Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Ma'am err I mean Sir?

In my job I meet a lot of people. Not as many as I used to but still a lot. Mostly over the phone.

The other day I had the opportunity to revisit an old customer. One if my favorites actually.

Thing is, she's never seen me as Cayleigh...only my previous self of James.

Many trans folk, heck maybe even the majority of us, fear the unknown. What will so-and-so think of my change? I will I explain this?

This fear is founded, legitimate, and so very real.

I've been transitioning now for almost two years. Not all at once mind you, there was a time, an Eon it seemed, where I de-transitioned.

During my transition I have learned a great many things about myself. One being, I am terrified of the unknown.

At first I swear I was looking everywhere trying to find the one person talking about me. I never found them.

As time went on I got more and more comfortable in my skin, rather clothes. Cause that's where it was for me. The clothes I was wearing. I thought that somehow, someone would have x-ray vision and see right through my clothes. It scared the hell out of me. This is where Trans Hell....Or not, came from.

As I walked up to my customers door and knocked I braced myself for total rejection. But something happened at this moment I didn't realize until tonight.

She saw a girl standing at her door. A girl with a lower than average voice, but still a girl. She didn't look through me, she didn't have x-ray vision and she wasn't waiting to out me to the world. She opened the door and said ,"yes?" with that questioning voice of who ate you. I remembered she has bad eye sight and told her its Cayleigh.

She welcomes me in and we conducted our business. Near the end she made a comment. Out of shear unconscious thought I responded, "yes you do know me but you know me as James."

Now why would I have said that? Who knows.

It was at this moment I realized something else. She didn't have issues calling me, referring to me, or thinking about me as a woman, as Cayleigh.

Once I announced my "trans ness" she immediately started referring to me with male pronouns. It was fascinating.

After that we talked. I educated her a bit and asked a lot of questions. It was a great conversation. One I will cherish.

She looked me over, really looked me I over, commented on different features of my figure, breasts, waist. She commented on my wide shoulders and how clothes will better because of it.

The take away here: don't announce unless you want to out yourself. Most people will see what you project.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Are you a part of the struggle or one we struggle against?

How do you convince someone that they are part of the same struggle you are fighting even though they are not part of the community that is fighting?

I am in a struggle to fight hatred toward my people.

Now that very sentence is enough to cause strife.

"My People".

In this instance I am referring tithe transgender community. I am not speaking of the human race, female gender, or white skinned people.

Since I am Trans and my wife isn't, she sees herself as an outsider in this struggle. She couldn't be further from the truth. How do I convince her?

As my spouse, she is part of the struggle. As an accepting person, she is part if the struggle. As an accepting spouse, she is even more apart of the struggle. Will people see her differently simply because she is Cis-gendered? I don't think so, once they learn she is with a trans-girl. If I am getting flamed by someone and she sees it first, she is gong to say something to them. Why? Because she loves me and will stand up for me. THIS makes her part of the struggle.

So......how do I convince the love of my life that she is part of the same fight as I am even though she isn't part of the community in the same way I am.

Dear, because you love me, because you will defend me and fight for me to the bitter end. Because you support me, because you see my true being, this makes you part of the very fight I am in. I know you can not identify with how I personally feel and that is ok. There is no way that I can identify with how you personally feel being with me.

For all who support the transgender community, you are also a part of the fight. Stand with us. We won't give up.