For my Cleveland years, the Keystone Conference would be my major outlet for feminine self-expression.  Yes, I did get out on other occasions, but they were too infrequent.  The managerial job just didn’t allow me the freedom I needed to adequately live my feminine life, and my frustration level was slowly, but steadily on the rise.  It amazed me how adversely not being able to express the feminine half of my personality was affecting my happiness.   However, a major life change was upcoming, and while it would prove to be a significant challenge in many ways, the events would ultimately benefit my female persona.  First, my mom and dad got sick.  They were in and out of the hospital and required personal care.  My wife and I did our best but living in Cleveland, we were too far from them to give them the support they both needed.  Second, I was experiencing serious job burn out.  I decided I need to find another job and I needed to be closer to my parents.    Things changed for the better when I got hired by an aviation training company as a flight simulator instructor.  I would be training business jet pilots.  The training facility was located in New Jersey, which put us much closer to my parents, and the work schedule was much better for quality of life.  Most importantly, this life change would help Sally re-emerge and once again flower.    Hugs,   Sally       
    • Mmindy
      I made a living talking about bulk liquids in cargo tanks transportation as a driver and mechanic. Safe loading/unloading, cleaning and inspecting, as well as emergency response scenarios.   Hazmat and fire behavior in the fire service as well as emergency vehicle operations and safe driving. "It was on fire when they called you. It will be on fire when you get there." Arrive ready to work. I could also talk about firefighter behavioral  heath and the grieving process.   The real fun thing is I can do this for people who are not Truck Drivers or Fire Fighters. Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Citizen Tax payers about Public Safety Education.   I love public speaking,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Mmindy
      Congratulations to the mom and family @Ivy on the addition of another child.   Hugs,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • MaeBe
      Congrats to you and yours!
    • Ashley0616
      YAY! Congratulations on a granddaughter!
    • Ashley0616
      I recommend CarComplaints.com | Car Problems, Car Complaints, & Repair/Recall Information. A lot of good information
    • LucyF
      I've got Spironolactone ___mg and Evorel ___mcg Patches (2 a week) going up to ___mg after 4 weeks 
    • Ivy
      Got a new Granddaughter this morning.  Mother and child (and father) are doing fine. This makes 7 granddaughters and one grandson.  I have 2 sons and 6 daughters myself.  And then I  switched teams.  I think this stuff runs in the family. Another hard day for the patriarchy.
    • Ivy
      Like @MaeBe pointed out, Trump won't do these things personally.  I doubt that he actually gives a rat's a$$ himself.  But he is the foot in the door for the others.   I don't really see this.  Personally, I am all in favor of "traditional" families.  I raised my own kids this way and it can work fine.  But I think we need to allow for other variations as well.   One thing working against this now is how hard it is for a single breadwinner to support a family.  Many people (I know some) would prefer "traditional" if they could actually afford it.  Like I mentioned, we raised our family with this model, but we were always right at the poverty level.   I was a "conservative evangelical" for most of my life, actually.  So I do understand this.  Admittedly, I no longer consider myself one. I have family members still in this camp.  Some tolerate me, one actually rejects me.  I assure you the rejection is on her side, not mine.  But, I understand she believes what she is doing is right - 'sa pity though. I mean no insult toward anyone on this forum.  You're free to disagree with me.  Many people do.   This is a pretty complex one.  Socialism takes many forms, many of which we accept without even realizing it.  "Classism" does exist, for what it's worth.  Always has, probably always will.  But I don't feel like that is a subject for this forum.   As for the election, it's shaping up to be another one of those "hold your nose" deals.
    • Ivy
      Just some exerts regarding subjects of interest to me.
    • Ivy
      Yeah.  In my early teens I trained myself out of a few things that I now wish I hadn't.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I was thinking in particular of BLM, who years ago had a 'What We Believe' section that sounded like they were at war with the nuclear family.   I tried to find it. Nope.  Of interest https://www.politifact.com/article/2020/aug/28/ask-politifact-does-black-lives-matter-aim-destroy/   My time is limited and I will try to answer as I can.
    • Ivy
      Well, I suppose it is possible that they don't actually plan on doing what they say.  I'm not too sure I want to take that chance.  But I kinda expect to find out.  Yet, perhaps you're right and it's all just talk.  And anyway, my state GOP is giving me enough to worry about anyway. I remember a time when being "woke" just meant you were paying attention.  Now it means you are the antichrist. I just don't want the government "protecting" me from my personal "delusions."
  • 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...