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is dedicated to the acceptance, medical
treatment, and legal
protection of individuals correcting the misalignment
of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition
into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.
Many Roads To Rome Print E-mail
Opinion - Guest Columns
Marilyn Pierce   
Wednesday, 04 January 2012 10:00
Diverging Crossroad.New York, NY, USA. I transitioned in the early eighties in my early twenties. I guess that makes me an early transitioner. It was a time of gatekeepers and group meetings.

I had been seeing my family doctor to start hormone replacement until he became uncomfortable with continuing the treatments and he referred me to the local Dallas psychiatrist that ran a group of people transitioning.


Dr. May would be my first gatekeeper. One needed to meet privately with this elderly doctor before you were allowed to go to the next step of the process. He had a set number of private meetings which was pretty straight forward. Much like the initial meetings I’ve had with the many doctors that my parents had sent to me in the past. The first was a conversation about current status, then a meeting for the tests and the final meeting was his final judgement. He approved the next step, and referred me to an endocrinologist and the transsexual group meetings that Dr. May held on Tuesday nights.

Root and Branch.This group meeting would be the first time I would meet other people going through the process. I didn’t have a clue about what to expect. I guess that I thought everyone would be just starting out, and that there were several groups meeting on different nights for those at a different point of their transition. Of course, I was wrong.

The group was a small set of people in different places of their transition and going different directions. As the newest member of the group I was also the one earliest in transition. The group very clearly expressed their disappointment that I had come straight from work and I was still in male clothes. They quickly judged my commitment to completing the process.

This group of people represented every stereotype you could imagine.
  • There was the post-transsexual woman acting as one of the Grand Dames instructing everyone on the one and only path to transition.

  • There was the drag queen trying to decide if she needed to go the next step and lose her career.

  • There was the butch lesbian working the best man impression she could muster.

  • The other Grand Dame was a what would be called a non-op. She didn’t see the need to go for that surgery, but continued to come to the group for the hormones.

The two Grand Dames constantly argued and fought over who was a real woman and who wasn’t.

Also in attendance were a couple of female to male transitioning clients. These guys were amazing to me. They were well along in transition and looked very handsome to me. They were also much more understanding of the many paths than the two Grand Dames.

The group meeting was actually in two parts; the first part was the hour long meeting in Dr. May’s office where we discussed success’s and failures of the previous week, and the second part which was when everyone would go to local gay friendly bars for drinks and ridicule. During the office group meetings everyone was on their best behavior because the good doctor was there, and he was the keeper of the path, or so we believed. It was the meeting after the meeting that I learned the real lessons this group had to offer.

Once free of the monitoring, the group would really let you know how your transition was working or not.
  • First, they would not even allow you to come to the bar if you didn’t pass well enough. The Grand Dame’s of the group would go item by item until you felt like a small wart on the ass of a frog.

  • Secondly, once they deemed that you were presentable (meaning that you wouldn’t embarrass them in public) each of them would lecture us on the proper way to go through transition. Each member of the group’s path was the only and true path. All others were wasted time and money.

Oddly enough, even though each person of the group believed they were the true gatekeeper, none of them were. I learned two main lessons from this group.
  • One, everyone comes to this point in transition from a different place, and

  • two, everyone leaves this point at a different pace.

There isn’t a single path to a place of “completeness.” There isn’t even a single destination where everyone must end.

Whether it is today’s transsexual versus transgender wars, or like it was in the eighties Dallas group fight of the Grand Dames or even like the Galli during Dies Sanguinis (The Day of Blood) on March 24th in Ancient Rome. There will always be those true believers that argue with the unfaithful. There have always been those who believe that their path is the only path. Their ideas are the only good ideas. Their pain is the greatest pain.

Everyone has a path, an idea and their own pain. There is a saying All roads lead to Rome, but in the case of human beings reaching that place of self understanding and wholeness, there are Many roads to Rome. And Rome is where your heart lives.

SourceThis article is adapted and extended from Many roads to Rome by Marilyn Pierce, published concurrently on her blog The Long Lost Hawk (Nothing is 100% of Anything).

Marilyn PierceMarilyn Pierce is a Director of Engineering for a cable news channel in New York City. She has been fortunate to be able to work around the world and has seen many diverse cultures. You can read more of her work here at TS-Si or at her blog, The Long Lost Hawk.

Marilyn is not affiliated with any activist organization, but she does donate to trans educational organizations.

TS-Si News Service.The TS-Si News Service is a collaborative effort by TS-Si.org editors, contributors, and corresponding institutions. Sources can include the cited individuals and organizations, as well as TS-Si.org staff contributions. Articles and news reports do not necessarily convey official positions of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates. We welcome your comments. Use the form below to leave a public comment or send private correspondence via the TS-Si Contact Page. We will not divulge any personal details or place you on a mailing list without your permission.


TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.


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Last Updated on Wednesday, 04 January 2012 00:02