
Monday was a half day
en femme.
I attended the last day of the workshop
en femme, then returned to my hotel to change into boy mode for my trip back home. As a result, I did not have much interaction with the public at large
en femme.
***
I can look back and laugh at myself now, but you know what I worried about the whole time I was in Manhattan? I feared that while I was walking around town, someone would recognize me as a guy, grab my wig, and run off with it! (I brought an extra wig just in case.)
***
The photo shows me dining with Prometheus at the Rink Bar restaurant in the heart of Rockefeller Center.
***
In conclusion, I found myself.
Everything just fell into place.
* Getting cold feet about attending the workshop
en femme* Phoning the workshop to find out if they had any issues about my attendance
en femme.
* Getting their green light of support to attend in whatever way I felt most comfortable.
* Finding a group of fellow attendees, who did not shun me, but respected me.
* The group's respect motivated me to be completely up front with them about my transness.
* My planned "show 'n' tell" became a natural conduit for coming out.
* The group's respect seemed to grow ten-fold after I came out.
* Coming out freed all my stress about the workshop; I really let myself go and apply myself fully in the workshop...
* Which permitted me to get a lot out of the workshop that I will apply in my career as a writer.
There was always the possibility that something could go wrong, but it did not. Maybe I was just lucky, maybe I was well-prepared, maybe some higher power was watching over me, I dunno.
But I do know that integrating all of me at the workshop permitted me to integrate myself outside the workshop, too. I was myself throughout the day rather than trying to impersonate someone else. And integrated as myself, I felt very confident about myself.
An example: one morning after I dressed
en femme, I adjusted the thermostat in my hotel room and somehow managed to shutdown the system. Nothing I tried could bring the system back to life, so I called the front desk and they said they would send someone up. In the recent past, I would have panicked and changed into boy mode as quickly as possible. But, that morning, I stayed in girl mode. When the maintenance man showed up, I interacted with him without concern or nervousness and he reacted in a positive manner.
Another example: Flag down a cab wearing a dress and high heels and you usually get the first available cab. Now that's power and it just added to my confidence!
I am so happy that I did what I did. It changed me for the better by making myself whole and more confident, so confident that I no longer fear being outed, nor do I fear coming out to anyone.