Let me start, if I may, by introducing myself. I am a 40 years old. I was born in Zimbabwe, whilst it was still Rhodesia, and grew up there till I was 20 years old. I then lived in the UK (London), where I sold and installed accounting software. I left the UK to return to sunnier climes in 1994 (which was also the year my mum passed away) and came to South Africa, where I have been living ever since. I am married (divorced once) and have two sons (8 & 10) from a first marriage and one (4 years old tomorrow!) from my second. My second wife (whom I met in Aug 2005), Jacqui, has a daughter (10) who’s father passed on when she was two and to whom I am now de-facto dad. Jacqui and I are both Pagan, from a spiritual perspective, although I wouldn’t describe us as religious, although we do honour the major Pagan festivals. So, that’s a little about me!Writing this blog I guess has a dual purpose. I feel I really need to get my story out of my head and onto the page, a cathartic process of sorts, and also because I would like to connect with people with similar challenge, as I have so many unanswered questions, which they may be able to help me resolve.
My story starts with my earliest recollections of myself. I remember when I was about 3 or 4 being dressed up by my two older sisters as a girl. Could this be where my challenge started? Everything I have read links Gender Identity Dysphoria to both physiological and emotion causes, so perhaps on a certain level this could have triggered things. Zimbabwe was in a state of war at this time, the war only ending in 1980, when I was 10. In ’75, when I was 5, I was struck with a double whammy… first my father left, not just the home, but the country, and moved to South Africa. Second, my mother didn’t handle this very well and packed us all off to a co-Ed boarding school in the middle of the Zimbabwean farming districts, exactly where the war was at its worst!
I still cannot believe my parents did that, and have told my father (77, who now lives in London) he must have had a brain-freeze to think that was a good idea.
On top of this, it was school aimed specifically at the surrounding farming district, and consequently the kids were all hardened farming folk. The school had a very traditional ethos, where boys were boys, bullying was accepted as part of the tradition (“It’ll toughen you up son”) and there was no tolerance for “softies”. Being a “townie” (i.e. from Harare and not a farm) put me at an immediate disadvantage. Reading about GID I can see that this was the “perfect storm” scenario. I was isolated from my family (it was frowned upon for the boys and girls to mix, hence I didn’t see my sisters much), placed in a barracks type dormitory with all these toughies in a community strong on discipline and extremely short on love. As the war peaked in the late eighties we actually had troops garrisoned at the school to keep us safe, but if anything I guess it was more disconcerting than anything else. It was during these early years at the school that I first became conscious of the desire to be a girl. I have always reasoned that it was brought on by the situations I have already mentioned, but I think accentuated by the fact that the girls’ side of the school seemed to me to be more “peaceful” and certainly less overtly aggressive. I was bullied a lot, for reasons already mentioned, and because I was less confrontational and aggressive myself, feeling unassertive due to the over-whelming feeling of isolation. My weight issues also started then. A parallel issue all my life, I have come to realize that this too was linked to the psycho-schematic need to protect myself, creating a cyclical crisis as I gained weight to protect myself which lead to me being bullied for being fat (“fat-crap” they called me), which lead to me gaining more weight. I have done all the weigh-loss techniques in the world but have never managed to crack this, leading me to believe its “all in my head”. As an aside, I have read that 8 out 10 of the genes that govern weight are linked to mental/emotional elements and only 2 are link to physiology. I definitely believe there is a link between these parallel issues.So it was then, when I was about 8, that, during school holidays I would dress in my sisters’ clothes and underwear. I loved the softness and it made me feel something deeply emotional inside, like this is how I was meant to be. The trauma really got worse and worse and I can recall impeaching God to set this wrong, right. Things became abundantly worse in 1980 when my immediately older sister, Caroline, left the school for high school. This, too, was something of a double whammy for me as, not only was I now left all alone in this isolated hell-hole, but my sisters were now day-scholars living at home. This strongly re-enforced my desire to be a girl as, if I was, I would then be able to live in the girls’ hostel, and when I left the school I could also live at home. My sisters contend however that “home” was no picnic either as our mother was gradually unravelling as a result of my father leaving and had become an alcoholic. She became more and more self-absorbed and emotionally distant. I remember not being sure what was worse, being at the love-less hell-hole of a school, or being at home watching my mother drink herself into a stupor. Caroline, who is 2 years older than me, also struggles to this day with the emotional trauma caused collectively by our parents.
Due to my mother’s unravelling, I guess my parents, in their wisdom, felt it would be best if I was sent to boarding school for high school. This was very traumatic for me, although as I said, my sisters hold the view that I was the lucky one. Well, this “luck” saw me sent to a boys-only school 650kms away from home, again in the middle of the bush-veld. The nearest town, Bulawayo (Zimbabwe’s 2nd city) was 72kms away, but access to the town was considered unnecessary. Again, this was a barrack style, “military” type school where “boys were turned into men” through a traditional regime of sanctioned bullying, unsanctioned bullying, beatings for anything from a creased bed, to unaligned clothes in the cupboard, to watermarks on the windows (we had to polish the dormitory every Sunday).
It took me till I was at least 30 years old to actually enjoy Sundays and not have a perpetual feeling of foreboding.
The school was also aimed at the children of the farming community and, again, great emphasis was placed on manly activities like rugby, bush-sports and athletics. I don’t think I have ever felt suicidal, which surprises me in a way given the circumstances I found myself. Certainly I felt isolated, and always very different to the other boys. I have though wished at times that I could cut my penis off, and don’t like the bulge between my legs. I find it unsightly, awkward, and always in the way. I never really felt, nor ever have, like I was a homosexual. I have had periods where I have fantasized about a homosexual relationship, but have never had the desire to follow this through in reality. I never wanted to have homosexual sex, but strongly desired to have sex with a man, as a woman. In a way I find this more traumatic as homosexuality is obviously an easier route than a sex-change! We were allowed to come home once a term, for four days, and had three main holidays a year. These holidays were split between my mother and my father, who was in South Africa, in Johannesburg. This made forming relationships of any kind very difficult as, (1) most of the other kids were farming folk, and (2) because of the split of time between my folks it was never possible to connect easily with other “townie” kids. Consequently I spent most of this time alone out of school alone, and most of it “closeted” (excuse the expression) at home in drag. The time with my father was no better as he was also extremely self-absorbed and emotionally disconnected, so my time at his house was spent much the same way. This created a number of issues though, as while I believe my mother and sisters were aware of my issue, we never discussed it and they kind of tolerated it. My step-mother however was less charitable, although she had great clothes and underwear! I see now that it was entirely reasonable of her to be irritated, and in a way she was probably the most honest of us all.In 1985 my mother agreed to let me go and live with my father in Johannesburg. I was put into a day-scholar school and felt that this was a new beginning for me, and my relationship with my father. Sadly though, he failed to meet the challenge, and seemed happy with his selfish, self-absorbed life with my step-mother, and didn’t really have time for me. He continued to play golf three times a week, work late and spend what little time was left with my step-mother. I tried to engage him by taking up squash and golf, hoping he’d coach me, but he just signed me up with the country club and school coaching staff. The one sport I did love, for myself, was ice-hockey, however this too was a problem for my father as he believed only “scummy” kids hung out at the ice-rink.
He once refused to fetch me from the rink as I had missed the last bus, and forced me to walk home, which involved a leisurely stroll through the Johannesburg CBD, Joubert Park (which is like Hampstead Heath after dark!) and Hillbrow (think Brixton, but 100 times worse!).
I was struggling to make friends, other than two great guys who I skated with, who my father naturally disapproved of. My cross-dressing got worse as I would steal my friends’ sisters underwear and step-mother’s. My step-mother tried to deal with this by locking her dressing room, which I got around by stealing and copying a key. It was not going well.
1985 was also when I had my first and only sojourn in public in drag. I went downstairs to collect the post (we lived in a flat). A messenger got in the lift and looked at me quizzically and then asked if I was really a girl! I almost died!
Rather than engage me, my father waited till I was on holiday with my mother and phoned to say that when I returned he would be sending me to an all-boys boarding school in South Africa, also about 500kms from home, in the bush, etc, etc. Faced with this possibility I elected to return to the Zimbabwean boarding school I had been at. I started dating girls at this stage, and had a regular number of girlfriends, despite the geographic challenges. We had a sister-school in Bulawayo, and from 16 years old we were allowed to attend school dances, where the girls were bussed in. You can imagine the pandemonium! I got on well with the girls and enjoyed this time with them, and developed a number of friendly relationships with these girls, especially the teenage daughters of one of the school masters. Entirely platonic, these friendships gave me a degree of sanity, and I also formed close bonds with my friends’ girlfriends, many of which I have to this day.
I never bonded well with other guys although at school I did have a couple of guys I was very close to, bonding mainly around smoking and other rebellious activities! We’re still in touch today, although the Diaspora of Zimbabweans in my age group has sent us to different corners of the world.
Despite the seeming normality of my life; good friends, I was enjoying school and school holidays by now, girl-friends, parties and all things adolescent, I just could never shake or get beyond this yearning to be a girl. I was so jealous, not resentful though (ok, maybe sometimes!) of the way girls were able to dress. I loved the idea of being able to wear make-up, mini-skirts, long hair, soft underwear, bras, camisoles and nighties. It drove me crazy. It was when I was about 16 that I started to by my own girls clothes. I remember the rush of going into a Woolworths (our equivalent of Marks & Spencers) and buying my first camisole, bra, panties and garter belt. For the rest I borrowed from my sisters and being a little overweight helped me fill the bra a bit and my spare-tire functioned as a great pair of hips. Caroline caught me once and, bless her, tried really hard to talk to me about it, but I just couldn’t. It drove me crazy. I didn’t want to be a man in girl’s clothes… I wanted to BE a girl. It was round about then that my father tried the “father-son” talk, and a bought me a book, “What every boy should know”. Clearly not a good communicator himself! On the back was an advert for “What every girl should know”, with a picture of a 15 year old girl, and I so desperately wanted to be her!I survived school and lived with my mother in Harare. I had about 3 jobs in 3 months, trying desperately to figure out what I wanted to do. I had sex for the first time when I was 19. She was a beautiful girl with a great figure, really sweet and nice. I enjoyed, and still enjoy, hetero-sex, but realized from the outset that I always wished to be on the other side. Oh, to be able to wear sexy negligees, panties, all those toys and to be able to multiple orgasm! Its just not fair damn it

After mulling through a number of jobs and relationships I moved to UK, mostly for career reasons, but also to try to connect with my father again, who by now was living in London. The four years I spent in the UK was pretty lonely for me and for the first couple of years I really struggled. I did find Ann Summers though! Living on my own was a bonus as I was able to dress however I pleased at home, but no matter how hard I tried, I was always consumed by the fact that I was a man-in-drag, not a woman. I guess if I had known about organizations like GIRES (if it was even around in the early ’90s), my life may have taken a very different path. Unfortunately all I was exposed to was the weird world of transsexuals through magazines from Soho (not a good reference base I know!) and I didn’t identify with that either. It seemed to me that even if I could re-assign my gender, I would forever be on the periphery of society, not able to lead a normal life and still not be considered a real woman. My fear of isolation, and need for acceptance, drove me to bury my feelings deeply to secret recesses of my being, and to get on with living a normal life. I had my first major relationship with a girl also from Zimbabwe, Nicky. She was so fantastic. When she moved in she found my “stash” while I was at work, and when I got home she merely announced that she didn’t want to know, and had thrown them out. She probably figured they were a collection from previous girlfriends. We never discussed it, and I never told her.
The last 20 years have really been a repeat of this cycle. I returned to Zimbabwe in ’94 when my mother got ill. After she passed I moved to Johannesburg, tried to live a “normal” life, while always carrying this burning with me. I got married, settled down, had two kids. My first marriage broke up for pretty much normal reasons, if there is such a thing. My ex-wife is devoutly Catholic and through my searching to understand myself, and life, I have become Pagan, and those two just don’t mix! She is also a very hard woman, not feminine at all, a verbal bully, and ultimately I needed to be with someone more empathetic, soft and feminine. I had a number of functional, loving and successful relationships before I met Jacqui. We actually met online, at Match.com. We clicked (excuse the pun!) right from the beginning. She is a 3rd Degree Wiccan Priestess, having done her Degrees in the UK. I didn’t really define myself as Pagan when we met, but since understanding my spiritual path from her perspective, I can now see that this has always been my path. All Pagans, whilst being polytheist, have one central deity that they most identify with. Mine is the Goddess Morgana, mainly known for her role in the Arthurain legends. It is so fascinating to me that all my life the feminine style I have always coveted is the long flowing black, or white, lace with tight bodice and flowing long hair. If you’re not aware of her, Google Morgana and you’ll see what I mean! Think also Evanescence. I also love the flowing gowns of the medieval times, damsels in distress and knights of honour. When I was younger I would fantasize about being a princess getting rescued and then ravaged (nicely!) by a strong knight.
I struggle with relationships with men, and South African men are the most pig-headed, chauvinistic of them all. It’s like they’re all still living in the ’50s. It’s all about rugby, braais (barbeques), beer and who’s got the flashiest car, all a substitute really for the question which seems to bother them most… who’s got the biggest dick?
So, I now find myself at something of a cross-roads in my life. I have been very successful as a man, well externally anyway. I have three sons and a step-daughter, and a wife who loves the “man” I present on the outside. But what about the “me” on the inside? I call her “Julieanne”. What do I do with Julieanne? We have been together for 40 years now. She’s clearly not going away. I’ve tried ignoring her. I’ve tried allowing her a little outlet now and then. It’s just not enough any more. The outside of me just isn’t in sync with the inside of me. My wife has made it clear to me that she needs a “MAN”. Hairy chest, hairy arms, short stubby finger nails. Of course, she would not be happy if I was a beer-swilling chauvinist, and loves the fact that I am empathetic and feminine in my approach to life. But cut those nails, don’t grow your hair, or shave your legs.
I don’t have the answer right now. What I have is the question. That’s a start. We’ll see where it goes from there! One thing is certain though, the next 40 years will be a lot different to the last!