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Is there realy strength in numbers or are we individuals?
This post is prompted in some ways by the What %age of men actually do crossdress thread because I think the underlying premise is that there is strength [and, maybe, validation] in numbers. And perhaps one day this great hidden army of trannies will surface and make it OK for us to dress as we please, when we please etc. and without fear of ridicule.
I have never really found this tranny utopia very appealing and the day that the bloke next door comes home from work and slips into a plaid mini skirt and pink angora sweater for a quick round of golf with his mates is the day I stop dressing. But I recognize I’m pretty much on my own on that one.
Nevertheless, I think the community way forward is more about ordinary trannies who live hardworking, everyday suburban, city or country lives being quite open about the fact they are transgendered or transvestite or crossdresser or whatever label youve assigned to yourself. Its only then that we will gain some level of acceptance and understanding both personally and as a community.
The reality is, of course, there are all kinds of impediments to walking the walk.
I think a lot of trannies still have the secret life which is quite removed and totally disassociated from their everyday male lives. The mere social or family mention of drag queens on BB or sex change vicars in the news or Eddie Izzards latest tour causes a defensive reaction akin to rolling up in a ball like a hedgehog or spraying vile smelling words like a skunk in case someone might suss you mince round in stockings and high heels on your RDOs.
I was reading an interview with Ted Haggard, the fallen US evangelist who had regular sex with a male prostitute, who described his disassociated dark side and his struggles against this evil within himself. Im not a fan of US evangelists and its easy to write off Ted Haggard as another hypocritical religious right winger more interested in the collected money than doing the good work – however, I think a lot of trannies would connect to that ‘dark side’ thinking if not the religious overtones.
The situation is further complicated by the fact that there is sometimes [often?] a sexual motive to cross dressing – that doesn’t just bear thinking about let alone discussing – so it’s best you leave that secret life deep in the recesses of the old filing cabinet at the back of the tool shed. Fessing up may expose all kinds of awkward questions.
And then even when you get to the point where you do accept yourself and you are quite happy, even enthusiastic, about ‘coming out’. You’ve told your nearest and dearest – and guess what? Yes – that’s right – they slam on your brakes with a long list of who ought not to know. Discretion is the better part of valour or something. I read somewhere that a Scottish newspaper ran a survey asking women what would cause them to leave their partners and transvestism was one of the top 2 or 3 reasons given.
Of course you can still get out dressed and be visible as a tranny, can’t you? Well now comes another internal conflict, especially if you are transgendered, because the Holy Grail is passing as a woman. It’s the raison d’etre. Mind you – you’re probably still not passing and you have to be realistic about that fact? However getting to the point where you are going to fess up and hand over your Visa card in your male name, to the saleswoman in Jacquie E to pay for the top you’ve just tried on, is still a mental leap. A huge mental leap even if you know – she knows. You ‘hide’ behind a femme name on the ‘net and you’re going to hand your ID to this woman?
My point is that it doesn’t matter whether the %age is 3%, 10% or .01% until we, as individuals, can openly accept what we are and change the perception of those in our own world.
Fiona xx