Diary Of A Sex Change
After nearly two years of hormones, anxiety, and longing to be
called "sir," an FTM says: "I'm finally able to be me."

By Anonymous
Anonymous is a female-to-male transsexual living in Boston.
November 2001 --
A short note about the origins of the FTM Diary. The diary first appeared in
print in the One-in-Ten, a supplement of the Boston Phoenix.
Apparently the One-in-Ten, a gay and lesbian monthly supplement, is no longer in print. The Boston Phoenix,
arts alternative weekly newspaper, is still active. I have been told that the diary
"was culled from hundreds of personal diary entries I kept during the early part
of my transition" for inclusion in a special transgendered issue.
November 2003 -- Anonymous has returned! If you wish to read
more of his story, please use the following
link.
NOVEMBER 17, 1995: I never identified as
a girl. I was always a boy and still am. When I was 10, my mother and Mrs. G. took me
clothes shopping. Mrs. G. took me to the boys' department to try on coats intended for her
sons. My broad shoulders, she said, made it possible for me to try on boys' coats, and
based on how they fit me, she'd be able to tell how they'd fit her sons. I liked the
coats, brown corduroy with hoods. I liked being told I had broad shoulders like a boy and
that I could pass for a boy. I was often mistaken for a boy, but I didn't think it was a
mistake.
Now I'm old enough to be a man, and all I want is to be seen as a man. I remember
coming out as queer 10 years after my straight peers had begun dating. Well, now I'm
coming out again. I feel like I stalled out on my boyhood at age 12. And I've re-emerged
and I'm 13 again. I have so much to learn. Being a 13-year-old boy in a 29-year-old female
body identifying as an adult is difficult, but not impossible, to maneuver.
My palms are sweating.
November 18, 1995
I just ran down the stairs with the trash and chatted with the garbage collectors. Will
I ever be able to hang out and just be one of the guys?
When I came out as a lesbian, I feared losing everything, but I ended up losing nothing
but the fear. Now I feel like I'm back where I started from. But maybe I'm really just
coming to grips with some gender variance. And maybe I could never really pass in the
straight world. How could I? And who would want to be with me?
F. posed that question while reading the Gender Nation article about gay FTMs:
who would be with whom after transition?
The FTM couldn't really be with a straight woman, right? Or a lesbian?
And as she was pondering this, I felt the answer for me: who I would be with was F.,
who identifies as bisexual.
F. once told me I'm her boy-woman. But she doesn't call me anything anymore. She
doesn't call me by my given name, she doesn't call me by my nickname, she doesn't call me
"sir," she doesn't call me "honey." She did once say, "You're a
babe," and pinned me against the wall and kissed me.
December 8, 1995
Pigeons are at my bird feeder. I didn't want pigeons, but I guess they're birds.
I went to C. and J.'s tree-trimming party last Saturday and spent $80 on stuff from the
hardware store, including a glue gun, but I have no idea what I'm going to do with the
glue gun. I don't have a hammer or a flathead screwdriver, but I have a glue gun.
Whatever.
December 10, 1995
Here I am, alone on my love seat. F. called on Thursday and said she got her HIV test
results. She's negative. I'm very glad. Obviously. And relieved.
We spoke on Friday -- she called at the office at the end of the day. It was good to
talk with her. I've really missed her. I know she has a lot of work to do between now and
the end of the semester and then exams, which she says she's not too worried about, but I
know better.
We also talked a bit more about FTM stuff that I've learned about this week --
testosterone and how it changes you. She seemed genuinely interested, as she has in other
conversations about this.
But I wonder if it's just another titillating topic to her. She must wonder why I'm
interested in it, other than a need to know in order to be a more well-rounded queer. I
mean, does she think I'm finding this out so I know a bunch of trivia, or does she get it?
That I'm trying to find out because that's the direction I'm heading in? She must know.
December 23, 1995
I cried this morning, just now. But only for a minute or so. I guess I was crying about
being alone. But this is how it is.
Last night I shaved my sideburns again. Per H.'s suggestion, I had shaved them on
Monday. And trimmed my hair so it's not so pouffy. But last night I brought the razor not
just down that inch next to my ear, but all the way to my jaw. And then I just thought,
what's stopping me from shaving my whole face? Nothing, really.
It's not as if I have anything to shave, but I thought I'd like to see and feel what
it's like. And it felt fine, not at all out of the ordinary. We'll see about stubble, I
guess.
Perhaps I'm kidding myself, and I'll never pass as a man. Just as the guys in the [FTM
support] group said of themselves. And it may be my own warped sense of self, but except
for V. and Y., those guys just look like dykes to me. And act the way I think dykes act.
V. and Y. act like fags. And then there's me. And I guess I have some fag mannerisms, but
I'm certainly not dykey-acting. Or I at least don't think I act that way.
When K. and W. said they've been on hormones, I just about did a double take. I guess
not knowing what they looked like before doesn't really help, but if that's what they look
like now, after months of testosterone, I wonder.
January 5, 1996
I told F. that I was doing something about my "gender issues" and let her
know I'm transsexual and not just gender queer. Her response was tender, honest, and
sincere. I felt safe and I know I scared her with my hesitancy to talk, but I wanted to
say it in the right way. I felt the wall between us, one I hadn't really realized was
there, come down. She told me not to do anything crazy and to do it the healthy way. I
agreed to that.
Our talks have greatly improved. Sexually, we have had more and more intensity and that
has been very satisfying. I feel her passion now more than ever. It's not just sexual, but
more rounded out, more complete.
We also had the penis talk. As much as I knew it would be difficult to admit, I told
her I wasn't going to have a mediocre penis just to say I had one, if it meant not feeling
anything. She understood, but still thinks there's a possible procedure out there that
could give me what I want. And she assured me that being a man isn't about having a penis,
and that she, herself, doesn't need her man to have one, that that's not what she wants a
man for.
I wasn't sure what to say. I felt afraid to ask if she was sure, but I did anyway. She
was speaking from the heart the words I wanted to hear. I knew then that I didn't have to
be afraid of being less than a man in her eyes. And I knew that my own attitudes and
feelings about my manhood could work, that I could be all that I am and not having the
perfect penis wasn't going to make me any less of a man.
My concern, I told her, is with passing.
Other things we talked about: sex, hair, sex drive, body shape, changes/growth
timeline, hormones, meeting her mom -- her dad doesn't have to ever know.
January 8, 1996
I called the therapist. She called me back, and I told her I wanted to work with her
under the condition that I would get the referral letter to the endocrinologist in due
haste. [Note: testosterone therapy cannot begin with a doctor until a diagnosis of Gender
Identity Disorder has been made by a psychotherapist.]
She said she could probably sign off on me in two or three sessions. I'm so relieved, I
can't even begin to express it. I'm so close now I can hardly wait. I have my first
appointment with her on Friday, then another one the following Tuesday and the third on
the next Tuesday. Then I can have the letter in my hand.
In either case, I'm that much closer to living my life the way it was meant to be. What
a thing to have had to wait this long to live, to really live.
February 28, 1996
It's windy out tonight. And I have little to no excuse(s) for not writing except for
the fact that things are very, very fucked up right now.
Since I last wrote, I got the letter from the therapist and had my first appointment
with the endocrinologist (February 2). It went okay, for the most part. An intern sat in
on the meeting. I explained to him as best I could that I am transsexual, and not lesbian.
He took me into an examination room and checked me out. He seemed genuinely relieved that
he didn't have to give me a Pap smear, as I had had one at the health center last month.
We went back into his office, and he said he'd want to see me in "two, three, or
four weeks to see if you still want to continue down this road." I was crestfallen. I
looked at him like, whatever, but thanked him profusely, took the form out to the
receptionist, and made another appointment. Then I went to the lab and waited for my name
to be called to have blood drawn.
The next few weeks are a blur, really. I called F. over the following weekend and
learned that she had told her friend S. about me, but it was as a result of him asking her
whether she'd be willing to marry his boyfriend from China in order to get the boyfriend a
visa to live here. I hit the roof. If I were a genetic guy, I said, he never would have
asked you that.
I realized then that I had to ask her to marry me, only so I would know that I could do
it and that it would mean something. Up until that point, I had every intention of asking
her when I felt I was really passing as male and felt more myself as a result. I even
fantasized that I would have a full beard at the time, the ultimate proof that this was
not about either of us being lesbian, that no one would ever mistake me for a lesbian or a
woman.
March 1, 1996
I had another appointment with the endocrinologist today, and it went well. I am on the
Androderm testosterone patch. And so far, I don't feel that much different,
March 6, 1996
I broke my toe yesterday. It was really just a stupid spaz thing to do, but it kind of
falls in with all the other spazzy things I've been doing lately.
I snagged my toes on some laundry as I was stepping through my bedroom -- so my foot
moved but my toe was held firm by the demon laundry. I just shrugged it off as a stub.
Later in the morning, when I got to the office, I took off my boot and sock and there was
the toe next to my middle toe all purplish-maroon and swollen. Ice, tape, and elevation --
it's a little sore but fine.
Yesterday I put on patch number five at 2 p.m.
So far, I haven't noticed any significant changes really. My voice is a little
"bigger" and I think this cold/cough is masking some of it. Hard to tell. It's
so subtle.
My face has gotten noticeably oilier. I refilled my script for Cleocin. I'm glad I had
enough smarts to see a dermatologist before I started on the testosterone. My back,
neck, and forehead are breaking out because of the hormones. I'm trying to be extra aware
of keeping my hands from my face. This afternoon, I was washing my face at the office and
as I dried off I dabbed my chin and it hit me: my chin is different. Squarer and more
pronounced. I was a bit taken aback. It's happening! I was amazed and a little freaked out
by it, not because I don't want it to happen, but because it's so soon.
I called W. and he seemed perplexed that the voice should be the first to change. I
think he thought it was just wishful thinking on my part. He said he couldn't tell over
the phone. "It is subtle," I said.
My period is late.
March 9, 1996
I JO'd several times last night to fall asleep. Though I can't touch myself directly --
too sensitive. Today, I felt groggy, but got up and did a few things, then went back and
JO'd again. And fell asleep. When I woke I did it again. I finally got out of bed a little
while ago, but I'm feeling kind of good about the fact that I'm enjoying my new and
improved sex drive.
March 16, 1996
Work-related stuff feels better. I talked to my manager yesterday. I think it'll be
okay. But I do have to get my shit together soon. Physical stuff: my period ended Thursday
night, but this morning I have brownish mucus discharge. Like it's back again. I put in a
tampon a couple of hours ago. I've been doing wall pushups the last few days, 50 at a
time. My voice is still not really noticeable. But right now I'm singing and it's totally
out of tune with the song; it's embarrassing.
I want to be happy, but I'm tired of waiting. I think the process should be enjoyable,
but I want more. All I can do is look forward to when I'll have noticeably changed and not
just be in the now. Outwardly, I'm not the person I am inside. And people don't look at me
the way I see myself. I guess if I think I'm not definable, then that's how people are
going to see me too.
March 31, 1996
The idea that this is about privilege may not be that far off. As a woman, I expected
to get treated like shit, but didn't like it and didn't really fight much against it. Now
I can't stand it. And won't stand for it.
April 3, 1996
Yesterday I got to the point where my heart was pounding in my chest. I just called the
endocrinologist's office and they were saying "classic stress symptoms." Okay, I
admit it, I feel like an idiot. Anyway, I took off the patch and will put it on later
today. And oh! I'm getting upper lip hair! I'm so excited! It started with a few at the
left corner of my mouth, three dark hairs. Now, there are more and they're creeping up
toward the top of my lip. I'm going to shave again today. I actually have about 10 hairs
that I can see -- I know it sounds so lame, but I never had that before.
April 13, 1996
I worry that F. is growing impatient. Sometimes I fear that she will find all of this
too hard to take, too much to be in, and leave me for another. I worry that I will fall
out of love with her as I worry that she will fall in love with someone else. I worry that
I will have to fight for her love every day of my life. I worry that I will not be enough
for her.
April 15, 1996
Went out last night and it was weird. I hated it. I was alone in a club full of
lesbians knowing that I could only look at them and see what I never was. Little baby
butch dykes bother the shit out of me with all that phony posturing. I wonder what I will
be like once I really start passing. Will I be an ultimate asshole about lesbians? I don't
know, maybe I'm just jealous of something I could never be -- a real lesbian. I know I'm
jealous of something else I can't be: a genetically equipped man. So what's left for me? I
need to feel confident that I'm worth something. I need to start changing. Damn it, why is
it taking so long? Who really sees me as a man yet? I don't think anyone does, not even
myself.
The night was a waste. I tried to use the men's room but the door was locked. I went
into the women's room and there were three women in there, not peeing, just talking. One
was tall, wearing a black dress. They were talking about the band and Josie and the
Pussycats and how they must have been lesbians and started laughing like that was so
original and funny. I felt awkward being there, listening to them, like I was a spy. The
tall one in the dress was so obviously into the dyke sitting down -- the bathroom
attendant. If I'd had my druthers I would've tipped the attendant and then told the others
my tip for them would be that the old "blank must have been lesbians, hee hee"
was neither original nor witty. But I wasn't in the mood. I just got annoyed with myself
for thinking such things and realized I needed to stop using the women's room. I thought
about going to Lansdowne Street on the way home, but realized it was because I knew it was
early and I wanted to get drunk. Instead, I ate an entire package of Smart Dogs and two
onion rolls and went to bed.
April 21, 1996
Had coffee and a slice of cold pizza for breakfast. I'm growing and growing. Fat or
muscle? It's a tossup. I opened my windows and know that will not help when it reaches 80
degrees today. I need to go do laundry and get my hair cut. I need to get in shape. I've
gained a lot of weight (15 pounds in six weeks, fat ass!); up to size 34 jeans and even
they don't really fit right. The endocrinologist upped my dose to two patches every other
day starting tomorrow and continuing until May 20, when I'll go to two patches daily. I
was supposed to start at the gym this weekend, but I was too depressed. I went shopping
instead and bought shirts, shoes, and a jacket for spring. Not that I'll be able to wear
it now that it's 80 degrees, but I needed it. I'm up a shirt size.
I got a letter from my sister after not talking to her for a long time. She told me Mom
was sick. I called my parents -- Mom is now better, free of cancer. They noticed my voice
had changed. I came out to my sister over the phone and wrote my brother an e-mail. He
e-mailed back. Both my brother and sister seemed to have the attitude: fine, let's move
on. My sister's supportive and willing to help in coming out to my parents. I'm not sure
what to do.
May 24, 1996
F.'s being here this past weekend was really nice. I was worried that in the heat we
would get on each other's nerves, but she is so soothing and calming. I can't explain it.
I really enjoyed our time together, and I guess it made me less worried about the future.
June 8, 1996
I sent my parents separate letters telling them what's going on. So they know now. So
far they seem pretty accepting. I met F.'s mom and according to F., she likes me. I miss
F. more than anything. I just want to see her, but I have to wait. She's moving to Boston
-- and moving in with me -- next month. There's so much to do.
June 27, 1996
It's been over a month since I've written. And what's prompting me now? Despondency
again. I'm on the eve of my period, which I hope will be my last. It should hit sometime
in the next three days, on the full moon or just before.
Little things about how the world sees me put me right back in the no-good place. Got
"she'd" today in the South End. And "she'd" at the hardware store
yesterday. Overheard boy-or-girl questions twice today. I'm in that place where I don't
even want to go out or do anything. I don't even want to go to the gym because I feel like
shit. But once F.'s here, she wants to go with me. So, will I join her there? Will I feel
comfortable? Probably not. And with all those musclebound guys, I will look like a wimp
and they will be checking her out, and even if she ignores them, they'll try even harder
and I'll have to see all of this in front of my face and either ignore it or stand there
and act all overprotective of her. I don't want that. I want the vibe to be there that
hey, we are together, so back off. That is so stupid. But my insecurity is really looming
again. I'm just insecure about not passing and having other guys messing with her and with
me.
July 29, 1996
I've decided my voice is going to end up lower than most guys'. I listen to news
reporters or "talent" on radio commercials and think, "What a wimpy, whiny
voice." The only thing "male" about their voices is the resonance. But the
pitch of most is relatively midrange or even high. It's sometimes funny to listen to the
voices I used to just lump together as "male" but now I'm putting them in
different ranges. Some are really higher than mine.
August 3, 1996
We're heading to L.'s for a BBQ. It's one of his social events for the support-group
folks, and I'm trying to get out more so F. can have some semblance of a social life with
me and have it not be too stressful.
Yesterday I went to see the endocrinologist. F. went with me. The registration moron,
who had magazine pages of hunky black men pinned all over her cubicle, gave me a hard time
about changing my name in the computer. So I asked to just change X., my girl name, to my
first two initials. She said she couldn't. So I asked her to get her supervisor on the
phone. I went into the waiting area while she did this. Then she came in and announced to
the entire waiting area that I can use my initials as an alias or nickname but that X. has
to stay on the computer.
I stood up and went right up to her and ushered her into the other room and said,
"You could have talked to me in here and not announced it to the entire waiting
room." The supervisor was still on the phone, so I talked to her and told her that I
want the initials on the computer now and I did not appreciate that fact that her
staff had announced to the entire room what was going on. She assured me it would be taken
care of, "sir." And then I went back to the waiting room and some bitch with her
husband was staring at me, so I finally looked her right in the eye and said, "Is
there a problem?" and she looked away. F. tried to calm me down but I was furious.
The endocrinologist had an intern sit in. She was in her 30s, I think, older than me,
and seemed nervous about the whole thing. F. and I had tons of questions for the doctor.
He asked about the patch and we spent some time going over the pros and cons of sticking
with it. And then we talked about shots. He examined me and made a big deal about my
breast lump. He finally ordered blood work and said I would be coming in every other week
for shots and it would take a while to figure out what dose to go on. I asked about
learning to do my own shots and he said it would probably take four to five months before
my dose would be figured out. Then I would do my own shots once I had a stable
dose. (Argh!)
September 15, 1996
My voice has changed a bit. Cracking, and all that. Being "sirred" on the
phone. Lately, I've been passing more in public. But there are still those days when I get
"ma'amed" but I'm not sure I'm hearing it right. On Wednesday morning, it was
trash day, so I brought down our garbage and outside was the landlord -- who didn't
recognize me. And I was like, well, I guess I should tell him what's up. So I said I had
changed my name and that the next rent check will have the new name on it.
To say that every day I think about passing is putting it too simply. There is a lack
of elegance in moving so deliberately. Everything is broken down into the tiniest details.
A certain way of walking, a certain way of holding my head, moving my arms, how I step off
a curb, the length of my stride, where I look, and who is looking back at me and how. It's
nerve-racking, yet important and necessary.
I am hairier than I was on my legs, my stomach, and it's creeping up toward my chest.
Also, my arms and hands, my knuckles -- I've even got hair on my toes. My upper lip is
still sparse, but a definite crop of dark hair is there, and stubbly when I don't shave.
The rest of my face is still soft, smooth, with fair stubble when it comes through. But in
comparison with others, I am behind. I am not where a 30-year-old genetic man would be, I
am not where a 23-year-old man would be. I might be where a 16-year-old would be. Maybe.
But that's not a manly look. It's male or male-ish, and definitely not feminine, but I'm
not there yet. The few dark hairs on my upper lip are a big deal to me, since I
never had a single dark hair on my face at all. But in the world of men, it's pathetic.
I'm so angry that F. is stuck with me at this point where I don't pass and I can't even
promise when it will be better, I just hope that it will be. Every day it's one more day
of less than living. I don't know what to do. It's frustrating and I get worried, afraid.
I worry that at some point she will have had enough and leave me. That someone will tell
her this is wrong and she will agree with them that I have drained her of too much and
that she still can't live with me like this.
October 5, 1996
F. just left to visit her parents. I was supposed to go with her, primarily because her
dad wouldn't be there. But he decided not to go out of town so I just stayed here. This is
probably the weekend that F. tells her dad about me. It's been really unclear to me what
he does and doesn't know. But I just learned this week that he thinks F. moved in with her
girlfriend! It wasn't F. who told him this. It's the absence of information that
led to him think that. He knew of me as "X." and that I was in Boston and that
F. was moving to Boston, so 2 + 2 = lesbian to him. Whatever. I never met the guy but I
would like to think he's not completely unreasonable -- he just needs to be told so he can
deal with it and get over it.
I got my name legally changed yesterday and spent the morning at the Registry of Motor
Vehicles to get a new ID. Then I went to Social Security and the bank. Suffice it to say,
it was a long day. The court thing was so easy it was unreal. The RMV sucked but I got the
"M" on my license! Social Security couldn't change the gender in their records
without documentation of surgery. But since no one from outside Social Security can see
it, that's fine for now. The bank was easy, too, and the bank customer-service gal was
very interested in knowing how involved a process it is to change. She was the only one
who asked me anything. Kind of interesting.
When I got back to the office they had sparkling cider and we all had a glass, and I
gave myself a toast: "To me!" I thanked them all for putting up with me for the
past nine-and-a-half months. It was like a pregnancy and out popped me! At this point, the
idea that there's a place for me in the queer community at all is a joke. Even the bank
gal asked me, "So, do you like men or women?" I told her it was a personal
question but that gender identity had nothing to do with sexual orientation so you can get
all kinds of combinations. I also told her that someday she'd see me come in the door with
my wife to open a joint account. Sometimes I'm perceived as a very masculine-looking woman
(argh!) and it's automatically assumed I'm a lesbian. Other times I'm perceived to be a
very fey guy and it's automatically assumed that I must be gay. At what point will I just
be seen as a regular guy?
I shaved my chest and stomach to see if the hair would grow back in darker. Right now
it's dark stubble on my stomach, and not much on my upper chest at all. I thought it was
worth a try. I talked to J. about the pump. He said he would get me some information about
it. I swear my little cock is growing quite a bit lately. Either that or I'm getting
spontaneous hard-ons all the time. It's usually in the morning that I put my hand down
there and go, Yikes! it's perky this morning. So, if the pump works at all, I'll try it,
and see if I can get some inch-age out of it. It'll probably be a few years before I even
consider bottom surgery, but if I do get anything it'll be the metoidioplasty and the
implants. So I might as well start trying to get bigger for it. As far as chest surgery
goes, I need to save money, period.
April 12, 1997
Did my first shot by myself yesterday. G. sent me a JPEG of someone's chest -- it's a
three-quarters profile shot but looks good. No huge scars. Evidence that what I thought
was possible is possible with the right surgeon who understands the technique I have in
mind.
My facial hair seems to be coming in. Sparse, though. At the edge of my chin it's
definitely whiskers, along the jawline and up to the sideburns -- they're dark. Not much,
but at least something. I shave every other day. The hairs look more blond than dark but
it's definitely no longer fuzz.
I'm still waiting to hear back from a surgeon I'm considering for the chest operation.
I need to ask him when I can do it and how long I need to wear a compression vest -- in
other words, I'd like a sense of how long until I can live like a normal guy.
May 7, 1997
I have a consultation with another surgeon today at 3 p.m. I'm strangely calm about it.
I have a good feeling about it based on my conversation with the intake receptionist.
I had blood work last Friday to check my [hormone] levels, and I might know as soon as
Friday. Last time my levels were checked was in January and the evil estrogen was up
around 220. [Note: a genetic male has levels between zero and 25; a genetic, premenopausal
woman has levels between 100 and 600.]
Lately I've had hot flashes and felt cold toward the end of my testosterone shot cycle
-- and irritable. The acne has also remained fairly constant/consistent with occasional
flare-ups. So right now I'm taking a new antibiotic. Yet another surgeon said she wouldn't
be able to do the procedure until my acne clears up. I have a consult with another surgeon
next week. And the following week I'll interview with another one.
May 24, 1997
Summer is here, at least it feels that way. I don't feel very good about it, though. If
I have to spend another summer bound up with multiple shirts on, I don't know what I'll
do. I have to get my chest done.
I'm glad, in a way, that I've had this time of unemployment to deal with all of this.
It's almost a full-time job getting all this shit together and keeping on top of
day-to-day stuff. Who do I trust to do this [surgery]? There's skill, and then there's the
impression that they really understand what I want. I know enough to know what's possible
and that scars are unacceptable, period.
One surgeon showed me pictures with vertical scars that just screamed "breast
reduction" to me. And that's not what I want. I want a male-looking chest, not just a
reduction. Idiot. I've decided to go with the surgeon who actually said: "We want you
to be happy with the results." No one else said that. They all told me what they were
going to do and would not even take my questions or concerns into account.
June 2, 1997
Surgery is scheduled for the 10th, kind of a birthday present to myself. F. will take
some days off from work to spend with me, but I'm not sure how long it will be before I
can fend for myself.
I have tried to make preparations and not worry too much. My parents are freaking out,
and my dad did say something about how it scares him to think of one of his children
having surgery, any surgery.
July 15, 1997
The operation was June 10. I slept without need of painkillers, but I was really
hunched-over the following day. It hurt like hell to get up out of bed to go to the
bathroom. Like a searing, burning pain in my sides. Once I had the drains removed (that
was what hurt the most) I felt a lot better. Black and blue still in some spots, and numb
all around the chest. But my ribs are still sore.
F. took such good care of me. I don't really remember much from the first few days,
only that I slept sitting up and drank a lot of iced tea and ate soup and slept. The
doctor said it will take a good two weeks after surgery before I can really move around
much. I still can't sleep very well, my sides ache, and I can't lift my arms without pain.
Now that I've had the surgery done I think about getting back to the gym, but also
worry about doing too much too soon. The idea of freelancing for a living is no longer
appealing. I think I can do it, but do I want to? Now that I can go out and get a job in
the world and feel comfortable as me, why would I want to freelance and stay cooped up at
home all the time?
July 29, 1997
Met with my sister and brother this past week. God, I haven't seen my brother in years,
and there we were dressed almost identically. Unplanned and bizarre. Same haircut, too.
Freaky. So we do look like brothers, very similar. Except he's gotten a bit chubby. And my
sister being pregnant, with her belly, and then me. I thought I had filled out, but I look
like a stick next to them.
My brother and his wife seem very accepting, which is really nice. Almost an attitude
of "Of course this is what was expected." One less thing to worry about.
September 1997
Being accepted as a man at work is a great relief. At times it's thrilling just to hear
"he" when someone refers to me. It's such a simple thing, but it means so much.
It's what this has been all about, being seen as the person I feel I am. No questions.
Finally getting to be something I don't need to worry about.
I was worried that sexist comments or the kind of locker-room talk I imagined from
other guys would be something I'd have to navigate, but there really isn't much of that.
And the women I work with seem to be okay with me too. To them, I'm just another guy they
work with, and there isn't much else to say.
October 1997
Since the surgery I still don't feel 100 percent. Not as strong as I'd like to be. And
the acne, because of the hormones, is still a problem. It's so ironic that before I was on
testosterone I didn't really think of acne as the reason I wouldn't take off my shirt in
public. Now, I'd really like to go swimming, and it's not my chest that's the problem (my
chest looks fine, there are no scars and it's a very male chest complete with hair) --
it's the acne on my shoulders and back that makes me not want to go shirtless in public.
Stupid, but true.
I think about how many people just take who they are for granted. I try not to get all
sucked into self-pity, but I really wonder how many people in my life understand that for
over 30 years I have just existed, and now I'm finally able to be me, and really live.
I think about lower surgery every time I get undressed. Not so much for sex, or
aesthetics, or even to pee standing up (so important to others, I have discovered), but
for convenience really. The pants stuffer I have to wear is fine but it's not exactly complete.
I have been taking antidepressants since August, diagnosed with mild depression, but I
don't feel depressed. Just a lack of patience. All I have been doing for the past two
years is trying to get my life where it should be. And here I am, but I'm still not
"done," not just to me but also in so many people's eyes.
I have my birth certificate (changed after I sent along the letter of my
"irreversible gender change surgery"), and it is some consolation -- F. and I
can legally marry now. But, as H. says, we'll never be genetic. I know that and have
always known that. I try not to think it's all about my genitalia. A lot of times I just
don't think about it, but then I think of the things I can't do. Yes, I'm further along
than I was two years ago, or even a year ago. But still . . .
You are visitor
to arrive at this page since January 1, 2000.
Copyright © 1998-2005 by Anonymous
and Denise L. Moss-Fritch. All rights reserved.
Revised:
10 Feb 2008 20:47:20 -0800.