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View Full Version : My Entire Story of Why I'm A Crossdresser and Other Various Facts.



elusivebeauty
05-26-2012, 03:18 PM
I originally shared this on my Facebook page (Facebook.com/EleNichols & fell free to add me). This was a reply I sent back to a friend who asked about my story. Oh boy, did I reply back to her. I thought it was worth sharing here too. We all have our stories and this is mine.


http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/392520_305349002882678_922214783_a.jpgThe simple answer to the question "How long have I felt this way about myself?" is all my life. I didn't identify things as male or female when I was a child. I was taught the difference later. I was raised in Arkansas in a very remote area with no children. I was creative, inventive and happy with myself. School changed that. There was just something the other kids couldn't put their finger on with me. I ended up being ostracized and bullied. That was the beginning of a long pattern of me trying to fit in and be something different.

I moved out to California when I was 10, things got worse for me. My only parent was never home and I received even worse treatment out here by my school peers. I recognize now I really suffered from insecurity and a lack of social skills. This all prevented me from getting ahead with my life and only turned me more inward. There were advantages to this because I became a very thoughtful person and tended not to judge people. There were also disadvantages because I retreated from the world and never really dealt with my problems.

Because I was literally at home alone most of the time, that's when I really started to crossdress and experiment. For a long time, I thought I was doing all this because of the problems in my life at that point. The need to express this other side of myself had always been there. Before any of the problems started in my life though, I was crossdressing. My real problem was I had no one in my life who understood me and had the ability to really help me. When I say help, I don't mean trying to stop me from being this way, but rather to guide me.

{ I want to interject here for a moment about my Mom, whom I'm about to speak of. I love my mother. I have a wonderful relationship with her as an adult. While there are still some things I've kept back from her, there is very little. People make bad decisions sometimes and she was no exception. So the person I speak of here doesn't exist anymore. Even then she wasn't a source of misery for me and never has been. She was a single mother in a bad relationship with a child. She just didn't know what to do when all of this landed in her lap. }

During this time, my mom had bags of clothing she had never worn in her closet (she did that kind of thing). I would borrow from all that and dress up in my bedroom. Did this for quite sometime, until one day she came to me very upset after she realized the bags had be rifled through. She thought that I had let in one of the neighbor kids and they had gone through her things. She was hell bent on getting a name, but I ended up coming clean with her. Her reaction was anger at first. After a moment, she just wanted to brush it under the carpet and act like it never happened. She had no idea what to do with that info. She chalked it up to some desperate act that was then probably scarred out of my system. That would prove to be wrong.

We started going to church again, not long after that. She felt guilty for not being around for me and for a lot of messed up crap in her own life. She felt better going, but I felt worse. One of the problems was that no one really had something of significant value to share with me. This was a charismatic church and everyone spoke the usual Christian drone speak. You had all these people talking about what Jesus did for you and the debt he paid for you. Then they would say something so contradictory that didn't sound right and didn't feel right. All these people standing around saying that they want to help you, but none even able to help themselves. I hated it because it was all so phony to me (my perception anyway).

So eventually we stopped going when things got worse in our lives. She lost her job, broke up with her boyfriend at the time and we ended up living in a motel room for 2 years in the ghetto. It was not pretty. As usual, she was never home, except sometimes on weekends. Left to my own devices and desperately needing to have at least short moments where I felt like myself, not being judged, I continued dressing again, but just a bit smarter.

Things got worse. I moved to West Virginia to live with my grandma and that was hard. She was super religious to an insane degree. I had no freedom, no privacy and no voice. I spent a year there and that was an almost impossible adjustment. I had been very self-reliant for so many years. Suddenly that was all ripped away. Dogma was constantly being barked at me and shoved down my throat. I was sent to a Christian high school, where again I never quite fit in. I was in hell. I don't want to make it sound like everything was horrible there, because it wasn't. I have some wonderful relatives who did so much for me and I will never forget that. My grandma was a broken person though and very hard to be around. She was selfish, judgmental and immature. Being again in the middle of no where with no place to run...lets just say I had some very bad thoughts.

One year later, I returned to California (forcibly of my own will) and my mom had been going to a church again. She had made some changes in her life and had really dived in head first into that world. So had my aunt Carol who was now living with us at that time. I felt like a prisoner. Crazy people yelling, nothing of any worth being shared (I felt anyway, personally speaking) and more facades everywhere I looked. First week I was there, there was a sermon excerpt about some gay people and transvestites. Needless to say, very harsh and cruel words were used and at some point during it direct eye contact was made with me (probably not intentional, but he scared the hell out of me).

Really, all the place did was terrify me into a 'relationship' with Jesus. It was survival and I was desperate. At some point, I got somewhat lost in all of it that. I started hoping I was possessed by something that could be cast out. After some 100+ prayer lines later, that never happened. I was constantly being reminded of how messed I was and tried so diligently to cure myself of it. To be honest, this was a big reason why I went to bible school in the first place (Yes, I actually went to Bible College for a year...). I thought whatever was wrong with me, it would be taken care of there. Instead, the very opposite happened.

So this pattern of denial and suppression went on for another few years. Around my 22nd birthday, I had a breakdown. I was working for a church at that time and had a private meeting with the pastors. I thought they would listen and try to help me. Instead, they twisted the whole thing into a sexual problem and labeled me gay. Not only that, they had another meeting with ALL the church leadership and staff and told everyone. They also did some other things I can't share, but I spent 3 months trying to earn back their trust (so stupid). What happened at the end of that was the head pastor sitting me down privately, rubbing my nose in the fact I was a 'gay transvestite sex addict' and telling me I needed to work for them for 90 days for free in order to prove myself to the ministry. I left that evening and never went back.

{ Another side not here. I don't think all ministries are this way. THIS ministry was this way. I made mistakes there, but so did they. I'll also allow that my memory of all these events may be distorted partially. They did happen, but during this time I was seeing everything though a slightly distorted filter. The emotions of it left a sting to be sure. Any way, I just want to clarify that I am not labeling all ministries to be this way. There are ALOT though. }

So I went back into hiding. Always living half of my life, which really isn't living. It's like having a Siamese twin that you're ashamed of and don't won't anyone to see. What do you do? You don't let anyone ever see you at all. 28 years I played that game. 28 years of misery, sadness, rejection and loneliness. For what? Because sometimes I want to feel beautiful? Not just that, but I've always been into fashion and makeup and so many other things that could be considered the exclusive domain of women. I still liked all my nerdy/geeky interests and my creative passions, but there was so much more I was terrified to share.

So more crap happened between here. A very great depression took me over and I bottomed out. I had to start over from scratch. I began working hard, developing my character (which I felt was lacking) and decided to stop chasing the dollar and turn back to my dreams. I've done that now and continue too. I'm not poor either, I do okay. I went all in on the future I wanted…except for the part of my life I was determined to always keep hidden.

2 years ago, I was spending a lot of time with my aunt and one night we just ended up talking about this. She really helped me and was supportive. With some encouragement, I started looking at myself not as this messed up person, but simply misunderstood. My thoughts changed, my outlook on life changed and my heart changed. I began to really love myself and embrace the way I was. This changed everything for me. It's been a process of healing and restoration. I've gone from being terrified of people and being socially awkward, to a person who is confident and even relaxed with casual conversation with anyone. Perhaps not impressive to many, but coming from where I've been, this was an impossibility for me at one time.

Since 2010, I've gone out, made friends in the transgendered community and really restored my identity. The one word that immediately comes to mind is 'Clarity'. I feel like I have that now. Also freedom. Further more, I'm not ashamed of it, but very happy that I am the way I am. I have a unique outlook on life. I have deep conversations with people and there is this openness that didn't exist before.

This year, I decided that this wasn't going to be a secret any longer. Besides, secrets always have a way of leaking out. Did I want it to seep out like it's something I'm ashamed of or did I want it to come out from my own mouth (or fingers). I've also been a member of a few message boards regarding transgendered and crossdressing topics. One day, I read this response from some one that could have been a echo from you childhood. It haunted me and just made me sob. This kid was so desperate for answers and so alone and fearful. He felt like he was the only person like this in the world and I remember having those horrifying thoughts too. I had no idea as a child how many men crossdressed and had a feminine side to them. The numbers are staggering. You would never know though because it's all hidden and bottled up. There is such an oppressive shame that gets tagged to it.

{ For all my crossdresser friends, the following paragraph is written from my perspective for my own life. I'm not judging or condemning anyone who chooses to never come out or wants to be passable. I'm really speaking about myself and how I honestly felt at the time I came to this decision. So please take no offense. I mean no harm in these words. We're all free to choose the life we want and no ones ideas are the same. }

Reading that teenagers message, I just felt this fire rise up inside myself to do something about this. It's wrong, it's all wrong. The ideas that the world has about us, the judgments that are made and all the twisted things that come up out of ourselves (CD/TG/TS people); it's all wrong. So there's not much that can be done if we all stay hidden or we try to blend in and be passable as the opposite sex. I am passable. Passable is a term thrown around in the community for those who want to blend in as the opposite sex unnoticed. This isn't a bad thing, but for me I don't want to simply be passable anymore. I want people to know. I have a voice, it's loud and I'm going to use it. It's not about some ego driven attention trip for myself. I just can't bare the thought of someone else going through the pain I did.

So I hate to sound pretentious, but I feel like I'm apart of making an impact. Serving as a beacon to others to let them know they're not alone. I hope I also change some opinions and rectify some bad info out there. We're not all drag queens and we're not all performers. There's not so much a Why as there is a Why Not. I've heard more than once, "Why don't you just stop? It would be easier." Of course it would be easier! Do you really think I made a choice one day like, "Gee, I wish I could make my life even harder. I know! I'll dress like a woman!" Really? It's mind-boggling to me that people think this is a decision. The only real decision involved is to either bury it or embrace it. Or even more appropriately, 'Misery' or 'Happiness'. I can't stop feeling this way just like I can't stop breathing. Actually I guess I could stop breathing, but I would be dead then.

As far as what people think, I couldn't give a flying f*** anymore. People are going to judge me either way, so why not give them something to really judge. There's this ridiculous thought that we should live life to be acceptable to others. No, no, no, no, no…We should live our lives the way we see fit (as long as it's not to the detriment or harm of others). At the end of the day, we shouldn't be judging people by their outside anyway. It's only clothing. For those who think I or the like are putting up a facade, well isn't a woman using makeup cloaking her true appearance as well? The argument could be made that a woman wants to reflect how she feels inside, outside. It's no different for myself. Sometimes I just have to express that side. I don't even do this all the time (though by popular demand, I have been dragged out more). I don't have to be one or the other. I can be both. I'm aware that I was born male physically, but my mind isn't constrained to that.

If you've actually managed to read this WHOLE THING…you're a real trooper. Thank you. This is who I am. This is always who I've been. Not always obvious, but always there. And I am not alone, not by a long shot. It's a changing world and like it or not, the world is going to have to make way. So thanks again for reading this exhaustively long diatribe. ;)

Much love,
ELE

P.S.
Some people thought that I changed my name from Brian to Ele because it sounded more feminine. Not the case. I'm an artist and a writer. All my work is online and people couldn't find me. Do a search sometime and you'll see what I mean. A few years back, A guy in Atlanta decided to go into a court room and kill a few people. His name? Brian Nichols. That caught a lot of attention and never really went away. So I referred to my middle name 'Lee'. Along with the same problems of bad SEO and search-ability, I got the idea to just go with the letter 'L' (which is the way it's pronounced). I used all three letters still, but I mixed them up E-L-E. So that's the story of my name. I don't care if people call me Brian, Ele, Nic, Brain or whatever. Surely you can't mean that? Of course I meant that! But don't call me Shirley.

JessHaust
05-26-2012, 03:36 PM
Brilliant, inspiring, the first words that come to mind. Next I kept finding lines that I wanted to quote on and say how strongly I agreed with them, but then there were just too many.
Your story is very moving, and while your circumstances are quite different than mine, they drove you to many of the same conclusions I came to. Please keep on telling your story, it should be an inspiration to all.

JenniferR771
05-26-2012, 03:56 PM
Thanks for sharing, Elusive. So many of us are "misunderstood" so few people understand crossdressing. It happens...we are born with it...we don't understand either. It will not go away. It causes so much depression and so many relationship problems. I think there are fewer gay men among us than the general population. And we make better husbands and more devoted fathers than most men. If only people could appreciate what we go through.

Great picture, Elle! So pretty!

c2candice
05-26-2012, 04:03 PM
Well said sister. power to you! Such a soulful story, thank you for sharing!

I love your conceptualization of 'why'. I am too scientific to accept the 'why' as just because. I just need to know that I accept this part of, and that is enough!

Lesley_Roberta
05-26-2012, 04:18 PM
You are not alone elusivebeauty

Different sources in my case, but I felt a lot of the pains you felt. Even had a heavy dose of religion in my early years to purge out of my system (not even close to yours though).

We are not all here for shits and giggles. Sure some of us just do some of the same things for their own pleasure, and that is their right too. But some of us are not here willingly in some cases.

How long have I had a woman inside me? I may never really know.

steftoday
05-26-2012, 04:37 PM
a great thread Ele, and thanks for sharing your story with us. it seems you've come a long way.

and I second the comment about your picture; very pretty!

Piora
05-26-2012, 10:11 PM
A very powerful story, Ele. I find it very informative to hear the stories of some of our members here. It can provide tremendous insight. Thanks for sharing this with us. Your picture is very feminine.

Kaz
05-26-2012, 10:21 PM
Ele, brilliant post... moving, thought provoking, and down right on the button...! We have all lived different lives, but we have a lot in common! I hope you enjoy and get some support from this amazing community...

Cassi3
05-26-2012, 10:30 PM
brilliantly written. I am sure your words hit home with a lot of us. Very well written.

Emily
05-26-2012, 10:48 PM
That was a great post Ele. Thanks for creating this thread, it was very enlightening. If you were able to go through all that hell and still come out the way that you wanted to be, then it just makes mine and other people's problems seem insignificant in the long run. After all that you've fought for make sure that people don't take away the thing that makes you you. Crossdressing is an expression or your individuality, taking it away from any of us will be like taking away ourselves. If anyone tells you that you can't be who you want to be then they have no idea what they're talking about. Thanks for the post though it was very enlightening! :)

AnitaH
05-26-2012, 11:43 PM
Thank you for writing your story. My life may have been different from yours but the years of pain, guilt and self-loathing were just as real. Finally accepting myself and making way for her to see life has finally begun to make life enjoyable.

Since accepting myself I have heard so many stories of hurting people in his community. It makes one want to do something to help heal the hurting. Perhaps in some small way we can prevent someone from having to go through the same life of pain that so many of us lived through.

Again thanks for your post, so many of us see large parts of our lives in yours. Your story is an encouragement to me.

AnitaH

April_Ligeia
05-26-2012, 11:48 PM
Very well-written. Thanks for sharing this.

Diane Smith
05-27-2012, 01:55 AM
Ele, I am moved by your story, and impressed by your strength in surviving all you have endured and making it out the other side as a stronger person. Some messages are important and just need to be long! Please ask if you need support (although it sounds like you're already doing better than a lot of us).

- Diane

Beverley Sims
05-27-2012, 04:49 AM
Ele, your story totally rocks.
You have the looks to go a long way.
I wish you all the best for the rest of your life.
Turn it all into a positive one.

Paula_56
05-27-2012, 06:02 AM
Thank you sharing this with us, I felt like I was there....

WifeofWrenchette
05-27-2012, 06:43 AM
Ele,

thank you for sharing your story. My husband's story is very similar to yours. You are a survivor and be proud of that! You are who you are and always will be.

Peace and hugs~

Wrenchette2

Erin McShea
05-27-2012, 07:05 AM
Great post Ele!! I echo a lot of the same feelings. I say live and let live HAPPY!!

Thank you for sharing with us

Erin

Raychel
05-27-2012, 08:51 AM
Very powerful story. After all that you have been thru, You are right, if the world can't accept that fact that you are a crossdresser, the "F" them.

Thansk for sharing your story with us :hugs:

ronda
05-27-2012, 01:12 PM
THANK YOU your story hit home in many ways it is inspiring to hear that you are working to help others

Barbara Ella
05-27-2012, 01:44 PM
Ele, thank you so very much for starting this thread with this story of your life. It is all the more poignant as it was written from the heart to a friend who was truly interested in you. I think that may be the reason you opened up as you did. Sometimes just doing that on a faceless forum is very difficult. You did an absolutely fantastic job in making me feel your pain and angst of your childhood. never quiet your voice, and continue to let whoever you want to be at the moment to guide your actions. Just know that you have a lot of non judgmental girl friends here to chat with now.

Barbara

Marleena
05-27-2012, 01:57 PM
Quite the bio on being transgendered Ele. Very enlightening post on how you arrived where you are. Thanks for sharing.:)

ClaudiaDawn
05-27-2012, 03:05 PM
Thank you very much for sharing, it is very a inspiring story. I wish I had your strength when I was younger. Take care.

CloserthanthisGG
05-27-2012, 03:14 PM
People are going to judge me either way, so why not give them something to really judge. There's this ridiculous thought that we should live life to be acceptable to others. No, no, no, no, no…We should live our lives the way we see fit (as long as it's not to the detriment or harm of others). At the end of the day, we shouldn't be judging people by their outside anyway.

Thank you for bringing light into the world that so many are too afraid to do. Because so many are so afraid of hurting their "loved ones" by simply being who they ARE. But it has always seemed to me that if they were truly "loved ones", that mutual acceptance of who you are would be an understood. But the world is full of hate. But isn't the hate is reinforced by the hiding? When you hide the beauty that is you from the world, then all the world sees is what it has already thought, which is negative. Perceptions will never change without brave ones like you guiding the way.

And I know some people don't agree with this approach but to me it's the only approach that makes any sense in the long run. It's just a matter of priorities.

I think maybe many CD people are so sensitive to the feelings of others that they place the feelings and perceptions of others before themselves. Ahead of their own self love. And maybe they would break on the inside if they had thought they had hurt the people they loved, even if they weren't loved back unconditionally. And that would be heartbreaking too. But it takes people showing the world more of the truth, as hard as it is, in order for things to change.

And I thank you and praise you for this, you are a beautiful and strong person.

-Amanda

Jenniferathome
05-27-2012, 03:30 PM
I've heard more than once, "Why don't you just stop? It would be easier." Of course it would be easier! Do you really think I made a choice one day like, "Gee, I wish I could make my life even harder. I know! I'll dress like a woman!" Really? It's mind-boggling to me that people think this is a decision.

Ele, first I read the whole thing! Second, you lived a tough life but came out on top. Attitude is everything.

The comment above was long believed about being gay. Anything outside the norm is always per dived to be a choice. Good luck on your mission.

natacsha
05-27-2012, 04:43 PM
Hi Ele! I spent a good portion of my life reading this post last night and I'm soo happy i did. I fell asleep feeling like i have something to prove to myself because of you! Lol really. Very moving and inspiring and as soon as i get out there, ill have a few lucky girls to thank :heehee:

Dawn cd
05-27-2012, 05:17 PM
Thank you Ele. I am much older than you, but you are my Big Sister. I'm very proud of you.