Acceptance

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For those who've followed the twisting turning path that is my life, caring enough to drop a note, or lift up a prayer, thank you.
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Fortunately, this isn't about drama. Not about rejection, divorce, hostility or any other negative emotion.Nor is it about weight loss or weight gain, physical problems, or the vagaries of my doctors. All of those are present, it's just they've taken a backseat to something I'd nearly forgotten exists.
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Acceptance.
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My soon to be ex-wife and I were introduced to each other by our best friends. A running gag between the four of us was my best friend's fiance was my fiance's best friend, or another way my fiance's best friend's fiance was my best friend. We've stayed close over the years. So... when my wife decided a divorce was in order (she didn't want to be in a lesbian relationship, and I really can't blame her for that), one of the unpleasant things we've had to deal with was how to tell our best friends.
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Now you need one more piece of information to understand this. I've been a chaplain or pastor for many years, and our friends are also quite deeply involved in their church. Yes, we're all part of the hated class of Christians. Sometimes the rhetoric around here can get pretty hostile.
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I've not had a very good track record telling friends about being Transgendered. In fact, I've been batting zero.
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Out of the blue our friends called to let us know they were down here, and when could we get together?
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I felt like part of the Fellowship of the Ring, walking in the mines of Moria, DOOM... DOOM...
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We took a deep breath and invited them over.
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We were sitting around the dining room table, and after the most meager of pleasantries I launched into "You're probably going to hate me for this, it's not Deb's fault. I'll understand if you want nothing more to do with me." In other words, I was being my usual, debonaire, lovable, and positive self.
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Who am I kidding? I told them I was TG, and let them glimpse the perfect hell that can mean. I was expecting the worst, and what I got instead was loving acceptance.
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While I'm writing about acceptance, there are two other's in my life that accept me, as I am. One is a cousin. The other is my mother.
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My mom is in the hospital, she had a very minor stroke that has been resolved, but the doctor wanted to do a workup of all the things that might have caused it. Thursday evening, we sat and talked for three hours. All my life, she has been my very best friend. I learned recently that even when I was very young, she thought of me as her best friend. Not that it would keep me from getting paddled if it was called for. As she ages, her short term memory has started to get a bit shaky, but her long term memory has gotten stronger, perhaps in compensation.
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Mom told me something she had never mentioned before. She knew. From the very beginning she knew I was a girl. I was a gorgeous toddler -> teenager. Every time someone said "she should be a girl, she's too pretty to be a boy," my Mom would smile at the backhanded compliment. She also knew when I was seven or eight I made a choice. I would NOT be the butt of other kids' pranks. After a very memorable session of teasing, I ran away from class to the principal's office at school. I resolved then and there to always choose what I perceived as the most masculine thing to do. I hated baseball (well actually I loved playing, but I couldn't run worth a damn - I ran like a girl. I hated football, but played it. It was expected of me. Mom pointed to these, and others.
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I suppose gender was not the immutable thing culture insisted was truth. Some of that may have been the "pretty" comments, but I suspect part of it was always my Mom. When she was being playful with my brother and I, she'd often say, "Well when I was a little BOY, we did..." Mom may have been F to M in those dark ages before Christine Jorgenson. She was at the very least a tomboy. The fluidity of gender her comments communicated as I was growing up certainly allowed me to conceive of another course of action, besides the one culture dictated.
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|sigh... I know, I'm either long-winded or lecturing again.
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It was an affirming time I spent with Mom in the hospital this week. We talked of things it was probably a good idea no one else heard of. The soreness in my breasts, which comes and goes as the hormones continue to shape my body - she shared hers took three or four years until everything was fully developed.
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I never thought I'd talk to her about half the stuff we talked about.
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In the dark cave which is my life, my Mom lit a candle, and made sure I knew of her love.
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Wow,
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Beth

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