MY STORY
My story is similar to those of so many
T-girls. Even as a small child I was fascinated by the women in my
life - my mother and my aunts seemed much more interesting people
than the men around me. They smiled and laughed much more often than
did the men. They just seemed to enjoy life more. I knew that they
were different from the men and the difference fascinated
me.
My yearning for things feminine slowly grew
stronger. In the second grade I would look over at the girls and wish
that I could join them. I particularly envied the way that they
interacted with each other and I just loved the way that they looked
when dressed up. I so wished that I could wear clothes like theirs. I
remember a particular fascination with a dirndl dress worn by one of
the girls. The only drawback that I could see to being a girl rather
than a boy was in the area of athletics.
Some years later in a closet I discovered a
bag of feminine undies that my mother must have discarded. Panties,
bras, even a girdle. Whenever I was lucky enough to be alone I would
go to that closet and put on those lovely pink silky underthings and
the girdle. How good they felt. So much better than the cotton
underwear that males wore. They made me feel so feminine. I would put
on a pair of her heeled shoes (too large of course) and wrap a shawl
around me to simulate a dress. I felt like a little girl playing at
being an adult instead of a boy and so loved that feeling.
A growing boy was bound at some point to be
the same size as his mother and when that wonderful time came for me
I couldn't wait to go to her closet and try on her clothes. I
experimented with her make-up too. As was inevitable I had several
close calls when either someone came home early or I dallied too long
because of my reluctance to take off my feminine finery. Thank God
for a bathroom with a door that locked and for an early opportunity
to smuggle my borrowed clothes back to their proper place. As far as
I knew no one ever guessed my secret
After high school I went off to the Navy and
then to college and had little opportunity to dress in clothes of my
choice. Even in my vacations at home I couldn't dress fully because I
had outgrown my mother's clothes. But the desire to dress like
a girl, to be a girl was always there. Only when I finally had
an apartment of my own could I act on that desire. And so I gradually
assembled a feminine wardrobe, foolishly purged several times, and
then each time replaced all that I had discarded.
I so enjoyed the company of women that
marriage was inevitable, and when I met a woman who was fully
feminine in her mind and who expressed that femininity in her actions
and in her dress I married her. I thought that her femininity would
be enough for me - that I wouldn't need to express my own. How wrong
I was. I began to build up a wardrobe again - much of it initially
bought in stores that catered to T's. But over time I began to
patronize the same stores that genetic girls did, and with that came
the need to lose weight to that I would have a larger choice of
clothes. And, of course, with that incentive I did lose the weight
and keep it off.
I do so love to shop for feminine things.
The boldest I have been in shopping involved stopping at a cosmetics
counter in Lord and Taylor and asking for Dermablend. The clerk
didn't bat an eye, but stepped into the aisle with me and tried on
various shades until she found the one that fit me. What a joy to be
doing something so feminine. I wonder what the passersby
thought.
The most fun that I have had recently
involved having a transition specialist, Lynda Krupa, do a makeover on me. She does
miraculous work. She even manages to make my all too obvious nose
less prominent. When she is done I look and feel so delightfully
feminine. Its an experience that I recommend to all.

I would so love to have a female body, but I
recognize that the cost of transition would be too high socially. So
here I hang like so many others suspended between the worlds of the
masculine to which my body belongs, and the feminine for which my
mind and spirit yearn.
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