The Subversive | Volume Two

Another issue of the online magazine I published in the early 1990s

THE SUBVERSIVE

Number 2

DECLARATION OF PURPOSE

“This journal exists to promote the concept that each human is a unique individual, intrinsically entitled with an equal right to pursue his own destiny as far as it does not inhibit others in that same right.  The Subversive shall serve as a ready forum for the free expression and exchange of ideas that do not violate this mandate, in the belief that tolerance grows from a familiarity with variety.”

                                 –signed,

                                                 Melanie Anne Phillips, Editor

——————————————–

WHERE TO FIND THE SUBVERSIVE:

Available FREE as a download on America Online, Compuserve, Genie, several servers on the Internet, and various BBS around the world.

For those who wish to contribute articles, stories, personal experiences, information, jokes, or whatever Email melaniexx@aol.com on Internet, or write to:

Melanie Anne Phillips

150 East Olive Avenue

Suite 203

Burbank, California 91502

Only original material will be accepted unless quoted in the context of an original work or submitted with credit to the original author along with permission to reprint the material.

NOTE: It is my desire to make this publication available free to all who wish to read it.  However, due to copyright laws, any overall license would allow unscrupulous individuals to excerpt portions and use it for their own personal gain.  Therefore, should you wish to upload this publication on your BBS or simply generate hardcopies for support groups and friends, please write me about a free specific license for your purpose. 

————————————————————

EXPLORATIONS

by

Melanie Anne Phillips, Editor

As a professional writer, I kept a transition diary from my first day or hormone therapy to arriving back at the station from Sex Reassignment Surgery two and a half years later.  From time to time, I have printed excerpts from my diary in the Gender News.  The response has been so positive that it has become my desire to publish that journal as a book. But since it is difficult to find a publisher for such subjects, and since there is a one to two year lead time from acceptance by a publisher until the book hits the stands, I have decided to share it with those who can use it most in a serialized presentation here in The Subversive.

Each month, I will print one month from the diary.  Which means the entire series will not be completed for another two and a half years!  Still and all, at least it will be available to those who might benefit from it.

In respect for those who are represented in the text, some names have been changed to protect those who might be compromised by the frank nature of this document.  And now, without further discussion, here is the first installment of my book, ” RAISED BY WOLVES: A TRANSSEXUAL DIARY”

PRELUDE

The pages beneath, chronicle my 18 month journey from a life as an apparently normal husband and father to that of an apparently  normal woman.  In the hope of capturing the immediacy of this emotional trip into the unknown, I shunned the retrospective approach, opting instead for a daily Diary.

Each entry was made on the day the events actually happened, expect as noted.  And each is filled with the raw and unpolished thoughts and feelings that held me at that moment.

Of course, this leads to a somewhat meandering story, as well as contradictions in my point-of-view and personal emotional outbursts that I’m sure will make me squirm once this is published.  But anything less would be less than truthful.  And if this document is to serve any purpose as either a tool for tolerance and understanding or as an inspiration to those contemplating any major life-change, then it must be completely honest.

RAISED BY WOLVES:

A TRANSSEXUAL DIARY

by

Melanie Anne Phillips

FOREWORD

As I write these words, I am still a man.  But that will soon change.  The hormone therapy I began two months ago is already altering both mind and body.  Soon, the person known as Dave will cease to exist and the new person of Melanie shall be born.

So it is with a strange mixture of sadness and elation, suffering and joy, that I pen these words.  For in order for Melanie to live, Dave must die.  No, I am not a “split” personality.  But just as there are many aspects of Melanie that cannot be expressed in the role of Dave, there are many facets of Dave that can no longer be explored as Melanie.

So, my life as a man has reached an impasses.  My development as a male is to be cut off, both figuratively and literally.  And yet, I gladly lay my life down for her.  For I have come to know Melanie intimately as a beautiful person: warm compassionate, creative, insightful.  I love her.  Indeed, if I were able to meet Melanie face to face, I would surely remain Dave and devote all my days to pleasing her and basking in the blow of her joyous outlook.  But such can never be, and Dave must die for Melanie to live.

I do not know what the future holds; no one ever does.  But I do know that the course I have charted is truly the only one open to me.  Any other path leads to certain disaster, as great, gaping chunks of my personality would whither, fester, and die.

So, I close with a wish for the new woman about to be born:  May your outer beauty match the inner beauty I have come to know and love.  May hour days be long and fruitful.  May you find happiness where I have found pain, and contentment from my frustration.

And may you have no regrets.

David Michael Phillips

Burbank, California

October 3, 1989

SETTING:

As my first entry starts somewhat into my story, a brief background is essential to an understanding of the text.

As of August 1st, 1989, when this journal began, I was living entirely as Dave – father, husband, small business owner, and free-lance writer/director/editor in the film business.  I had been married for thirteen years to Mary, with a ten-year-old son, and a six-year-old daughter.  My family life was good, my career growing, my future bright, but still something was missing.

I had first felt “different” in kindergarten, where all the other little boys seemed to know instinctively how to act, but I had to struggle to learn the male role by rote: it did not come naturally.  I never considered the possibility I had the instincts of a female; I simply thought I had none at all.

By age seven, I was regularly sneaking off to dress in the girls’ clothes my mother brought in as part of her short-lived ironing business.  This was well before puberty and was not an erotic experience, but rather a feeling of completeness and contentment.

Throughout my teenage years, the need to dress as a female came and went in waves, sometimes intense, sometimes absent for years at a time.

I was nonagressive in school, both in sports and dating, and excelled at neither. My only erotic interests were not in what I could do to or with a woman, but what it would be like to be one.

I married as a virgin in 1976, and the longings to be female vanished more than they were there.  But, gradually, as I progressed through adult life, the waves became stronger and more frequent.  Only twice in my life (both times in my early teen years) had I ventured out as a female, both with such tension from fear of discovery, that I did not attempt this again until three years before this journal began.

Suddenly, the need to move in society as a woman became overwhelming, and within two months, I had made nearly a dozen outings, tentative at first, then growing more bold as I gained confidence in my ability to “pass” without being “read”.

I never confided in anyone, relative, friend, or professional, and was never “caught”.  I began to take an interest in hormones as a means of edging closer to the female self-image I had created in my mind.  I began with low dose mail-order hormone creams, then, finding them to be practically useless, began forging prescriptions over the phone for birth control pills, all to avoid admitting my situation to anyone, even a qualified physician or psychologist.

Throughout this period, I was constantly “purging” myself of this “awful” desire.  Full of guilt I would throw away all my pills, wigs, clothes, and any other accumulations, only to be driven to rebuild my accouterments scant days later.

Finally, I came to the decision that this secret side, if not dealt with openly, would lead to self-destruction and the loss of not only my self-respect, but the love of those I loved.  So, at the end of July 1989, I mustered the courage to call a gender “hotline” and get a referral to a doctor who provided hormone therapy to transsexuals.  This Diary begins with my preparations for that appointment.

————————————–

August 1, 1989

I was incredibly nervous as I prepared to venture out as Melanie for the first time in nearly a year.  I had made arrangements with my dad to watch the kids for the day, and had taken my old clothes, make-up and wig out of plastic bag storage in the garage.  Earlier in the morning, I had used my old supply of “Nair” to get rid of the hair on my legs and arms.  Once again I felt the excitement of feeling soft and sensual!

It took a long time to get everything just right, but eventually, I was satisfied that even if I looked awful, it was enough to convince the doctor that I was serious.  In truth, I needed to make the breakthrough into the mainstream of actual medical care so strongly, that I would have walked a gauntlet or red-necks in three-inch heels to latch onto a program that would lead where I wanted to go.

I checked my appearance one final time.  Hair – ratty, make-up – cakey, skirt – laughably short, high-heeled shoes – preposterous.  In summary, I was ready.  I sneaked out of the house, slunk into my car, and boldly set off to find my destiny.

Driving through the city and down the freeway was exhilarating.  I knew that I was a woman to all who saw me, and I anxiously hoped with every fiber of my being that the doctor would see fit to make that dream a reality.

The medical center itself was a modern ten-story facility, not the sleazy back-room affair I had anticipated.  I parked across the street and (after some hunting) found the front entrance.  I went looking for room 1009, but there were only two levels in this part of the building.  I had no idea where to find the office, nor the certainty that I could (with my nervousness) pull off a conversation to get directions.

Just when I was feeling most distressed, a ten-year-old boy showed up out of nowhere, took one look at me and asked if I needed some help.  I told him, in a breaking voice, the number of the office I wanted.  He said it was in the other building, and asked if I knew how to get there.  I replied in bad falsetto that I didn’t.  He said, “Do you want me to show you?”  I gagged out, “Sure…”  He said, “Come on…” and bolted down the hall.

I don’t know if he was the son of someone who worked there, or perhaps a patient himself.  But he darted down the corridors and around corners like he had designed the place.  The only question he ever asked was, “Are you going for plastic surgery?”  Thanks a lot, kid!  Anyway, after two minutes of mind-boggling twists and turns (him run-walking and me trotting gracelessly down the slippery floors in high heels) we arrived at the elevators.  “Tenth floor”, he said, smiled, and left as mysteriously as he had arrived.  “Thank you!”, I croaked as he disappeared around a bend.

Fortunately, the elevator was empty, and I was unmolested, embarrassed or ashamed on the way up.  The doors opened revealing the tenth floor: the location of my destiny.  I stepped into the hall and checked the office listings until I found the prescribed number.  Gripping the knob with a sweaty but determined hand, I gave it a turn and stepped inside.

The room was small, but well decorated (by waiting room standards).  There was one short, round lady sitting in the corner and the reception desk straight ahead.  I walked up, asked for Ann, as I had been instructed to do, and was told to sit down and wait.

No sooner had I lowered myself, as lady-like as possible into a chair, but the plumpish, weathered woman began to speak.  In broken English, she told me the story of her life; her days in San Francisco, her stint as a land-lady and run-in with the Housing Authority, the death of her husband and how she coped.  All the while, she rarely required a reply (thank God!) content to have a live body as audience that had not been initiated into her life previously.

I nodded with sympathy and understanding, peppered with an occasional “uh huh…”, and she seemed not only satisfied, but almost euphoric.  Once, the nurse caught my eye and smiled knowingly, in empathy with my ordeal.

Finally, my name was called, and I stood to the window to fill out information and answer questions.  Then, out of nowhere, the nurse asked if I wanted to buy the pills today.  I was shocked!  After years of felonies committed forging prescriptions for birth-control pills, suddenly here was another human being, a qualified, legitimate medical professional just GIVING them to me!  “Yes!”, I stammered, fumbling the required twenty-two dollars out of my purse.

Bill paid, the door opened and I was beckoned inside so meet my future.  I flushed from head to toe as I crossed that threshold into the unknown.

I was ushered down the hall to an examining room, where the nurse sat me down, handed me a bottle of 100 2.5 mg estrogen pills, “Take one a day, and don’t miss any!”, and took my blood pressure.  I just kept staring at that bottle, unable to take my eyes from it, transfixed to the reality and weight of the decision I was about to make.

The doctor came in, asked some routine questions and told me to “bend over the table.” for a prostrate exam.  I hardly noticed the pain.

Finally, Ann came back with two syringes, one for vitamins and one, the fateful one, with a mix of estrogen and progesterone in sesame oil for slow release.  She asked me to stand and raise my skirt.  I complied, my heart racing as I contemplated the path I was beginning, the reality of a lifetime of dreams.

I stared out of the tenth floor window, across the city, bustling with thousands of ant-like people, going about their daily routines, unaware of the change of life that was about to occur 100 feet above them.  I stared out toward the ocean, across the universe, across the years, as my entire life collapsed into an abstract desire whose fulfillment would begin with the sharp prick of the needle that hovered behind me.  And then, I felt the tiny pain as the steel shaft slid into the tissue of my derriere, then slowly deposit its cargo of womanhood, rushing into my system, realigning the workings of my entire anatomy, so that its new responses would ultimately transform me into a true and undeniable woman.  That brief moment lasted an eternity for me as I savored the upwelling of emotion, knowing that I had the courage to take that first step.  And, now that I had, there would be no going back.  I was on the road to womanhood, and I would not stop until I reached my destination.

I fixed my clothes, left the office, and felt incredibly feminine as I sashayed down the hall, riding the most pleasurable high I have ever experienced.  Down the elevator and back to the car.  Onto the freeway and across town.  Into the driveway and the house.  It all blurred together with the knowledge that the hormones were working already.  Carrying their undeniable commands to all parts of my body.  Telling my most basic systems, “This is a woman, do your job!”

I didn’t come down all day, and I fell asleep with a smile on my face.

(Written the morning after, August 2, 1989)

[Author’s note:  There are about three weeks missing between the first diary entry and the second.  I had no idea at the time, that I would be documenting my transition so fully, and had only written the first entry since I am a writer by trade and by love.  Writing for me has always been a natural way to work out my feelings.  Nonetheless, several important events transpired before my entries became regular, so I document them here for clarity.  The Saturday following my first Doctor’s appointment there was a support group meeting hosted by the fellow who had recommended the hormone doctor to me.  Mary did not yet know about my recent hormone use, although I had told her of my fantasy of being female a year ago, and had even confessed I had tried hormones briefly.  After that, I had grown a mustache to prove to her that I would not follow that direction any further than fantasy.  So, I elected not to tell her I was on hormones, but tell her only about the support group meeting and use that as an excuse for having shaved off my mustache.

She did not like my going out dressed as Melanie, and refused to see me dressed as a woman, instead taking the kids to a movie so I could get ready in peace.

It took me three hours to put myself together in those days, and I needed every minute.  I was more nervous than I had ever been as the time drew near.  Being summer, it was still light when I finally left at 6 pm, sure that the neighbors would find out.

The drive was scary, but exhilarating.  I had actually never met another transsexual and had no contact or knowledge of the community so I had no idea what to expect.

The meeting was at a private home in the San Fernando Valley, in the midst of a typical suburban neighborhood.  I parked my car and gingerly made my way up the walk.  I couldn’t tell where to enter from: there were several doors.  I knocked on one, but got no response.  I began to fear that I had the address or the time wrong and that some angry homeowner would leap out with a shotgun and end the adventure right there.

Finally, I moved around to the alcove and saw a note taped to the door: “Welcome, Come on in”.  Would there be five people there?  Fifty?  Would any of them also be “dressed”?  (I was wearing the same outlandish outfit I had worn to the doctor’s – it was the only one I had).  Most important, would they think I was pretty?

I was the second one to arrive.  The host, Lee Risenburg, introduced me to the first guest, a middle-aged man named Bill.  I was the only one dressed as a woman.  I felt like an absolute fool.  Lee urged me to sit anywhere.  I selected a spot on the couch across from them.  And they returned to their animated conversation.  I felt completely out of place.

Three or four other men arrived for the 6:30 pre-meeting class on Gender Identification, and none of them were dressed either.  At this point I would have left in a flash, except THAT would have embarrassed me even more.

Finally the class started, and Lee illustrated the differences between anatomical sex (male or female) sexual preference (straight, gay, or bi) and gender identity (masculine or feminine).  He explained how none of them were tied together and any combination was possible.  I finally began to understand for the first time, just what nature of beast I was.

Toward the end of the 90 minute class, other people started to filter in for the support group portion of the meeting.  And some of them were “dressed”!!!  FINALLY!!!! I was not alone!

Eventually, about 30 people had arrived: gays, bis, TVs, pre-op and post-op transsexuals.  REAL transsexuals!  I had never been so close!  Everyone was warm and friendly, even the truck drivers in the tutus (not really, but that was the impression a couple of them gave.

The one thing that impressed me the most, was that each of these people was friendly, sincere, respectful, and willing to accept everyone for whatever and whoever they were.  No ridicule, no recrimination.

The format was a round robin, and at my turn, I had my first experience impressing people with who I was.  I was nervous, to be sure, and my voice was a joke.  I kept trying to gesture in a feminine manner, but managed only to look stiff and stilted.  Still and all, the group accepted me as one of their own and I felt like I had come home.

Afterward, I ended up talking at length with the guest who was there when I  arrived, Bill  It turned out that was HIS first meeting as well.  He was TV, but had never dressed in front of anyone.  He was also a writer and asked if I might like to co-author something with him.  I agreed, and we exchanged phone numbers.

Later in the week, he called and invited me to lunch at the Rose City Diner in Pasadena, not far from the route of the Tournament of Roses Parade (whose official film I had edited for two years previously.)

I arrived with excitement, as I had never gone to an eating establishment as a woman before, nor had I as a woman had lunch with a man.

He greeted me outside with a handshake.  When we walked to the door, he opened it for me.  Hey, this was great!  He gave his name to the waitress and it was only a moment before a table opened up.

It never occurred to me that the woman is supposed to go first behind the waitress (you never think about what you don’t do) so it wasn’t until he indicated I should that I finally realized I was screwing up already!

I then realized that here was my first trip out that wasn’t just a quick romp and he had selected the busiest diner in all of Southern California at the peak of lunch hour!  And the tables were all open, so I would be in full view with nowhere to hide.

I looked over the menu, and selected the Chicken Salad, as the item least likely to attract attention.  He ordered for me, “The young lady will have…”  We talked for a while, man and woman out for lunch, and then the order arrived – with fanfare!

Here was the biggest chicken salad I had ever seen!  A tostada shell filled about a foot high with every imaginable garnish.  The waitress had to strain to carry it!  Every eye in the place turned to see who had ordered this monstrosity.  So much for anonymity!  (To this day, I have not been able to order a chicken salad in a restaurant!)

Well, I made it through the meal, and actually had a good time.  After lunch, we walked up and down the streets of Old Towne Pasadena, stopping in shops and talking about his story that we might work on together.  We said goodbye with another handshake and went our separate ways.

Meanwhile, the hormones began to take affect.  As predicted, on the 10th day after my first shot, my nipples began to swell slightly – actually more of a puffiness – and became tender.

I have never been able to keep a secret from Mary, so once again, I broke down and told her everything.  She was upset, but we did not have an argument.  In fact, we discussed the issues rather calmly, and even arrived at a tentative agreement that would allow us to stay together.  The confrontation I had dreaded never really materialized.  In fact, it was something of a let down.  I almost yearned for, no, REQUIRED a major event, just to mark or prove my resolve.  But it didn’t happen, and that left me feeling somewhat unsettled, almost as if nothing had really happened at all.

It was in this state of unfulfilled confusion that I made my next entry.

August 25, 1989

So much has happened, but nothing’s occurred.  The hurricane I call my life surrounds my quiet eye with a turmoil of events, and yet all of them collectively are a process, not a condition, and nothing tangible has congealed in the gale; perhaps it never will.

It all goes back to my childhood, and with any luck, it would’ve stayed there. But such is not my lot.  The seeds planted in my young mind by environment, were nurtured in the fertility of my genetic stew.  The twisting vines that sprang forth have so entwined my psyche as to be indistinguishable from it.

I believe myself to be female, from the inside out.  The question poised upon resolution is: have I become female from subconscious efforts on my part to achieve that condition, or have I always been of that kiln and only now am realizing it?

Hopefully, Time will tell, while it heals all wounds.

August 25, 1989

Bill called me again a couple of days after our first “date”.  I thanked him for a good time and told him how natural it had felt for me.  He told me that he had to keep reminding himself that I wasn’t actually a woman, and I put on a breathy voice and told him, “Don’t remind yourself.”  He said okay.

Our conversation drifted through many areas including my admission that for the first time in my life, I was attracted to a man.  I told him I found his quiet strength, but gentle eyes very sexy.  He admitted that ever since the support group meeting, he had been extremely attracted to me. But he was worried, as he was married and totally straight.  I told him not to worry, he was just responding to the woman he saw, not to the remaining male underneath.

He had told his wife about our meeting, but not that I was meeting him as Melanie.  She responded that it was okay, as long as he didn’t bring me home.  But as the conversation ended, he asked again if I wanted to write with him and I told him I very much wanted to.  He decided that it was best to meet at his home, so we agreed.

All week long, I thought about the upcoming meeting and found myself hoping that I would have my first experience with a guy.  If things went as I wanted to, I’d experience my first kiss.

The day before our meeting I found myself doing all kinds of female things to get ready that I had heard about but never done myself.  I bought a new skirt: a pleated, frilly thing, just so I would look more desirable and feminine.

The day of the meeting I spent twice as long as usual with my make-up, intentionally wore the pull-over top he had first seen me in, and added a second spray of perfume.  In short, I was a female planning to trap my man.

When I arrived, we began to work on the story, but as he is TV and I am TS, the conversation naturally drifted.  I re-iterated that I was confused by my new feelings toward the “opposite sex”.  He admitted that he was worried by how much he was thinking of a relationship with me, when he was a happily married man.

I allowed myself to begin to cry, knowing exactly what effect that would have on him.  And he responded as planned.  He opened his arms and said, “Come here…”  I melted into his embrace and clung to his strong arms while he held me tight and comforted me.

It’s hard to describe the feelings that went through my head at that moment.  For the first time in my life, my need to be cuddled and protected was being fulfilled.  I was not expected to be strong, to hold my emotions in check.  I could respond as I felt, weak and helpless, and let him take control.  These were the same needs I had gotten married in order to fulfill fourteen years ago, but had never found in my marriage.

Well, I pulled myself together and we returned to the story for the few remaining minutes before we both had to leave.  But at the door, as I was fiddling in my purse for my keys, I heard him say again behind me, “Come here…”  I turned and found his arms open for me.  I eased into them and felt him hold me tight.  I held him close, then, in mutual need, we loosened our grips slightly, looked into each other’s eyes for a fleeting moment, as if to confirm what we both wanted, then our lips met for mere seconds in a tentative, almost brother/sister kiss.

We again fell into each others arms, then broke away and nervously fumbled our way to the door.  We each left for our cars without another word or glance.  But all the way home I basked in the afterglow of the completeness I had finally achieved for the first time in my thirty-six years.

Afterward, I went to my weekly doctor appointment, more anxious than ever for another dose of the medication that was making me into the woman I wanted to be; the woman I NEEDED to be…

August 29, 1989

Mary has been much more content today, and her almost-happiness has made my depressive clouds evaporate.  It seems she has accepted my offer that I will not appear in her presences as Melanie, will not tell the kids until they find out for themselves, and will remain faithful to her as long as we stay together.  In exchange, she will remain through the hormone treatment and even SRS.  I can have an outside life as Melanie, as long as it doesn’t get back to her.

Now I realize, of course, that this is only a temporary solution.  Within the space of several moths to a year, it will be extremely difficult for me to successfully appear as a male.  And as soon as the kids crawl up on my chest, they’re going to know something is up!

Plus, there’s the terrible strain of leading a double life, while trying to develop one of those lives and whither the other.  But at least it gives us both time to find ourselves, and most important, it gives Mary the chance to accept the changes and perhaps even allow me to go “full-time” and still keep our relationship.  And after all, it works for Clark Kent, doesn’t it?

August 30, 1989

It’s so hard to know when I’ve really decided anything.  Just as soon as I think my true drives and emotions are coming into view, another life-changing revelation jumps in to screw things up!  But today, so many pieces QUIETLY fell into place that I trust this new view, as it cam in like a lamb.  A very STRONG lamb, to be sure, but not with bells and whistles.

I was at the lumber yard with an old Boy Scout friend, Chuck.  While he was having some cutting done, I wandered down the isles of stacked lumber, breathing in the fragrance of freshly cut wood.  Pleasant emotional memories began to filter through my mind like sunlight through the sawdust.

I remembered my woodshop days in Junior High; the smooth, solid feel of the finished pieces, the deep glow of the polished varnish, the satisfaction of creating an object of beauty and function from a simple block of wood.  And I remembered trips that Mary and I had taken to the lumber store throughout our marriage.  I re-enjoyed the thrill of picking out just what I needed for a project: a project that had her totally confused.  Not that she couldn’t have easily done the job herself, but that it was MY domain, the HUSBAND’S domain, and she chose not to tread there.

Suddenly, I realized that these were aspects of the male life I didn’t want to give up.  Sometimes I enjoy and want to continue to enjoy being the knowledgeable protector and handyman.  This didn’t lessen my desire to be the submissive and protected partner, but rather to add that to the other facets of my life as well.

In that moment, in a gentle revolution, my male and female persons merged and melded for the first time.  I was not longer Dave or Melanie, I was me.  ME!!!  I didn’t have to conform to either role, regardless of the sex I ultimately choose to be.  All at once, I didn’t care what others thought of my attitudes, gestures, or activities. All I needed was to be true to myself in either role, and the rest of the world could come along or get lost.

This was not an emotion of vindictiveness, but of freedom.  I cannot recall a time in my life when I was not secretly terrified to cross a street for fear of what the oncoming pedestrians would think of me.  It didn’t matter what I thought of myself, but just the image I projected to them; and I was not at all sure of that!  I was self-conscious of my walk, my arm movements, my thin wrists.  I frequently would pretend to scratch an itch on my face, just to raise my wedding ring where it could be seen: a badge for all to acknowledge that at least someone thought I was male enough to marry, so I must be okay, no matter what YOU think, NYAHH!!!

But that afternoon, I walked down the street outside my office, drifting with the clouds, feeling the light breeze on my face and listening to the rumbling sound of the traffic, like mechanical babbling of a concrete brook.  And everyone encountered was not a test to be passed, but a fellow human being of no greater or lesser value than myself.  Thirty-three years of affected gesticulation fell away, and I walked without conscious control, swinging my arms without concern in whatever manner felt natural, without censorship.

I cannot recall a time in which I had not constantly been aware of every movement, at least on a subliminal level, to prevent any possibility of disapproval by even casual acquaintances, even STRANGERS, for that matter!  But today, I simply let all that go, or perhaps it was taken from me.  Today I became myself, not anyone’s expectations of me.

This evening, at home, Mary told me she had shared our problem with a friend at work – a gay guy whom she often jokes with.  That, to me, was her most significant reaction since this all started.  Because, what this really means is that she has finally accepted that what I have been telling her is real: not just a strange imagining.  She may never come to terms with it, at at least she is truly acknowledging it.  Thank God!

August 31, 1989

Today may have been the most uneventful since this all began.  It’s strange to contemplate that someday, the changes I have set in motion may seem commonplace.  Then years later: the excitement has worn off, the struggle nearly forgotten.  The strangeness of my new body has become its normal feel, and the question, even awareness of what sex I am, what gender, never enters my conscious thought.

What then of my life?  The wind still blows, the sun still shines.  What will I have gained?  Perhaps nothing.  So what will I have lost?  Perhaps everything.  Or perhaps the other way around.  Ask me again in ten years.

Tonight, Mary told me she had confided in another friend at work.  This confirms my view that she is coming to terms with the reality of the situation.  She was given a recommendation by both of her confidants to see the same psychologist for counseling.  Amazingly, she has taken the advice and intends to meet with a professional.

I worry about her; I worry about myself too, of course, and THAT is mostly what I consider at the intellectual level, but for Mary I worry with my heart.  I do not know if I can live a life without her.  But I suspect I could not live a life without following my own needs.  If the two diverge, I am not sure what I will do.

So, now that she is facing it all and now that she is talking to someone who can help, I know that she will become strong.  There is a deep sense of loss in this, as I know that I will no longer be the one she comes to for strength, but will either find it within herself or from someone else.  Rather than being her source of conflict, I will, or perhaps have already, become the object of her fears or anguish.  I cannot wish her not to find that comfort; I love her too much, but as I write these words, my eyes fill with tears that I am not the one providing it.

Mixed with my own fear and anguish is a strange excitement, an almost giddy elation that at thrity-three years of dreams may ACTUALLY become REALITY. To really awaken in the morning and know that I am truly a woman, not in fantasy, not in costume, but in actuality, fills me with a jittery nervousness of anticipation: a school-girl rush just before her first date.

I intend to let Mary read this entry when I am through, and though I know she will be disheartened, perhaps even disgusted by these admissions, I need her to know.  I need her to know that I do not bring this upon us from lack of love or insensitivity, but from a driving force so strong that, left denied, it would have torn us both apart in years to come, or at best doomed me to a private hell of always wondering, yearning to find out and feeling my life had never been more than a series of days.

If I could change this, I would.  And the fact that I enjoy it so much makes it all the harder to defend as a need.  But the lack of joy is the need, and the need fulfilled becomes the joy.  Will I follow this through?  Can I live without the half of my life that Mary represents?  Will God smile upon me and let me have both?  Somehow I doubt He will.  There is always a price for inner peace and perhaps perpetual grief is mine.

(Copyright 1992, Melanie Anne Phillips)

(The Transsexual Diary series will continue in the next edition of The Subversive)

—————————————————

MAKE UP TIPS

A continuing series by Mary Kay representative,

Lynda J1

“BLUSHER”

Blusher is often more difficult to apply than eye makeup.  You may be wondering which type of blusher is right for you,  what color you should choose, and how to apply it correctly.

First let’s talk about types of blusher.  There are basically 5 types of blusher:  liquid rouge, cream rouge, cream blusher, powder blusher, and blushing gel.  Liquid rouge is a very thin, water based cheek color.  It is difficult to blend and without LOTS of practice, very difficult to keep from looking like you have a high fever!

                Cream rouge usually comes in one neutral color.  It can be used alone or as a base for powder blusher.  Alone, this formula is recommended for dry and normal skin.  When used as a base for powder blush, it gives “all day” color that needs very few touch ups.  This combination is perfect for those with skin that seems to absorb color.  Either way, cream rouge in one neutral color is a versatile product that blends well with any skin tone so there’s no chance of choosing the wrong shade.  It provides long-lasting color with minimum touch-ups.

Cream blusher (Mary Kay’s Creamy Cheek Color) blends easily with a few finger strokes.  It gives natural looking color to dry, normal, and combination skin types.  This too can be used alone or under powder cheek color for long-lasting wear.  This formula blends especially well with cream or liquid foundations.

                Powder cheek color gives a natural color and a matte (no shine) finish.  It can be used alone or with cream rouge or Creamy Cheek Color.  Powder cheek color is compatible with all skin types and is especially recommended for oily skin.  One word of caution for those of you with dry skin:  be sure the powder blusher you choose has conditioning ingredients for dry skin.  Some powder blushers can irritate dry skin.

Blushing gel gives a natural looking color, but it will often remove foundation and if you try to blend too much, it will come off, taking the foundation with it.  It works well on bare skin when just a hint of color is desired.

Choosing the right color is a little more complicated.  The most important thing to remember is that the color should look natural.  You want to have a healthy blush, not the look of a straining weight-lifter!  Of course if you want a day off work, you could apply with a heavy hand for a “high fever” look.  🙂

The best way to find a shade that is right for you is by determining your level of contrast.  For example, if you have fair skin and blonde or gray hair, your level of contrast is low.  If your skin is fair and your hair is dark, your level of contrast is high.  If you would like more information about determining your personal level of contrast and specific recommendations of colors that are right for you, please don’t hesitate to send e-mail to Lynda J1 stating your hair, eye, and complexion colors.  I would be very happy to help by making recommendations for colors that are just right for you, personally. 

The next thing you will want to determine is your wardrobe colors.  If you wear mostly cool colors like blue, cool greens, purple, and the darker shades of red, you’ll want to pick a blusher shade with cool undertones such as light pinks, rose shades, or those with a hint of lavender or dark red.

If you wear mostly yellows, oranges, and bright reds, you’ll want to select a blusher with warm undertones such as coral or peach shades.

I Want to Make You Blush!

 Cream rouge gives a natural looking blush and is easy to blend.  T-or lose Your level of contrast determines which specific shade in a color family will give you the best results.

Besides level of contrast and coordinating cheek color to wardrobe color, it is important to apply the blusher correctly.  The secret to correct application is first to locate the cheek bones.  These are the bones just under the eyes.  Use your fingertips to feel the cheekbones from just under the temple under the eyes to the center of your nose.  This will give you a general idea of where to place your blusher.

For liquid rouge, blush rouge, creamy cheek color, or blush gel the general rule is to place three tiny dots of color along the cheekbone:

1. Just below the temple.

2. At the outer edge of the eye.

3. At the outer edge of the iris.

Then, gently blend with fingertips using outward strokes toward the hairline at the temple.  Finish with loose powder to set the blusher.

For powder blusher, set foundation with loose powder first, then begin applying blusher just below the temple (where you want the most color) and blend along the cheekbone toward the nose.  Your blusher brush should be 3/4 to 1 inch wide depending on the size of your face.  Smaller faces need the smaller brush.

For those with an average or wide face shape, blend powder blusher along the cheekbone, no closer than two fingers-width from the nose.  For those with a narrow face, no closer that three fingers-width.

When blending powder blusher, use a straight brush stroke for a wide face, an underhand stroke (like a smile) for the average face shape, and an overhand stroke (like a frown) for the narrow face.

A few final notes on blusher.  New lip and eye colors for fall are rich and sultry.  When you use strong color on eyes or lips, keep the cheek color subtle so colors don’t compete for attention.  Coordinate your cheek and lip colors by keeping them in the same color family, warm or cool.  If you look a little washed-out when wearing black, don’t automatically reach for more blusher.  Try a rosier shade of foundation first.  That will give an all-over, natural-looking skin tone that looks great with darker colors.

Next time:  Eye Color.  If you have specific questions about eye shadows and/or eye liner, write to me.  If you have suggestions for future articles, I’d love to hear about it.  I’m here to serve you!  If you have questions or comments, send e-mail to Lynda J1.  All questions will receive a personal reply.  Those of general interest will be addressed in this column (No names will be used.)

Editor’s Note:  Remember, Lynda J1 is YOUR Mary Kay Representative.  Support her efforts here by placing your orders with her, a real nice way to say “Thank You!”  All orders are held in confidence, and orders will be shipped in plain wrapping.  And you’ll never find a more understanding or knowledgeable make-up consultant for your special needs.

—————————————————

“Crossdresser in JC Penny’s”

By Pam36C

Lingerie Anyone?

On a recent lingerie buying trip at J C Penny with a girlfriend Charlotte we were standing at the cash register, trying to carry on a casual conversation with the store

representative. Charlotte noticed something and she nudged me then nodded in the direction of an elderly couple. They looked as if they were in their sixties plus or minus a few

years, and we could tell they were intently shopping for a bra. In the next few minutes we noticed that it was he who was accepting or rejecting her choices. He was looking for a

certain style and/or size bra.    Upon further scrutiny and a few giggles (silent of course) we noticed a very clean shaven face on this man. For a few seconds we both watched him locked in an almost obsessive trance. We were watching the couple but primarily

him. Suddenly they separated, she, still looking at the various styles, he, looking and touching certain styles and a certain size 36’s.    He very nonchalantly walked around this one display of

beautiful bras. Looking at some high up, above eye level, he pulled one of the bras slightly away from the others. Then he inspected the inside, No! This wasn’t the right one.

After some other inspections he came to a rack a little closer to us. He was still by himself, touching and looking for just the right bra. It seemed longer but I know it

probably only took a few minutes. We were unaware of everything around us, as I said earlier we were sort of in a trance. This man knew just what he was looking for. He was

undistracted in his determination and to the point of almost robot like in his search.    Charlotte finished her transaction and we turned to leave. Quietly we briefly discussed if we should have

approached this man and given him an Alpha Omega card (if we would have had one). Alas discretion regained control of us and we went our way, back to an accepting dress shop. More on that one later I hope.    Incidentally Charlotte and I are, and I hate to admit this, boys. (HEY LIGHTEN UP I’M JUST KIDDING! ! !). We were dressed in male clothes, of course, and also very nonchalant when we were shopping for Charlotte’s nighty.    Writing about this incident I happened to think about Charlotte and me inspecting nighties. It made me wonder if perhaps another crossdresser across the store in the dress
department might have been observing us. Touching, looking, commenting on each nighties attributes or drawbacks. Then I wondered if THAT crossdresser had been observed by still another pervious crossdresser.    Isn’t that a weird idea, like a progressive observation club. It could be that all over the world this club operates anonymously. Without dues, membership rolls or a constitution. So the next time you are shopping for that special someone quickly glance over your shoulder. Maybe just maybe you’ll catch one of us watching you. If you’re lucky you may observe someone else and that automatically enrolls you in the club too!    Yea I know it’s strange idea but I feel we have to accept ourselves and have fun with it. I guess we’ll never know for sure if this club really exists unless this article brings in a flood of observation sightings. Remember girls I’m a BLONDE and that allows me to be dingy he he he ! See you in the lingerie department sometime.

Love, Luck, Laughter    Pam 36C

—————————————————-

HORMONES

By Melanie Anne

The subject of hormones is a hot one.  These chemicals are essential to feminization and transformation, and yet they are very poorly understood.  Medical experts around the country stand firmly behind the information they supply.  The problem is, they all disagree!  So what’s a girl to do?  How can learn the REAL story on hormones?  Well, as a small step in that direction, I am opening the discussion here today.  I would like to hear REAL LIFE comments from those who are on or have taken hormones about the effects and side effects they experienced.  Pills vs. Injections, emotional effects, physical complications, desired physical effects.  In short, let’s gather our OWN data base of information from real people who are actually USING hormones.

The most important thing to remember is that

HORMONES ARE DANGEROUS!!!!!

They are not candy, they are not recreational drugs, they are not womanhood in a bottle.  So, in the traditional warning: “Don’t try this at home!”  You could kill yourself.

I know a doctor here in LA who will give you whatever you want.  Just tell him the dose and he’ll inject it or sell you the pills.  Now THAT’s REALLY dangerous!!!  Unless you know what you are doing, you might just end up on a slab or a mental vegetable.

You see, one of the gravest dangers of hormones is blood clotting (or Thrombosis).  When clots form, they might be so small as to be undetectable.  Yet if that clot is dislodged and thrown into the blood stream, it can lodge in the heart, lungs, or brain, and cause everything from heart attack to stroke.

And then there is the liver.  Anyone taking hormones by pills needs to have regular checkups to test for impaired liver function.  Injections bypass the liver, going directly into the bloodstream, but pills are processed by the liver and the wrong dose can permanently damage it.  The liver does not regenerate.  Once it is damaged, it STAYS damaged for the rest of your life.

So, a physicians care is ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL for ANYONE on ANY KIND of hormones.  Now, many of us ignore that, trying to get on the ‘mones without anyone knowing, or afraid that a doctor would not prescribe them.  And even those of us on professional care often change dosages to our own idea of what they should be because we are dissatisfied with our own progress.

That last point is pertinent to me.  My doctor saw me through all my hormone therapy and all the way through surgery.  He had always told me that after surgery, you need to drop your dose.  But, right after surgery, he retired and moved out of the area with no forwarding address.  He turned over his records to another doctor, but the new doctors were just general practitioners, not Transsexual experts.  So, I switched to my S.O.’s HMO plan.  The doctor there was very accommodating.  He looked at my dosages and said, “I don’t have much experience with hormones, but these levels look about right.”  So he just rubber-stamped my pre-surgery levels, not even knowing they were supposed to come down.

Now, Doctor Biber gives you an “ad lib” or “for life” prescription for HIS recommended dosages: .05mg Estinyl daily, 10mg Provera one week per month.  He does not believe in “cycling” like with birth control pills, for example, where the standard prescription is three weeks on and one week off everything for a 28 day “cycle”.

Now the dosages I was taking from my HMO were .25mg Estinyl (5 times as high as Biber recommends) PLUS 5.0mg Premarin on a 25 day on, 3 day off cycle.  Then 10mg Provera on the last 10 days of the cycle.  Quite a difference!!!  But, this was all prescribed by my doctor.  So, who is right?  What is right?

Well, that brings me back to the purpose of this article: to find out!  To start the effort off, here is a portion of a letter I wrote an online friend earlier in the month about my attempt to find the proper hormone type and dosage.

“Well, I have been dissatisfied with my bust development.  I knew it felt like there was more of an effect when I first started on injections three years ago, but I don’t want to go back on them because I had some severe mental effects.  That’s why I switched to pills after two months.  Before the injections, I used B.C. pills.  I used the 1/50 kind, which I understand to be 1mg of Provera and either .05mg or .5mg Estinyl.  Now, after about 60 days of that, I developed trouble breathing and a general lethargy and tiredness and weakness.  I stopped and the effects went away.  I was not sure if they were caused by the pills or not.  On the dosages I had from my doctor, which ended up at .25mg Estinyl and 5.0mg Premarin daily on a 25 day on 3 day off cycle with 10mg Provera on the last ten days, I had no ill effects.  But I also never got that breast tenderness I had experienced with the injections and only ended up an A cup.  I had heard that Estinyl was 10 times as powerful as Premarin, meaning the 5.0 Premarin amounted to .5mg Estinyl.  But the two drugs also have slightly different effects.  The Premarin sneaks past the glands and is not noted as an increased Estrogen level, but the Estinyl is noted and before surgery, the body increases Testosterone to counteract the Estinyl.  But the Estinyl is what increases the breasts best, so it is a catch 22.  But AFTER surgery, you don’t need the sneaky Premarin, and you can use all Estinyl with no backlash, thereby getting the good effects.  Also, after surgery, you are supposed to lower your dose.  Well, my doctor moved out of the area after 16 years here, just after surgery.  So I went to the HMO and they just rubber stamped my old prescriptions.  So I wanted to lower the overall dose, but get more effects.  So, I stopped the Premarin, (the equivalent of .5mg Estinyl, and added .25 to the Estinyl to bring it up to .5 total.  That way, it cut down the effective dose by 33% but added more of the good stuff.  I also switched to a daily dose of 5mg Provera, amounting to the same overall amount taken over the full month.  Well, I got a BIG boost in development (especially around the nipples from the Provera).  But the weakness and breathing problems came back.  So, I am in my 3 day off cycle now.  I stopped the Provera and Estinyl.  I will go back on the regular cycle except I will use the .5mg Estinyl daily and only use the Provera on the last 10 days as before at 10mg daily.  I cannot be sure if it is the higher estrogen level or the Provera that causes the problem, nor which one is the cause of the extra development, but this last test should clear that up.  I’ll let you know what happens.

Love,

  Melanie”

Okay, so there’s an opening salvo in the war against Hormone Ignorance.  If YOU have any REAL experience or knowledge of hormones, PLEASE take the time to make that information available to the community in this column, so we can be all that we want to be at the smallest possible risk to our health.

———————————————–

AFTERGLOW

The words to a song I wrote just before transition:

THE COMPANY SONG

By Melanie Anne Phillips

Every morning I cling to my bed,
While lost opportunities dance in my head.
No time for problems or pleasures or life,
I gotta win bread for the kids and the wife,
SO I’M SINGING THE COMPANY SONG.

Race through the door so the card gets its punch,
Open my locker and throw in my lunch.
Hundreds of papers and thousands of parts,
When they blow the whistle the whole damn thing starts,
AND I’M SINGING THE COMPANY SONG

Every two hours a ten minute break,
But don’t fall behind on the things that you make.
Meet all your deadlines, your quotas and goals,
And maybe you’ll get a small raise, but who knows,
WHEN YOUR SINGING THE COMPANY SONG.

When I was younger, I used to wonder
What would I be when I grew?
I never considered the way its turn out,
I would’ve stayed young if I knew.

Privateer politics, cloaked in good will,
Backstabbing rumors that wound more than kill,
Lack of respect and the pain that it brings,
These are a few of my favorite things,
WHEN I’M SINGING THE COMPANY SONG.

Don’t make suggestions and don’t act too smart,
Or thirty-year fools will take you apart.
Humor the fools and buy them their beers,
And you’ll be a fool in thirty odd years,
WHEN YOU’RE SINGING THE COMPANY SONG.

Now that I’m older, sometimes I wonder
How it turned out this way?
But somehow the answer becomes more obscure,
Or just matters less every day.

Now, I’ve got security, you understand,
In a ten percent vested retirement plan.
And if I should die, well there’s no need to grieve,
They won’t let me go ’cause I’m out of sick leave,
AND I’M SINGING THE COMPANY SONG,

I’m singing the company song.

— From the “Tarnished Karma” album – Melanie Anne Phillips

                                                (Copyright 1992 Melanie Anne Phillips)

NOTE: It is my desire to make this publication available free to all who wish to read it.  However, due to copyright laws, any overall license would allow unscrupulous individuals to excerpt portions and use it for their own personal gain.  Therefore, should you wish to upload this publication on your BBS or simply generate hardcopies for support groups and friends, please write me about a free specific license for your purpose.

The Subversive

Number 2

1992 Melanie Anne Phillips