Were there ever any feelings of ‘I don’t know if I can do this,’ or ‘I’m not sure I want to,’ or were you absolutely certain it was the only way you could feel happy?
There are a lot of hardships with being trans.
There have been plenty of times where it’s been so hard and transitioning, especially at first, will bring out more of your gender dysphoria [feelings of intense distress from a mismatch between assigned gender at birth and gender identity] because you’ve been suppressing it for so long.
So when you finally start seeing changes, the things that aren’t changing are horrifying. But if I hadn’t transitioned, I don’t think I would be living a life – or possibly even be alive – at all. So, really, there was no choice. I would be absolutely miserable if I were still pretending to be a man.
And how was the actual process of transitioning – physically, emotionally and psychologically?
It’s been difficult at times because, obviously, I finally transitioned, and yet I’m still so far from where I want to be. But at the same time, I no longer have a full beard. I’ve trained my voice to sound like this. No one ever calls me, sir, or calls me a man in public. I may not be totally where I want to be, but I’ve accepted and started to love what I have, rather than hoping for more because I’m kind of like, ‘Well, you know, I pass! I look good and I sound good and I’m a million times happier than I was before’.
You mention body dysphoria related to your gender; have you also experienced some body euphoria as you’ve started to see some changes?
I have, yeah. I was around at my friend’s house yesterday and parts of me have rounded out a bit because I’ve upped my hormone dosage slightly and I literally stared in the mirror for 20 minutes and cried because it made me so happy. So, yeah, I’ve had plenty of moments of euphoria, and it’s just incredible when it hits. Those moments make all of the really difficult times worth it.
The first time I got called ‘m’aam’ in public was incredible!
So as a woman now looking back, what would you say to that scared 10 or 11-year-old who had just started to realise they were trans?
So many people assume that because you’re young, you don’t understand yourself. People think it’s just a phase and that you don’t really know yourself because you haven’t been through puberty. Personally, I wish I had gone on hormones when I was younger – it would have saved me so much pain. There’s so much I’ve had to undo and fix – and still am fixing – because I went through male puberty.
I knew that I knew. So I think my message would be to trust myself.
I’d also tell myself to start voice training early! For trans men, their voice on testosterone will drop, so they don’t have to worry about it. But for trans women, we have to train our voices to sound more female.