Chapter 17 Decision
I slept surprisingly well. I thought my busy mind might keep me awake trying to process, all the experiences of the wonderful day. But instead, my exhaustion caused me to fall quickly into a deep uninterrupted sleep. I awoke refreshed, but full of thoughts on my boy/girl decision. My subconscious must have been working overtime.
I got up showered and looked at the new me, in the mirror. It seemed like an out of body experience. That girl in the mirror couldn't be me. Yet, I had spent a wonderful day as her. Despite seeing my naked body, complete with dangling genitals, I had, the strange thought, that I needed lipstick. Was something happening to my mind? I seemed to suddenly be thinking differently.
I tried on the new pastel blue bikini panties over the flesh colored gaff. The panties were comfortable, and I liked the view in the mirror better. I wasn't sure if it was because I liked looking at girls in panties or because I liked looking like a girl or both. It felt a little strange having so little covered down there. But overall I felt good about myself (pretty unusual for a teenaged girl).
I got dressed in one of the new pairs of jeans, a girl band tee from Charlie's wardrobe and my new powder blue shoes. I noted that the tee evoked thoughts of girl power solidarity, rather than the old eye candy thoughts.
Brushing my hair quickly brought it close to where Cynthia (thoughts of hot babe intruded) had left it. I added a little of my new pink lip gloss.
I went down to breakfast, where Joy and mom were already eating.
"Good morning, Sis!" exclaimed Joy excitedly.
"Morning Charli, did you sleep well?" asked mom.
"I slept great, fell off quickly and slept without interruption until waking refreshed a little while ago," I replied.
"You can drop some waffles in the toaster and pour yourself some milk and juice." said mom.
I thought she was making the transition from full-time mom, to shortcut taking career woman quickly. The family was going to face a lot of major change quickly.
"You look pretty in your new clothes," said Joy.
"Thank you," I replied, feeling a little warmth in my cheeks, not being used to being called pretty.
We chatted about how much fun we all had yesterday. Mom told us how proud she was of us, and with the new hairdo's and our mature behavior, we seemed to have added two years growth in a single day. I added, I too had seen that growth in Joy and that she seemed more an equal companion, than the little sister needing protection that she had seemed days earlier. I found Joys beaming face heartwarming.
As we cleaned up, Julie came in saying, "Spending the evening with you three lovely ladies was enchanting."
Mom replied, "Thank you, for the lovely enchanting evening and the opportunity to show off my lovely young ladies."
They exchanged knowing smiles, that had me wondering what might have gone on while I slept.
Julie fixed herself a coffee and disappeared into her office.
" I would like a little alone time to collect my thoughts from yesterday," I stated.
Joy frowned. But mom smiled and said "That would be good. Joy, leave your sister alone."
'Yes, mom," replied Joy, but the way she stomped off left me wondering how long I would have before she intruded.
I went to my room, closed the door, got out my laptop, and began typing my thoughts:
1. Comfort. I had been surprisingly comfortable as a girl. I thought I would be anxious about being identified as a boy in a skirt, but as the morning wore on, I found myself worrying more about what people thought of the pigtails. As a girl, I received lots of smiles, that felt like you are a nice girl, a pretty girl, a well-behaved girl. As a boy, a what kind of trouble are you going to get in now scowl was more likely. After Julie’s comments on feminine mannerisms and speech patterns, I was beginning to doubt my ability to present as a boy, without appearing gay. Surprisingly this was clearly pro-girl.
2. School. No contest. St. Katherine’s was clearly superior in almost all ways, to the public school I would go to as a boy. Another strong pro-girl.
3. Safety. I was in real fear of getting the shit beat out of me, as a boy. Girl seemed much safer.
4. Restrooms. Girls were generally (not always) cleaner and better smelling, and usually a better social experience. But boys were quicker and easier. Point and shoot still preferred. Slightly pro boy.
5. Friends. I found myself looking forward to friendships with other girls. As a boy, friendships with other boys seemed more problematic. Pro girl.
6. Sister. TJ and I had been extremely close. But I think Joy and Charli were even closer. Pro Girl.
7. Mom. I think mom was being stricter and more intrusive with Charli than Charlie. This might just be normal mother-teen daughter dynamics and lead to closer bonding later. But I liked the relative freedom and invisibility Charlie had. Slightly pro boy.
8. Julie/Dad. Julie had always been kind and caring, but there had always been a wall. I think most of the wall had come down with the fatherhood revelation. But she was showing even more vulnerability trying to help me. I think sharing the boy to girl experience will make us even closer. Pro girl.
9. Genital Comfort. Wearing the gaff had gotten to the point where I could forget I was wearing it until some hot girl wondered by (or even the girl in the mirror, which was a little disturbing.) But letting them dangle in boxers, was definitely more comfortable. Pro boy.
10. Clothes. More variety and selection and more enjoyable shopping with girls. More durable, less fussy, less time needed to select, sometimes more comfortable with boys. Pro girls.
11. Hair. Easier, less time consuming for boys. Pro boy.
12. Male privilege. Men paid more for the same work. Positions of power and prestige reserved for or biased toward men. Women’s ideas and opinions often ignored or diminished. Women stuck with more routine drudge work. Pro boy.
13. Emotions. Women were a roller coaster of highs and lows. Men were repressed, which I thought was unhealthy. Perhaps I can get the best of both, Pro girl, Con hormones.
14. Makeup. Can provide different looks, can be fun. Time and money consuming. Generally a girl thing. Slightly pro boy.
15. Religion. Some call choosing girl an abomination and condemn that choice to hell. I see this as more an argument against those religions than for boy. Slightly pro boy.
16. Future. I had assumed I would become a husband and father. I now realized I had little knowledge what either of those really meant. Still, it was a dream that I was not ready to let go of.
Could being a mother replace that dream? I don't know. Pro boy.
I decided that these were not equally important. And for some the decisions were close. So I would assign an importance weight to each item and a strength multiplier for how close the decision was.
Comments
very interesting way of deciding
beats a coin flip!
Sorry
Since uploading part 6 I have been unable to upload to blog, so all comments here, please.
Afterword up in blog
Although I was getting a lot of 503 errors, which complicated things. I finally got the afterword posted to the blog.
This really is a good story
Lots to cover yet lost of unaswered questions by Charli(e)
Love Samantha Renée Heart.
I love sweet stories like this
It is very fun to read a nice story and have good stuff happen in them.
Charli is a list maker !
Some would call that OCD or a melancholic personality. I call it wisdom! Excellent story Cheryl!
Hugz! - **Sigh**
Sighs are the natural language of the heart.
-Thomas Shadwell
How I became
Tough choices. For now Girl seems much better but if he wants to keep his options open he will need some boy training also or he will really have no choices. It may be he will decide to go full transition but oddly enough he might want to spend some time as a tomboy to get exposure to boy culture while not being expected to fully join in. Which ever way it turns out in the long run it would be interesting to read of Charli's experiences in school.
Time is the longest distance to your destination.
Sad commentary
It's a sad state of affairs that Charli has to give up his way of living just to keep from getting beat up or worse. And yet, maybe it's best to become Charli and have a good experience going into the world, rather decide to continue homeschool because of how others would treated Charlie.
It's rather strange how those who won't accept someone being different, are themselves different in many ways.
They have different likes and dislikes. They have different eye and hair colors. They have different tastes in clothing and shoes. Some are left handed, and some are right handed. And some forget which hand they use for what because they use either hand for different activities.
All these differences are accepted, and cause no lasting ills between people. It's only when a person crosses far over the line that a reaction is triggered and a mob mentality takes over.
Charli will enjoy her first foray into the real world much better as a girl, though she will still find it rough at times. Times when some guy hits on her, or it's discovered she is still he.
Many parents want to protect their children from the ills of the world or from being mistreated because of who they are. But they are done a disservice because they never learn how to be who they are among the morons and idiots who appoint themselves the rulers of who to accept and who to reject.
Others have feelings too.
Is Charli crossgender?
I'm not sure. If being crossgender means crossing gender lines, then I'd say yes. If it means Charli identifies as a girl, I'm not quite as sure. One day spent as a girl doesn't feel like enough to be certain about something like that.