Grover
I sit here at my kitchen table staring at it. There really wasn’t nothing much to look at. A bulky looking briefcase sized box with a screen displaying a very attractive woman with a very obvious touch screen button flashing off to the side.
That’s all, just an over large tablet or odd shaped laptop. No identifying trademarks or even a seam. Hell the damn thing didn’t have a cord or battery either. It shouldn’t work at all.
But what it did do was something else again.
All I had to do was press the button and nothing would be the same for me ever again. I can’t claim that my life was that bad, but not all that happy either. All my life, I’d my deep dark secret that at times I’d kept zealously even from myself. It’d ridden my back as insidious as any addictive monkey or big black dog hounding my every step.
My secret couldn’t be escaped, but at times it rode less heavily on my heart. But always, the shame and guilt not only made me continue keeping it a secret but bury it even deeper until it once more dragged me down into depression.
And now this: me and this button. One simple act would erase all need for that secret that I’ve kept for so long. The hell of it was if I did then there would be other secrets. Would these new ones prove less of a burden than the old?
I sighed. I knew of boi and gurls who would’ve already broken their arms reaching for the damn thing. I however was conflicted. Was this really what I wanted? In a very real way this was a suicide.
The me that everyone thought they knew would cease to exist. I would be so different that for all practical purposes I would be another person. Someone that lived only in my heart and dreams, kept hidden for so very long.
No I decided, the problem wasn’t the secret or even with me. It was everyone else. They all believed and accept me as fitting in a certain way into their reality. Hence lay the problem. If I pressed that button, I will be defying all they thought they knew. Some, perhaps all, would not be able to accept that. I would lose friends and almost certainly my job.
I eyes tracked over to the clock. Like out of a bad western, the hands slowly moved marking my time was running out. My wife would soon be home. The one who above I loved with all that I am. Who I expected to live out the rest of my life with … But.
Except for my long kept secret and now this button.
I’d made vows and promises to her that I’d never broken once in all the years of our marriage. I’d never dreamed it would come to this.
Was it a betrayal?
I shook my head still staring at the button. The figure floating there beside it wasn’t another woman. She wasn’t trying to steal me from my wife or commit some kind of infidelity. It was only me in a different wrapping. Perhaps in a very real way, a me unwrapped from the secrets that’d kept that part of me hidden for so very long.
Should I talk about it with my wife? Would she understand? I knew for certain that she was aware I was different. How many wives could honestly ask their husband fashion questions and get good advice? She’d complain at times I had a better sense of style and trends than she did. I’d replied I had the strengths of my weaknesses. I wasn’t the most masculine of guys on the block, but that also meant I avoided a lot of their macho BS.
One of the few people who knew my secret once told me, “It’s an intrinsically selfish thing.” She was right. I did want this. That was why I was still here staring at that damn thing.
On the other hand everyone else was selfish too. They all wanted me to be like this and act like so. While I gave lip service to all of that, I knew I fell short. My hair was longer than most and my nails weren’t cut into the quick like so many I worked with. Small things maybe, but they helped keep me sane. I would never ever be exactly what they wanted me to be. The best I could do was fake it sorta kinda.
I knew my wife. She was kind and had a heart as big as the sky. But after years together, she was definitely not bi-sexual. If I pushed that button our relationship as we knew it was over. It might survive in another form as friends since that was how it’d began but never that so close intimacy we shared for so long.
However, I also just couldn’t push the button and disappear. Just leaving without any explanation or knowing if I was alive or dead would hurt her more than I could bear imagining. Our marriage had survived for so long because we had very few secrets. Like I said before I suspected that my secret wasn’t much of one for her.
Sitting there I stared at the button.
So what do I do? What do I do?
Inspired by the Box and Elrod’s MAU stories.
Comments
Very insightful
Far more than the usual stuff one sees.
Cheers,
Puddin'
-
Cheers,
Puddin'
A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style
I Wondered Why
You hadn't posted this little gem here. I read it over at Stardust.
Yeah. When push (snicker) comes to shove, what would you do?
Joanne
Button button, who's got the button
Yup - I'd have pressed it, RIGHT AWAY!
Thanks Grover.
with love,
Hope
with love,
Hope
Once in a while I bare my soul, more often my soles bear me.
I can relate
I was kind of in that position last year. Not a real button but the outcome would be the same. I pushed it.
Hilltopper
Hilltopper
Selfishness
I agree with Puddin'. This is very insightful. I like that you brought up the issue of selfishness. It is selfish for us T-gals to want to be genetic women but it's also very selfish of family and friends who don't want us to change. I wish all of our family and friends would realize that.
You have to balance both sides. It's not easy. I'm sort of in the same boat as you, Grover. I look for balance to keep me sane. I grow my hair long and frequently let my fingernails grow out.
Good luck in your quest for balance and thanks for the story.
- Terry
P.S. Just what is an addictive monkey? ;)
Monkey?
Hey Terry! I was trying to make allusions to additive habits being sometimes referred to as having a monkey on your back. The Big Black Dog was of course another one referring to depression. Talking about depression one of my favorite responses to it is from an author who I can't remember. However I can paraphrase what he said. "Depression? That a hole in the ground! This is a Deep Black Melancholy that sucks the life right out of you." When I first heard that I nodded my head in agreement. Been there done, done that, burned the shirt when I purged.
Thanks to everyone for your comments!
Hugs!
Grover
That's a question.
IS wanting to be honest and true to yourself selfish? Is asking others to ask you as who you are, rather than who they want you to be?
Perhaps an unrelated example may help.
My dad had a friend that went to med school and graduated, and practiced for ten years, ALL because his dad wanted him to. He finally got fed up, and told his dad that he really didn't WANT to be a doctor. The end of the story was that his dad accepted this, he went to dental school, and 20 years later was still very happy as a DENTIST. Was he selfish to not be a doctor as his dad wanted? I certainly don't think so. On the other hand, his dad insisting that he do it was selfish. Through my wife, I've seen a LOT of students over the years that are "Pre Med" because mommy and daddy want them to be. It warps their way of looking at the world and everything. A few are happy, but most are not.
Are we any more selfish in wanting to be able to express who we are? I don't think so, but, I know some will say YES. I know I feel like I am on some occasions. But, I don't argue their right to be who they are. Enough. I'm talking in circles now.
Annette
So what do you do?
What do you do when faced with a decision such as this? Do you retreat into the 'safety and misery' of being what others expect you to be? Or do you push the button and jump into the unknown?
I made a lot of wrong decisions, and tried too hard to bend with the breeze but, eventually, I jumped.
This is a dilemma which faces many of us. As has been said; "Life is not a rehearsal - you only get one shot at it. The road to misery is often paved with regrets."
Susie
It's A Nagging Little Story
Isn't it?
Would I have pushed it?
Fifty years ago I would have stabbed down on it with no hesitation.
Forty years ago I still would have pushed it, perhaps with a couple of twinges.
Thirty years ago I would really have sweated about it but probably would still have pressed it.
Since then? Too many hostages to fortune. Oh, I'd love to press it, even now, but it's no longer about "being myself". I am myself, just one part is hidden except here. Spouse, children, grandchildren, friends, colleagues. The profession that I still love and like to think I contribute something worthwhile to.
Now, for me, the most seductive part is the implied return to youthfulness. Perhaps I could justify pressing it on the premise that I couldn't pass up the chance of an extra forty or fifty years of life and the gender change was purely incidental (the price you pay, so to speak), but then.....you outlive your contemporaries and probably your kids....
Dunno,
Joanne
My button sits in front of me....
....almost like a siren calling, but also like a friend who cares more about me than I do...dilemmas are always impossible to solve, even if we think we know what we want, since they always require giving up one thing to gain another. And the button changes, since the choices change as well, don't they. My button might have been pushed long ago and very quickly. Now, it sits and waits, perhaps impatiently as I wonder what I would have been even as I have placed before me what I know will take place. Excellent provocative and compelling story. Thank you!
She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Con grande amore e di affetto, Andrea Lena
Love, Andrea Lena
Why is he hesitating? We know...
My wife is no dummy: math & chem major, income tax whiz. (But then, you might wonder, how did she end up with me? Well, that’s another story entirely.) --- She has told me that in that first decade after the children had started coming (2!), she wondered if I would leave her to “push the button.â€
From our very beginning, I’ve tried to always take our love into account, rather successfully I feel. And you have to say, I’ve avoided Grover’s question. (I’m quite aware that this is easier for some than it is for others. Fifty years ago it was really hard, but then she had her own powerful attractions for me, too -- still does.) She, for her part, has neither pryed nor looked too closely at what I’ve been doing on the internet.
As far as I know our surviving son has no tg interests, but his wife’s uncompromising nosiness, spending habits and control tendencies recently led to divorce after 15 years. (No kids possible.) Between stress at work and his mate, he was nearly broken at age 42.
Coping (with a healthy dose of dignity) for the sake of love or a loved one, I suppose, is an art, one you may or may not be good at or -- might or might not even be interested in.
what it's all about
One of the great attractions of Science Fiction is its ability to take a question and exaggerate the circumstances and the situation. Just like putting a slide under the microscope you can make it bigger and therefore easier to study.
The question in the Button: Do you stop trying to walk the line, or go as far as you need to. My exaggeration is a machine like a MAU that can give you the perfect body that you've always dreamed of. With everything at stake, your dreams and most hidden desires, on one side and on the other the friends, family, and the life you've managed to live. This is a tough question, and has no easy answers. It is hard for us, but it is also difficult for those who love us. I've many long talks with Cathy and other girls about all of this. The selfishness, guilt, self-destructive habits, and much more than I mentioned in my little story, but nope, not an easy answer anywhere in sight.
Like many others, my age at the time changes my own answers. Thirty years in my late teens, I would've been one of those leaping across that damn table for the button. Twenty years, and like others said I would've thought about it, but still pushed it. Ten years ago, I would be staring at the damn thing like my narrator, but would've pushed it in the end. Today, I would still be staring, but results are much less certain.
You do what you have to do in order to stay alive. To do that you have ask yourself some hard questions. Therapists and the rest are there to help you figure out what questions you should be asking. I'm not a professional in any field at all. If you're having problems with questions like these get help!
Hugs!
Grover
Yes, we have talked long,
about this subject, Grover and I, but really, it all comes down to something someone else told me.
"If you're going to be TG/TS/, then prepare yourself to give up family, friends, job, career, reputation. In short, everything you've worked for your entire life."
Now nothing says you WILL lose all those things, but it's an almost sure bet that you will lose SOME of them, and it all comes down to: HOW BADLY DO YOU WANT/NEED IT?
The answer to that question varies as widely as one can imagine, considering how many of us there are, but it also boils down to this. Does anyone else's opinion really matter, or are you willing to be that selfish, to put yourself first and damn what anyone else says?
Answers? I haven't any. I know what was right for me, and yes, I did give up some of the aforementioned things. Family? Mostly. Friends? Mostly. Job? Actually, no. I was fortunate enough to have worked for a county that supported me in my transition, and in a job where the people were understanding and compassionate. Career? Never actually had one. Reputation? Heh. That's hard to say. I think I kept mine pretty much intact, but only because, again, I was in the right place, at the right time, and I took myself seriously. In other words, I didn't fumfer about when it finally became time for my RLT. I jumped in with both feet and never looked back. 2 years into it now, with no end in sight, and began with radio and Television interviews, and my book signing the same weekend as the interviews.
What Grover has so clearly pointed up with this little gem of a story is this...The ONLY one who can make this decision is YOU, and the only one to take full responsibility for it is YOU. Others might help you in one way or another along the twisty path of transition, but in the long run, it's you and only you. Selfish? Oh yes. Indubitably. Necessary? Without doubt. Choices? For a lot of us it's transition, or die. Hardly a choice.
I wish every one of you who has transitioned, will transition, is thinking about transitioning, the luck and good timing I enjoyed with mine. I'm not done yet though. I'll only finish transition when I pass on. Then, I'll undergo a whole different type of transition... I hope.
Beautifully done Grover. My compliments to the chef... er, I mean author.
God Bless you all... every one.
Catherine Linda Michel
As a T-woman, I do have a Y chromosome... it's just in cursive, pink script.
By the way,
I'll turn 63 on Thursday, the 15th of this month, April. It's never too late to start transition, if it's what you really need.
Hugs and love,
Catherine Linda Michel
As a T-woman, I do have a Y chromosome... it's just in cursive, pink script.
I was
still sitting there staring at that button when she came in from work.
Wordlessly, she sat next to me, putting her hand in mine.
We both stared at the button...
Interesting and thoughtprovoking.
Roll back the time two years... And the person with the box/button to press could have been me in many ways. No, I didn't have the box to press, but I'd come to the conclusion I couldn't hide who I was any more. Miracle of miracles, my wife still loves me and is supporting me becoming the person I need to be. She wouldn't even let me "consider" locking Annette back down again! :-)
As I've thought about it, yes, it'd be wonderful to push a button and suddenly find my body physically where I want it to be. But, there are so many complexities to deal with. I'm "hoping" that my gradual transformation will give me time to "break" some of the bad habits I developed over the years to help me blend in with guys better. *sighs* Yes, that's something I'm having to do. It gives me time to work on my voice - though pressing the button, from what you've described, would have solved that issue. LOL
Now, I'm not saying I wouldn't mind having that little case, to use after I come out at work! It'd make things easier after the fact, if it included the eye/hand coordination to apply mascara correctly without getting occasional "glops". LOL
Again, thanks for this interesting AND thought provoking trip. I commented because there are SOME wives that CAN make the transition, and despite not otherwise being bi or lesbian be able to live in a lesbian relationship. (Okay, my wife did go and get some help working through what she was thinking, but, I'm very glad she did. I'm also "outing" myself to the world slower as a result, which is both helpful and frustrating. Helpful, as electrolysis takes time as does voice therapy. Frustrating, because I want to press that button!)
Thanks,
Annette
P.S. While I feel selfish, my wife says that needing to be yourself isn't being selfish... I'm trying to believe her.
Pushing All the Buttons
Nicely done.
Whether or not you push the button should be a personal decision, but is it ever?
If, by pushing the buttion, you would cause irreparable harm to your family, would you do it? If, by pushing the button, you would end the relationship with your parents, would you do it? If, by pushing the button you would violate the vows you made to your wife, would you do it?
Interesting, and relevent.
In our community we have certain members who think following your desires is the primary directive. It is not. Desires must always be weighed against consequences -- for you and others. There is a season and a time to every purpose under Heaven.
With proper planning and action, prior to pushing the button, negatives could be avoided or mitigated. It's not so much "should I push the button", as "what needs to be done before I can push the button". To some of us the amount of work necessary before pushing the button makes pushing the button out of the question.
Once the decision has been made to walk away from the button, the quest becomes living with that decision, which also involves work.
Great story, Grover.
Angela Rasch (Jill M I)
Angela Rasch (Jill M I)
like my SRU story
this shows the downside of a magic change. glad I found it today
Dorothycolleen
Magic Changes
It really doesn't matter what the plot device is, magic or Sf. It's the decision that's important, and regardless of what you decide it's not going to be easy. Not push it, but live with the knowledge that you had your chance. Push it and maybe lose everything.
In this one there's no rewriting reality, but still in this age where identity is everything, what do you do when you have no proof of who you are? Nothing, but your word.
I've dear friends who've told me transitioning wasn't a decision. It was the only way to save their lives. You have to ask yourself what is more important, your life or their expectations.
Thanks for the comment Dorothy!
hugs
Grover
PS: I've read your story too!