TransGriot Note: Another insightful post from author Pamela Hayes
Back In The 80's, It was Easier Being A Transsexual
by Pamela Hayes
I have been living as a female for over three
decades. I was a teen when I started this transsexual journey. In the
beginning, the late 70’s and much of the 80’s, life was sweet. I lived
as a woman, took my hormones. Eventually had surgery....
I dated. The men knew I was trans. Some of them introduced me to their
family members. And friends. I was escorted to company picnics and
Christmas parties. I played horse shoes and danced with their
colleagues.
Here and there, people would whisper comments about
me. I’m tall, and some people accused me of being a female impersonator.
Not in those words, mind you. But for the most part, I was not
disrespected or treated differently.
Back then, people dismissed
the “That‘s a man” accusations. Think about it. We’re talking about
the 70’s and 80’s. Facially, I looked female. I had/have breasts and
curves. My voice was/is light and feminine. So to accuse the tall
striking lady of being a man was considered a ridiculous statement.
I
recall one night, in the early days of my journey, a guy and I went
partying on a Tuesday night. After leaving the club, we stopped at 7-11
because I was out of soft drinks and I had to put some in the house.
I bought this big bottle of Pepsi, which they called The Boss back then.
Anyway,
I went inside. This man looked me up and down. I could tell he
appreciated my appearance. We spoke. He told me, I looked and smelled
good. He flirted. Tried to get my phone number. He had been conversing
with the clerk. It couldn’t have been anything serious if he was coming
on to another woman in her presence.
When I was getting The Boss
out of the cooler, I heard the clerk whisper that I was a man. “Girl,
you crazy,” he said, supposedly sotto voce. “That woman just tall. Ain’t
no damn way that’s a man. Your ass is crazy.”
He said goodnight to me and when he wasn’t looking, I winked at her.
The
point of that story is to illustrate that back in the day, when a
transsexual’s gender was impugned, people didn’t take it seriously. It
was dismissed as a silly statement.
But along came the 90’s. And
in the 90’s, when Miss Pamela was pelted with the ”That’s a man”
accusation, people listened. Stared at me. Put me under a microscope.
They wondered if the statement was true.
However, I can honestly
say that most people DO NOT treat me differently. I can tell when people
have been told things about me or have suspicions. I can see the
confusion or skepticism in their eyes. But for the most part, they're
cool. A friend, a cis woman. I know she has qualms about me. I can see
it in her face. But once a week, I baby-sit her children.
But
in the 90’s, trans women like Tula, and the late Jahna Steele hit the
talk show circuit and a plethora of lovely t-women followed, confessing
to Maury, Sally Jessy, Phil Donahue and the studio and at home
audiences, making people realize that just because a woman was pretty
didn’t necessarily mean she was born female.
I don’t know if this makes a lick of sense. But I’d bet some veteran trans girls can relate to what I’ve written.
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