I'm writing this post from a friend's apartment in Long Beach, California. Unfortunately, my internal clock hasn't quite matched up with the actual time here, which made me decide that it might be a good time to get some thoughts down on (virtual) paper. What's in Long Beach? Festival 8 - Phish's eighth music festival, and the first one they've held since reuniting this year. More on this:
That summer, they mounted their first two-day festival — The Clifford Ball — at a decommissioned Air Force base in Plattsburgh, New York. Between 70,000 and 80,000 people were in attendance; MTV was on-hand to document the experience. In Phish's own makeshift city, Great Northeast Productions created an amusement park, restaurants, a post office, playgrounds, arcades, and movie theaters. Aside from six "traditional" sets, the band rode a flatbed truck through the campground, serenading the audience at 3 a.m.[25] The concert's production company went on to host six more Phish festivals.
The Great Went, Phish's second large-scale festival, was held that summer at Loring Air Force Base in Limestone, Maine, just miles from the Canadian border. The official count for the show was an impressive 65,000 people, qualifying the festival to be the largest city in Maine.[27] For many fans however, the crowd felt larger. Band and audience collaborated yet again in a colossal work of art: individual pieces of art by fans were connected to a large piece of art by the band. A giant matchstick was lit, burning the resultant tower to the ground.[28]
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So it's been a little bit more than one year now since I went full-time living as Michelle. Sometimes I find it hard to believe that it's only been a year. I have gone back and read some of my posts from the beginning of this blog and it almost seems tough to remember who that person was that used to write in here.
When I was transitioning, my biggest fear was that I wasn't passing. It used to absolutely kill me to go out and wonder if people were talking behind my back, joking about "what the hell gender is that person?". Or to wonder every time I told someone what I was going to be doing if I would never see that person again. Basically, a lot of my fears existed because I put too much power to make me happy in the hands of other people.
Eventually, time passed, confidence grew, and I stopped doing this. As I've said in the past, the only way to get past a fear is to charge forward into it head on, and that's what I did. Somewhere along the way, it stopped being a big deal for people to find out, and I became a much happier person for it. Over the winter, I started discovering the power of live music and in that found a really viable way to meet new people with whom I could start fresh, introducing myself as a woman and not looking back.
These days, things are going pretty great. I have a job that I think is a pretty good fit for me, even if it occasionally drives me crazy. I have gone from being totally afraid to approach new people to actually looking forward to it. I am happier with my appearance than I have ever been. I have always tried to live life by the principle that I should always be enjoying myself, and although that goal is impossible, I think I've been doing the best that I can.
The problem with living life as a woman is that the bar for my happiness now feels like it has been set really high. When I was living as a male, nobody really questioned my gender or behaviors (even though, by most standards, I was a pretty weird kid). When I was in transition, I would be genuinely ecstatic every time I got "ma'am"ed or received some confirmation that I was passing. Yeah, it would suck when people slipped on my name/pronoun or otherwise treated me like a guy, but I had accepted those mistakes from others as things that would happen and eventually figured out how not to let it bother me. These days, it's actually pretty rare that people slip up and use my male name, and that's something I'm really thankful for.
Unfortunately, as a woman, the bar has been set a lot higher. I have two sets of issues that cause me stress these days - problems related to being transgender, and problems related to being a woman. I think I optimistically assumed that the second group of stresses would replace the first, but that doesn't seem to be the case.
The first group of issues is characterized by questions like "how am I going to find a guy who is comfortable with my past?", "how am I going to arrange everything I need to do for surgery?", "does this person who I just met suspect that I'm transgendered and is there any perceived awkwardness?", "at what point, if at all, do I bring up my past?", "are my mannerisms and dialogue too 'male'?", "how do I talk about my past?", and "how do I deal with having body dimensions that just aren't the same as a biological woman's?". These are always going to be there, and I pretty much knew when I transitioned that these would be things that I'd have to deal with for the rest of my life.
The second group of issues is interesting, though, because I don't think I ever would have realized this stuff if I had not transitioned. The second group has questions like, "are people judging me on my looks first and my personality second?", "are people listening to/respecting my opinions in the same way that they did when I was perceived to be male?", "are people more inclined to take advantage of my trusting nature now that I am perceived as female?", "since I'm not a 'stunner', how do I attract the interest of guys?", "how the hell do I interact with guys that are actually showing an interest in me?", and "am I being careful enough when putting myself in situations that could potentially end badly?". Two things that I can say with absolute certainty: more people have called me "naive" in the last year of my life than they have the first 28, and I have noticed a tendency for people who used to listen to me to now talk over me or dismiss my ideas as they come up. I suppose that these are the things that most women face, and while they are very real issues in my life, there is a part of me that feels 'right' that I get to experience these sorts of trials and tribulations.
Oh well! I suppose it's time to move on with life - the one thing that hasn't changed is that I recognize that the way to solve these problems is to go out and live a bit, so that's what I'm going to do. On that note, I'm going to end this post.
On Friday night, I went to my fourth Phish show in Hartford. What a night!
The last month has been stressful to the point where I haven't even felt like writing about it. For the most part, none of this stress has anything to do with me being transgendered, so I wasn't sure how much of it necessarily belongs here. That said, things are starting to look up, and so I thought I would take a moment or two to reflect on things.
On Sunday night, Phish (my favorite band and one of the best live acts around) played at Fenway Park (my favorite stadium, located two miles from my house). Although I had waffled at first trying to figure out whether or not it would be worth it to buy tickets, I eventually decided that I would regret it far too much in the future if I didn't go. This turned out to be the correct decision, because I absolutely had the time of my life.
There are two quick stories about things that have happened since my father passed that I wanted to share in this blog. These are things that I would normally write off as coincidence, but would like to believe have more depth than that. Frankly, I don't think it matters why these things happened so much as what they mean to me.
And so now the time comes to end this letter. It’s the toughest thing I’ve ever written, filled with things that I’ve never been able to really properly say. I really want the best for you and I know that it’s out of our hands at this point. I love you more than any words or any letter can properly express, and I know that you love me just as much.
Thank you for being there and loving me with everything you’ve had. You’ll always be in my heart and thoughts.
Love, Michelle
PS – I’ll see to it that Manny gets the shunning he deserves.
Did you see that last part? Because to the people not from Boston/who don't follow baseball - Manny was suspended from baseball for 50 days after being found using illegal substances. Looking at the opinions of sports newscasters, of fans around the internet, and of people living in Boston - it would appear that I won't have to do anything to facilitate a shunning of Manny Ramirez. The weird thing is that the story broke the day after my father's funeral. It's not that I think my father had any pull in this - that would be crazy - but IF my father had a chance to influence something like that happening from beyond the grave, that is certainly something he'd consider.