Submitted by Magenta
 
I have begun to do something  that I wanted to do 55 years ago. I’ve started to shave - my face.  I remember watching my father when I was about 4 or 5, and wanted to  know when I would get to shave, when would I grow a penis like his.  I don’t remember his reply, but it made it clear that no such things  would happen. 
I was never the classic tomboy,   wearing jeans and playing baseball. I read all the time and wanted to  be indoors. But I certainly wasn’t the typical girl of the time; I  had no interest in clothes or talking to other girls, playing girls  games. I liked to cook, but since my dad cooked on Sunday, and my  younger  brother also liked to cook, it seemed a human trait, not gendered. I  did very little housework, just chores that seemed like make-work –  the rug looks perfectly clean, why vacuum it again, I did that last  week. Since my brother had chores as well, some of them worse than mine,   again, it seemed like something everyone did, not gendered. I don’t  think I read any gender into being allotted certain chores rather than  others. So my sense of gender was somewhat more fluid than others of  my age. 
When the hormones kicked in  around age 14, I was attracted to girls as well as boys. I was attracted   to people, not really knowing much about the physical possibilities  of sex. The book my mom gave me explained menstruation and babies and  all, and the father puts this special part of him in the mother. But  never why. My mom said because it feels good and it make you feel close,   but having someone put something in me sounded gross at 9. The hormones  gave me urges but no ideas or techniques. So I liked the idea of being  close to another person, but no idea of what to do. 
 
I had been nicknamed “it”  in junior high, partly because I didn’t sit with either the girls  or the boys in the lunchroom, only by myself with a book. I was  terminally  shy. I ended up with boys the first few times because I had no idea  how to start, and they did, or pretended well enough to fool me. This  was not intercourse, because this was the other 60’s, the suburban  60’s, when a teenage girl getting pregnant was still the WORST POSSIBLE  THING that could happen to her. This meant I learned lots of ways to  get myself off, and had about 3 years to learn about my body’s reactions   before I had intercourse with a male. 
Meanwhile, flipping though  a psychopathology textbook in a bookstore, I found a chapter on sexual  pathologies. There I learned the word “lesbian”, and said it was  more difficult to spot them because it wasn’t unusual for perfectly  normal women to hold hands with each other, and even kiss and hug. Women   were more affectionate than men. Hard to spot – no kidding. I didn’t  find one for years, despite living mostly in large cities. But I didn’t  go to bars, and that was the only gathering place in those days. 
 
It took me to my mid-twenties  that I had my first real sexual experience with another woman. By then,  I’d learned the word bi-sexual, and claimed it for my own. I was  attracted  to both women and men, no matter what actually happened to me in bed.  Males were still easier; heck it was difficult to avoid them. I never  wanted children, nor conventional marriage. I was lucky to become sexual   active at a time when the pill and penicillin made sex safer than any  other time in history, before or since. 
All along, I wasn’t sure  I was really a woman. I have strong secondary sex characteristics –  big boobs and hips, round face, little body hair - I’m short. I used  to wear my hair long, partly because I hate getting it cut. While I  look very female, it doesn’t match my interior experience. Dresses  felt like drag, so I seldom wore them, except for absolutely necessary  occasions – job interviews, formal weddings and funerals and so on.  These days, even that isn’t usually necessary. Jeans and t-shirts  are my uniform, and I like it that way. I don’t wear cosmetics, and  I don’t like the color pink. I hate high heels and bras. 
 
So now I’m getting old. I’m  noticing all the sexual traits are blurring. Age may bring wisdom, as  well as end of periods, cramps, PMS, and the possibilities and risks  of childbearing. I don’t want a beard – I like the clean-shaven  look. But watching older people, I notice that the faces blur into one  gender – old. “Priscilla, Queen of the Desert” was on TV last  night. Terence Stamp is amazing; give him long hair and dresses, and  he looks like a women. And I’m noticing that among people I know.  Gender becomes more fluid, changeable, ambiguous. 
 
I feel more comfortable now  that my periods have stopped. I am used to the organs I have, they  aren’t  the shock they sometimes were at 15 or 20. Back then, when I was most  dissatisfied with being biologically female, it was next to impossible  to transition FTM. I asked a psychiatrist about it, and he (of course  he) said I’d feel better about myself once I was married and had a  few kids. RIGHT.  But I was terrified of surgery, any surgery.  I didn’t know of any other options, like hormones. There might not  have been any options for me, besides learn to live with it.
 
So now age is performing its own genderblurring on me. I wonder what it will be like at 70, 80, 90. I’ll wear jeans and sturdy shoes. I’ll cuddle whoever I’m attracted to. I’ll keep the short hair, because it’s easy. And unless I really get enough hair for a proper beard, I’ll shave my chin.
 
