Here’s the thing you need to know about people who transitioned as adults: their transition is probably a truly epic saga. They might be the most basic person ever, and they might not tell you their story, but it’s there.

Maybe it’s about the extremes they reached running from their dysphoria. Maybe it’s an intricate web of relationships and pain and sorrow. Maybe it’s an internal tale of descending into themselves to battle daemons that society itself cursed them with.

Transition is wild, yo.

Trans folks, if you are so inclined, please feel free to share your story.

@Willow Summer. 1993. I was 13.

Puberty hit me hard between grades 7 and 8. Fast. Ugly.

I was mistaken for my dad on the phone. Adam's apple to next week. Hair already giving away the fact I'll go bald. I hated every moment of it, way more than the other boys.

It hit so hard, in fact, that my pituitary gland had to balance my body out with estrogen, with an unexpected side effect: hard lumps under my nipples.

The doctor said it was temporary, puberty-induced gynecomastia, and that it would go away in about 6–12 months. Most boys would probably be elated and play video games. I walked out of his office numb. And that numbness bothered me. In fact, it bothered me the rest of the day.

You see, I was a kid who ideated suicide a lot, very quietly. My parents screamed and fought constantly. I was viciously abused at school for my high marks and my (unaware-to-me) queerness. I was used to the numbness of wanting to cease.

This wasn't that. This numbness pulled. At my mind. The rest of the day. And it wouldn't leave

I went to sleep bothered not to be able to figure it out, like a limb that fell asleep that won't wake up. I eventually decided to try to sleep and worry about it the next day. My brain went quiet. Until:

“Oh,” a little, calm, rational voice — my voice — said, “you have little breast buds and you don't want to lose them.

But. You're going to. And that hurts. That's the problem.”

That voice was tiny, but it split my brain like a thundercrack. I immediately knew.

I was a girl.

I cried silently in my bed for what seemed like hours. It wasn't a mistake, what this voice said. But God wouldn't fuck up this bad. Science wouldn't fuck up this bad. There has to be something.

What can I do?

What… could I do?

There's… nothing I could do.

I cried myself to sleep knowing who I was, but more trapped than I could imagine.

That's the story of discovery. I'll write more later.

@Willow Teen years: 1993–1997

My next two weeks were rough. I was trained at home by my mother to put on the act that I was always fine, but I couldn't care to. My mood even prompted my father, who was very stoic at the time, to ask if I was okay.

Eventually, I put the face back on. I was broken underneath it.

Over the next few years, I struggled to cope. I thought I was the only girl like me. Yes, I saw Ace Ventura. Yes, my mom liked to laugh at the trans women on Jerry Springer. Yes, I heard of people who had sex changes. But, the media depiction was so awful, so nefarious. I didn't make the link that those people were like me simply because these people were so caricaturized by media, intentionally demonized. I didn't feel like some evil, laughable character on TV. I just felt so alone.

But, I did manage to have moments that I'd steal for myself where I'd move through the world as a secret girl. In the hallways at school. On the bus. In my room. Walking home. No one had to know.

…until someone figured me out.

Grade 11 math class was awful, taught by a retired, Hall of Fame athlete who barely taught class and spent his time outside chainsmoking. He would answer questions with the phrase “Don't ask questions about things you don't understand.” Easily the worst teacher I ever had.

I made friends in the back of the classroom with some girls and we got along like a house on fire. Anytime the teacher left, we'd start joking and laughing. It was a lot of fun. I felt like me.

And the girls could tell.

At the end of semester, when the teacher left one class to smoke, the girls offered me a hangout. A shopping trip. For cosmetics. And clothes. And to show me how to use them. And going out for a movie. And it was all deeply sincere.

“You know… just a girl's night out. What do you think?”

I froze. I immediately replayed grade 11 in my head and realized that year, at school, that I somehow dropped my guard and stopped pretending I was a boy. And it showed. So much. The way I walked. Held my books. Talked. I was such a fool. Idiot. Stupid, stupid, stupid. I wasn't being so secret of a girl, anymore.

I refused her offer. Silently. We never talked about it, again.

The rest of the year, I changed the way I walked and wouldn't walk that way in a long, long time.

(Continued later)

@Willow The end of high school and beginning of university, 1998–1999

The last year of high school seemed like a blur. It was also oddly the first year where bullying happened behind my back instead of to my face. And I was somewhat accepted.

Looking back, yeah: I finally learned how to assimilate.

I also started absorbing a lot of hot garbage my mom had been selling me for also a decade of throwing money at televangelists. Extremely regretful, with some of the usual stereotypes that come with it.

You wouldn't have wanted to know me. I didn't want to know me. I think that was probably the point.

But, for reasons I'll keep to myself, at the end of my first year of university, I had need to scroll through psychological and psychiatric resources on this thing called high-speed internet. I was looking up things to try to understand something someone I was close to was going through (unsuccessfully, sadly).

But, as I was going through a list of disorders, conditions, etc., I saw a link for something called “gender identity disorder”. This wasn't what I was looking for, but I was going through this website's disorders list alphabetically and thought “Eh, I've come this far. Why not?”

So I started reading.

Summary.

History.

…oh.

Diagnosis.

Symptoms.

Oh. Oh, no.

Treatment.

Prognosis.

…fuck.

Me. I'm reading about me. This whole page is me. I'm not even supposed to be here, but… this is me, dead to rights.

The prognosis section of the page outlined that studies show patients typically report their distress continues until relief was sought with treatment (gender transition).

“Not me. I'm going to be different.”

I closed the page and threw myself away completely for the next 22 years.

(Continued later)

@Willow The lost years, 1999–2015

From 1999 to 2015 — 19 to 35 years old — I became what my understanding of being cishet was. And pretty awful at that until I hit 32 years old.

I believed terrible, evangelical bullshit until I was 26. Abusive. Patriarchal. Controlling. “Love the sinner, hate the sin” bullshit that I choked on as a teen but somehow used now.

Surprising no one, I was also labelled as a “great guy” during this time by both men and women alike.

Awful. Just horrific stuff that society tells you is good. But, no one questioned it. No one questioned me, either. Society likes to reinforce you like that.

But, I started a new relationship with my current partner at 25 and, after a year, I saw what that abusive mentality was doing to her. I was lucky enough to look in the mirror and ask myself what it would feel like if she did that to me.

So I stopped. Sadly, I couldn't take it back, but I could make it better. That's what I tried to do.

At the same time, I lost my main social network. My relationship with my partner healed in some ways, but strained in others. We separated for a while, but eventually got back together.

Other troubles started. At 30, I became estranged from my mother in what was a long time coming. The same year, my job ended the careers of several people, including myself. I tried to get by with freelancing and working in a kitchen.

Was I improving as a person? Depends on if you call being a shitlib “improvement”.

I got taken to task by a gender studies academic while at dinner on vacation in Portugal in 2012 and I didn't realize it. I deserved every moment of it, but I laughed the whole thing off like she was just full of gender studies bullshit. It took me going to bed and waking up in the hostel the next morning to realize not only that she was right but that I was full of shit.

That trip was the end of my liberalism at 32.

Afterwards though, personally, everything was falling apart. We were having troubles affording things. My partner struggled to keep work. Her chronic illness took a bad, critical turn that needed expensive treatment. I found myself working where I vowed I would never work: in my dad's welding shop.

And, in part, me working there brought me back what I had thrown away.

(Continued later)