My First Heroine...


My First Heroine...



 
There are so many people we can look up to in this community; trend setters and trailblazers and pioneers. That's Anne Heywood; my first heroine isn't a real person, per se, but a character in a movie. Ronnie and I were talking about visits to the library and to books stores and such today, and she explained that she had come across a book in PDF form; I Want What I Want, and that she's saved it on her computer. It tells the story of Roy and his journey to become Wendy. She was looking for the file, but had been unsuccessful. I came across the file in a Google search, and also found an article on the book by Geoff Brown at Wikipedia. In reading the article I (re)discovered that a film was made in 1972. And I wept.

So much of my development as a human being has been shaped by the abuse I suffered as a child. My gender issues were shoved aside by fear and even buried by memory loss and repression.

(See The Invitation http://bigclosetr.us/topshelf/fiction/30562/invitation )

In 1972, as a twenty-one year old, I was engaged to my first wife when I saw the trailer for the film, I Want What I Want, and I had forgotten about it until Ronnie and I talked about it today. Feelings of shame and guilt flooded back as I felt ashamed to even be curious about the story.

Any time a news story or a movie or a television show depicted a transsexual or any other expression of a feminine nature, I reflexively would turn my head, pretending that I didn't see it. Worse yet, my fear caused me to either laugh or make fun of the subject; pretending it didn't have any meaning for me or that I found it repulsive. Even seeing the trailer for the Christine Jorgensen Story caused me to retreat to my bedroom to hide in shame. A casual viewing of a Medical Center episode while on vacation had me turning the channel hurriedly when my wife entered the motel room, since it guest-starred Robert Reed (Mike from the Brady Bunch) as a transsexual. Fear and shame again... When Ronnie and I talked, it was the first time I had recalled my reaction to the advertisement in thirty-nine years.

It would be interesting to hear from any and all of you who have had similar feelings and reactions. I know now because of how things work that I wasn't so much ashamed as fearful of discovery, since I knew first hand what it was like to reveal even a small part of the girl inside of me. And I know that I had no reason whatsoever to be ashamed because of who I am inside; that I was just being me, and that Anne Heywood...the actress who portrayed Wendy...is an old friend to be welcomed; my heroine so to speak. Thanks for reading! Andrea

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