WHY DO WE CROSSDRESS?
I
did not write this but really like the way it expresses the way many of us
feel:
Over the years, I have avoided for the
most part asking this question of others or trying to answer it for myself. The
reason I steered clear of this one is that trying to answer it can get in the
way of something more important: learning to accept the fact that we crossdress. I don't want to feel that unless I can explain
why, I am not free to enjoy it.
Before I get too far into this discussion,
I’d like to clarify what I mean by the word “crossdress”.
When I did my on-line survey in 1999, I
discovered that only about half the people who said they crossdressed
were actually going to the point of applying makeup, putting on a wig (or
styling their own hair to be more feminine) and in general present themselves
as a woman or trying to “pass”.
The other half crossdress from the neck down.
I am not being judgmental or critical of
anyone, and I certainly won’t claim that one approach to crossdressing
is better than any other. Everyone lives with their own sense of what they are
comfortable with and what they can handle.
The reason I mention this is that I
sometimes hear crossdressers describe themselves as
“typical, normal men”… who happen to like to make themselves
look like women. Forgetting for a moment the use of loaded words like “normal”,
I have to admit to exasperation with this one. It is, to me, either denial or a
vain attempt at having it both ways. Crossdressers
are anything but typical men. We may live ordinary lives, but we live them in
an extraordinary way.
What I do know is this: living almost all
of one’s life with crossdressing is an ongoing
process of moving between fantasy and reality.
The fantasy is what we think we are
capable of, what we think we can become, who we think we can be. These
fantasies become reality by taking small steps, living now while dreaming about
the future. When we are young, many of us fantasized about being turned into
women, through some technology or magic, or being given the power to transform
ourselves back and forth between male and female at will.
When I was a small child, totally
dependent on my parents and with no control over my own life, I often wondered
what it would feel like to be a girl: to wear my long hair in a pony tail or to
have it braided, to wear dresses and skirts and Mary Jane shoes, to have to
walk and sit and bend down differently.
When I got a little older, I was able to
obtain some articles of women’s clothing of my own and try them on. I
discovered what it felt like to dress differently, and in the process what had
been only fantasy became reality. As time went on, I experimented with more
clothing, wigs and makeup and began to develop an image of myself as female, at
least in appearance if nothing else.
This was becoming my reality.
But the journey of crossdressing
is like climbing a hill and finding, upon reaching the top, another, higher
hill waiting in the distance. We are always driven forward by the promise and
the mystery of what lies on the other side.
We all face many of the same hills, some are harder to climb than others.
I remember once, as a teenager, shaving my
legs during the summer to just above the knees. It was both terrifying and
exciting because of what I was both losing and gaining.
I remember another time, going out late at
night crossdressed and just walking around the block
in my neighborhood, again terrified of being caught or even seen by someone,
but thrilled by the sensation and the achievement.
Sometimes the terror became too great, and
out of fear I would turn around on my path, and decide I didn’t want to climb
any more hills. I sometimes felt like I was killing off my male self for the
sake of some as of yet unknown female self. In these times, I would nurture my
masculine self.
We call these moments “purges” and, as we
all know, they are only temporary. In time, we start on our path again.
I was lucky. I never resorted to risky,
self-destructive behavior in an effort to destroy the female in me (by killing
off the male host). I never joined the military, never drank excessively, never
used the trappings of machismo to hurt or punish myself.
But the journeys of many crossdressers are filled with stories like that.
For me it was different. I resorted to sabotage
in an effort to destroy my host. Rather than kill the body, I tried to kill the
mind. How did I do that? By marrying a woman who knew I was a crossdresser and who hated it. I punished myself with
thirteen years of a loveless relationship with someone who was repulsed by the
person I fundamentally was.
And to make sure I suffered, I kept my
body alive and well. On the outside, one might have even thought I was
flourishing. Little did they, or I, know or understand that I had, of my own
choice and free will, locked myself away in a jail cell from which I could see
in the far distance, through a tiny window, the hills I would never allow
myself to climb.
But that period of my life is over, and I
don’t dwell on it. I recall a line from a popular song I heard when I was a
teenager:
“Don’t
let the past remind us of what we are not now”
There were hills to climb and I had wasted
too much time already.
But what starts us on this path with these
hills? When we are very young, and we are faced with our first hill, what
compels us or motivates us to climb?
Is it something in our bodies, some
chemical that makes it seem right to do so? Is it our nature? Or is it the fact
that there was no internal voice telling us not to, no message that says this
is not our path? Is it the way we were nurtured?
Personally, I think it has more to do with
how we are brought up than something organic within our bodies. Children are
born perfect, with no sense of evil, no fear, no notion of what is expected of
them. Children are guiltless, innocent, free. It would
only make sense that the longer a child remains so, the more likely he or she
is to experiment with that same sense of innocence and wonder.
The shame and guilt comes later.
Perhaps there is some biological
explanation as well and it is a combination of biological and environmental
factors. How else can you explain the fact that no one ever chooses to stop,
and if they do, it’s not for long.
Or perhaps there is no one single explaination for why we do what we do. Perhaps that's the
myopic shortcoming of science: to try to keep everything else equal and explain
human behavior with respect to a single random variable. Perhaps the very act
of answering this question causes the answer itself to change.
There is, at any rate, something very
compelling about crossdressing, something that makes
us want to climb those hills and see what’s on the other side. Our reasons for crossdressing change with time, we
climb new and different hills. I am no longer an eight year old child wondering.
I've climbed that hill and many others.
If you want to understand why you crossdress, consider the hill you are climbing and what you
expect to find at the top.
And yes, I am aware that I haven’t
answered the question.
- Eloquently
written by Yvonne at Yvonne’s Place for Crossdressers