The Road to Haifa
Chapter 19 — On Target.
by Alyssa Plant
Home for the first time since coming out, things are going well ...
Chapter 19 — On Target.
Sarah woke suddenly. The sun was streaming through the gap in her curtains, signalling a new day. It wasn’t the comfortable, sleepy awakening she enjoyed, but she felt renewed, full of energy and ready for the day.
As she lay in bed, her eyes drifted around the room. It was definitely David’s. The room she had sculpted to please her parents. The sports posters, the fighter jet photographs. Even her old rifle sat in the corner.
Gently slipping her legs from the bed. Sarah was very aware of her past in this place. So many memories… so many feelings. She was happy for a large part of it of course, the times she could do something… anything… she didn’t have to think about herself. It was her childhood, there was no changing that.
Stretching, she slowly padded over to her old rifle. The gun her father had bought her when she turned 12, the gun she had been taught to shoot with.
She sat down on the edge of her bed, cradling the rifle in her hands, her fingers rubbing the grain of the stock. Just touching the thing brought he back to the day when her father taught her to fire the thing. To aim, to breathe correctly. She remembered his gentle, firm instruction. It had seen her through her life so far in more than just shooting…
‘Relax before you do anything, line up what you want, and get it first time. Passion and fire will only cause you to rush, and waver.’
How that had held true…
Gently placing the rifle against her nightstand, she rose from the bed and pulled apart her curtains. The bright sunlight made her blink momentarily. It was still the same…. The neighbourhood she had grown up in was hardly different…. Would she be able to face it? Or would she sneak out the same way she had arrived? Avoiding those who might know her…
The knock at her bedroom door broke her from her thoughts. “Hello?” she called uncertainly, wrapping her robe around her tighter.
The door opened and her mother appeared bearing two mugs. “I thought I heard you moving around darling.” She smiled warmly.
Relaxing, Sarah returned the smile and took one of the offered mugs.
“Thought you might need this, you always liked me bringing you coffee in the morning,” said her mother wistfully, as if remembering a happier time.
“I still do Ima.” Sarah replied slipping her hand into her mother’s and giving it a squeeze.
“You know, you seem a lot more natural now my dear.” began her mother slowly.
Slumping down on her bed with a leg beneath her, Sarah looked quizzically at her mother. “Natural?” she repeated wrinkling her brow. “How so?”
Joining her on the edge of the bed, Sarah’s mother patted her child’s knee. “You just seemed a little forced last night, your actions and mannerisms seemed deliberate, forced, and unnatural…..” She began. Before Sarah could protest, she continued. “Seeing you this morning proved that to me…. You were trying to prove yourself to me, prove you were worthy to be my daughter. Worried we would think you unfeminine if you relaxed. Believe me dear, Seeing you now is prove to the opposite. Even the way you sit is totally female…. What confuses me, is this is how you always acted, sat, moved, reacted… you really haven’t changed. Just your shell seems more appropriate now.” She smiled.
“I really don’t know what to say Ima.” sniffed Sarah, fighting back tears. “I wish I could have told you sooner, I was just terrified of myself… I know I probably let you and Aba down… I wasn’t the son you wanted… That you expected….” She answered quietly.
“Daughter, believe me, you could never disappoint me and your father. Of course, I would have loved a son, but that does not change the fact that I was blessed with two daughters, and I see that now. I never had a son. So I fail to see what I should be disappointed about….” She smiled softly at her child. “Your father and I had a long talk last night. And we want to be there for you… To help you, love you, and rejoice in your successes… Nothing will change the fact that you are our child, our baby. You were a blessing to us, we want what makes you happy.”
Unable to restrain her tears, Sarah Hugged her mother tightly. The world didn’t matter now she had the approval of those who mattered, those she cared about.
“Come on you, get dressed now and face the day properly.” Smirked her mother. “You cannot stay in your bed all day, or ill be forced to spank your bottom madam.”
“Yes Ima” giggled Sarah smiling broadly. Words could not describe how good it felt to be normal… Just a regular girl …
After a brief shower, Sarah made her way downstairs. Looking around, she saw her mother working by the sideboard, but nobody else.
“Ima, where are Eli and Aba?” she asked cocking her head to one side as she slipped onto one of the bar stools in the kitchen.
“Oh hello dear.” Her mother smiled turning at the sound. “They went out, Eli needed some things and you know how your father is with her…” she smirked.
Sarah grinned. “He will be penniless when he returns.”
Her mother chuckled as she chopped fruit, “Well he does like to dote on his only daughter.” As the dagger like words slid into Sarah’s heart, her mother spun around with her hands to her mouth. “I’m sorry darling. I.. .I just… its taking some getting used to.” Her mother stumbled apologetically.
“Sarah looked down at the wood grain of the table. “It's okay Ima, I didn’t expect things to be perfect straight away.”
“No darling, I’m sorry, I should be able to get something so simple right….” Her mother replied softly placing her hand on Sarah’s shoulder.
“It's okay, Ima,” she sniffed quietly. “Is there any more coffee?” she asked brightly, hoping to change the subject.
“Of course. One moment dear.” Her mother smiled, rubbing her shoulder before busying herself in the kitchen, clearly catching that Sarah did not want to talk about things further. She had always been like this with her mother. They had always got each other's clues and signals.
How could she not have spoken to her mother? She had known that she was unhappy and tried to talk… but any time she did… she had just pushed her away. Sarah felt a massive pang of guilt that she had not had enough love to trust her mother, what if? What would things have been like? Where would she be now? Surely not doing what she did, that was certain in her mind.
As the two sat quietly drinking coffee at the table, Sarah pushed her chair back and looked squarely at her mother. “I’m seeing someone.”
Her mother stopped mid sip and looked across at her daughter. “Aaah, that’s nice dear. What’s hi … ah … he … um, their name?”
Sarah looked at her mother. She was trying to be delicate, and she could tell that her mother was thinking very hard about gender and sexuality at this moment in time.
“It’s a man, Ima. … It’s Ari Weismann …”
“Does your father know?” she asked tentatively, watching her daughter’s expression.
“Uhuh,” nodded Sarah, “When we talked last night.”
“Oh,” stated her mother simply. “I shall have to talk to the Rabbi about this … Surely he can find some way for you to still be a boy and love Ari? You don’t have to be a woman if its not what you want dear … If its because of this ….”
Sarah didn’t hear the end of her mother’s sentence. The door slamming saw to that.
Comments
Ouch!
That had to hurt, badly. All that acceptance Sarah thought she had found, crumbling away. The quick assumption that a M2F transsexual is really just a gay man trying to validate his feelings. I could get started on a rant there, but I won't. But Sarah is going to hear that, a LOT, and she is going to have to devise a way to cope with it. I guess I'm a bit surprised it hasn't come up before now, but I've been caught up in the flow of the story.
Karen J.
"Being a girl is wonderful and to torture someone into that would be like the exact opposite of what it's like. I don’t know how anyone could act that way." College Girl - poetheather
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
This is All too Real
Having lived through this and seeing this situation again just guts me. To have your own mother see you as something you are not and refer to you as something you are not just makes my flesh crawl. I had both my parents do this to me and they still do. Kudos to the realness and down to earth grittiness you've added to this story. It makes Road to Haifa that much more relevant to us as a community and that much more cherished in my heart. *Hugging Sarah tightly*
Sephrena Lynn Miller
BigCloset TopShelf
Ouch is Right
I had once dated the head of a college Psychology Dept, she even was the faculty sponsor of the school LBGT alliance but to this day she cannot get her head around the whole TS thing; she is certain it is all based on being gay-in-denial.
*sighs*
Mom's not "quite" so accepting as it appeared. She loves her child, I think... Doesn't understand, For Sure. and contridicts herself regularly.
Sarah lives in "interesting" times...
*sighs*
Annette
Gee, what did I say?
From her wording, Mom's little blunder was an attempt at helpfulness and support.
She's highly misinformed, but gender variance was never a part of her world until the
day before, and she might not really know any gays either. If all the information she's got
is from the media, she wouldn't naturally savvy the distinction unless it was explained to her.
I think once Sarah explains more about who she is + how off base such a suggestion was,
Mom will be duly chagrined. Maybe Sarah is rushing off to the bookstore to buy her
folks each a copy of Transsexualism for Dummies. I think they'd read it too,
they seem like wonderful parents...
~~~hugs, Laika
"Government will only recognize 2 genders, male + female,
as assigned at birth-" (In his own words:)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1lugbpMKDU
What she said
Sarah didn't say she was gay, Sarah said she was a woman. Major difference. If mom got "gay" out of that then she wasn't listening, she was busy mentally shoving David into some neat cultural pigeonhole that she could accept easier. Mom's relief that she was going to be able to keep her son after all, "he is just gay", was obvious.
Sarah is a normal hetrosexual woman, stuck in a man's body. Me, I'm gay, I'm a woman who likes women; and I was stuck in a man's body.
KJT
"Being a girl is wonderful and to torture someone into that would be like the exact opposite of what it's like. I don’t know how anyone could act that way." College Girl - poetheather
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin
Rock On!
Huge difference. I am thankfully post so I am a woman in a woman's body ( yeah, closest approximation of one, darn it ) who appreciates women. There are very few men that catch my eye. The idea of a grizzled smelly old coot hugging and kissing me when I am an old fart does not do it for me at all. I think men can be fine people, though there are a significant number who desperately needs to be hit on a nose with a newspaper.
Sarah's travails are all too common and all too real. It evokes a deep felt wince especially in the TS viewers out in web-land.
Kim
The Road to Haifa - Chapter 19
Sarah's mother showed how she truly feels, hope her father is different.
May Your Light Forever Shine
May Your Light Forever Shine
oh dear
That hurts, of course it does. But give Mum some credit, she's trying to understand something that was perhaps only a vague occasional news story before now. Suddenly her little boy is a girl and if she slips in trying get her thoughts fully around that, well... Sarah didn't word that terribly well, 'I'm seeing someone, it's man'. So where does mums mind go, sex and she knows that Sarah may be feminine but she isn't physically female. I think this plays the ambiguities and contradictions of such a situation very well. The pain and the stumbling confusion, the unwitting hurts. God job Alyssa.
Kristina
Say, that went well
didn't it? I thought I'd read that mommy and daddy had had a long talk yesterday, after Sarah and her father had a heart-to-heart. But I guess it wasn't much of an issue for dear dad, bless him, that his daughter has a -mutually shared- romantic interest in her best friend Ari, so he failed to mention that while discoursing the news Sarah brought, with his wife. And while he seemed to show a courteous acceptance of his new daughter, apparently this isn't an equally shared sentiment with mom. Or of too little importance to mention.
What somewhat irks me, however, is that mom seems to immediately -want to- turn for guidance to the rabbi. What's with that? Can't she think and decide for herself? Or -because she is after all ´just a woman' and thus needs help- why not turn to Aba and confer with the residing patriarch.
Mom's reaction to the news of a boyfriend was very confusing, when taken in account the lengthy discussion the night before. Apparently she doesn't grasp the meaning of transsexuality. Well, what else is new? Educate, educate, educate. :S
A nice chapter, however, and I eagerly await the next installment. Thank you.
Jo-Anne
Oh Dear
Sarah's mother was doing well up until the end. I was sniffling quite happily until her faux pas. *sigh*
I'm sure it's not malice that made her mother say what she did. It seems more like ignorance to me. I'm sure they'll make up. I don't see how they could have a perfect understanding over night.
Thanks. I really liked this chapter and I'm looking forward to more. Please keep up the good work.
- Terry
Very good and complex chapter
Mom is having a hard time as is Sarah but mom committed that second and possibly fatal mistake -- assuming her SON is gay and not a woman --, in terms of their relationship, after profusely apologizing for the previous one that implied Sarah is not a daughter but her son.
Time may heal this wound but they never will be close again. What hurts is, and Mom doesn’t know, is Sarah was castigating herself about having failed to come to Mom long ago about her confused sexuality. She remembered Mom noticing something was wrong with her son and that she was willing to listen. For Mom now to badly misunderstand what Sarah was saying about Ari hurt Sarah to the core.
I suspect like the PM’s wife did and Sarah’s fellow troupers do that she is really a genetic woman and only outwardly at all a male. I hope for the Disney ending, that of the PS’s wife’s doctor discovering Sarah’s really a female, fixing what is wrong and she eventually becomes a mother. Where will her relationship with Mom be by then? Closer but never again close, I fear. There will always be that remembrance of the day Mom seemed to deny who her daughter was. That is a wound that may never heal.
Damned good stuff.
John in Wauwatosa
John in Wauwatosa
Maybe it takes time to adjust.
In real life, both my brothers either slip sometimes or are simply unwilling to use the correct pronouns. It is surprising how others seem to dance around something that is so important to us.
At this point, I just have to tolerate it. If I even start to think about how I really feel about it, I get really, I mean really! angry! I feel trapped because I can't lash out at them and if I lash out at myself...
It is a hard road to walk. Don't ask me if the BULL SHIT is worth it now.
Gwen
Everyone else ......
has said most if not all so.... I will just say this is one of the best stories for me in quite a while. You really rock Alyssa!!
That being said I do not mean disrespect for any other authors posting here or about. There are some very very good ones still going on and some that have finished. This one just has so much going for it that the story SHINES, at least to me, and I usually do not post a public comment on any story until it is finished, if even then.
Bringing back memories of a less than fantastic time...
the assumption of your gender based on your sexuality as a transsexual is something that is always confusing and misinterpreted by a lot of people. I remember when I opened up in High School back in the 80s, I was asked the sex question a lot, as far as if I was interested in boys or girls. I kept it simple. I refused to answer the question due to personal reasons and the fact that I could have so easily been assumed to be gay based on my answer. Later of course after transitioning, there was no confusion on the part of people that knew me and maybe my earlier stance on my sexual preference help things along.
Beverly Colleen
**********
I am a leaf on the wind, but someone turned the fan off.