Yesterday was my 39th wedding anniversary……..

A word from our sponsor:

1200-320-max.jpg
Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Blog About: 

Yeah, 39 years……… probably 38 more than I deserve, lol.

I fully expected that my marriage was over a decade ago when my spouse and I had our first discussion about my gender dysphoria. And then again multiple times after that, but especially when I told her I was going to transition.

We had gone through a lot, between my time in the service and the ensuing issues it left, to my civilian career which kept me away from home about 75 to 80% of the time, and then eventually due to my gender issues.

When I came out, she tried to deal with it. She tried to convince me to keep it in private, then she told me she didn’t care if I wanted to cross dress in the house - just not outside of the house. But I told her I had tried to keep it hidden for years and it was eating me alive. That pretending was killing me, that I couldn’t be a dirty little secret hidden away in the closet. And I moved forward. I had been seeing a therapist for years, first due to my issues from my time in the military, and then due to my gender issues. I started seeing an endocrinologist for HRT - although I had been self-medicating for a while by then. And yeah, I got the expected lecture for that even though I had been giving myself the proper dosages per my doctor, lol.

My spouse eventually convinced me to halt my transition, even going to see the endocrinologist with me when I told him I was stopping the hormones. That lasted about six months, but by then I had already returned to being on the edge of suicide. So I told her I couldn’t be what she wanted and went back to the endocrinologist. She told me not to come back home from my next business trip, and let me know she had gone to see a lawyer about a divorce. Three weeks later one of my sons called me to tell me that she really needed to talk to me, and as my lawyer had advised that I not speak with her I was not taking her calls or texts. Hence the call from my son.

I called her, and she let me know that she had realized that she loved the me that was inside, not what was outside. She had told the lawyer to get lost and wanted to come see me. She drove down to Pennsylvania that night to be with me, and we are still together. I have now fully transitioned, and she tells me I am a much better person than I was before.

So 39 years ago on October 12, 1985, I was lucky enough to marry my soulmate - a woman who is a saint. Without her, my life is just an accumulation of days spent dealing with the inanities of life. A collection of wasted days. Without her, I am nothing.

With her, I am a better person.

With her, I am everything.

Comments

Nice

Good to hear that you've both managed to find a way to keep together. Difficulties abound in any relationship, but it seems love can still triumph.

Every day

Andrea Lena's picture

I think of her. This past May would also have been our 39th as well. God bless!

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Lucky indeed

So it's time to start plannning for the celebration of the big four O?

Very good

Wish there were more stories on BC that reflect the goal of maintaining such a relationship.

Such a blessing

Emma Anne Tate's picture

We had our 32nd anniversary this year, so we’re a ways behind you! But I do not think we could navigate the transition that you and your wife have managed; I doubt very many could. Your wife must be an extraordinary woman, but then — though I doubt you’ll believe it! — so are you. Congratulations!

Emma

Fifty Last March

Accepting realities is hard.

Over the fifty years we've been married we've had many discussions about realities.

Truth and reality are not shifting concepts. They exist.

Your marriage became solid when you both accepted your reality.

My guess is that holding onto that reality in the face of a world of lies has been a struggle.

I'm willing to bet, based on personal experience that your mutual understanding with your spouse has become a key strength of your narridage.

Years ago I was taught that chaos is bad and order is good. When making a key decision I look for the path of least chaos.

In your situation it seems your dysphoria was at such a level that not accepting your natural state was the path of most chaos.

Congratulations!

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

The Ones We Love

BarbieLee's picture

Loving another isn't the same as loving a home, a car, money, a friend, etc. Just as there are different degrees of temperature there are different kinds of love. I'm happy you and your wife found the right kind of love before you both lost one of the best gifts there is in this mixed up crazy world. Thank you for sharing yo and yours happiness.
Hugs D. Eden
Barb
Life is a gift, what we chose to do with that gift isn't always up to us but give it the best effort anyway.

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

Congratulations

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

Sounds like you've got a keeper.

Really good marriages are made better and couples are drawn closer by adversity. When you can face serious differences of opinion or direction in life and come out the other side together and both wanting to stay that way, you got something worthwhile going on.

After all of that, there's nothing that can separate you while you're both still drawing breath.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann