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marie claire FIRST PERSON

 

MY EX-BOYFRIEND BECAME A WOMAN

 Laura was always attracted to Jim.  But then, Jim became Jenny.  Can an ex-boyfriend make it as a girlfriend?

BY LAURA FRASER

 

When my good friend Jenny opens the door of her house, I'm amazed. In her stretchy pink T-shirt, highlighted hair, and short denim skirt, Jenny looks much better than the last time we saw each other.  But then, the last time I saw her, she had wire-rimmed John Lennon glasses, whiskers, and the beginnings of a beer belly. Jenny had been Jim.

I have come to visit her in rural Maine out of friendship--and, I guess, curiosity.   Some time earlier, Jim had E-mailed me, telling me to sit down, because he had some difficult news. I didn't know what to expect: Terminal illness? Death of a mutual friend? I was relieved when it turned out he was undergoing a sex change.  No one had died. Or had he?  I had no idea whether my friend Jim was gone forever, or if jenny was basically the same person, only wearing lipstick.

I live in San Francisco, where transsexuals are as common as burrito parlors, but I'd never known one as a friend--especially not someone I'd dated.   In his letter, Jim said he felt like he'd been in prison for 40 years for something he didn't do, living in the wrong body.  So, for the past year, he had been taking hormones and living part of the time as a woman.  Jim-I mean Jenny-said she knew Jim hadn't always been such a good friend to me.  "I miss you, "Jenny said.  "In a way, I've missed you all my life."

 

Would we be closer now that Jim was female?  At first, I wondered whether the difficulties Jim and I had had as friends--some competition, envy, and sexual tension--would dissolve as fel­low gals.   Finally, I reacted in what seemed the only way a true girlfriend could: I congratulated her--and sent her a summer purse.

 

After we hug, the initial surprise wears off and my mind drifts from shock to self-doubt. I've al­ways had the lurking feeling that Jim was better than me at almost everything--writing, playing the piano, being funny, making friends.  Now, I worry that Jenny will be better at being a woman than I am.  In person, I can see that she's managed to pick up the little mannerisms-lightly touching friends while talking, flicking her hair back, extending her pinkie slightly while holding a wine stem--that make a person register as female.  Her makeup is expertly applied, and she has no beard--thanks to count­less painful sessions of electrolysis.

 

Jim had been a gangly Ichabod Crane, a big brain on a stick, but Jenny is graceful, willowy, pretty, and serene.  She tells me she's been taking hormone pills for about a year-basically a double-dose of estrogen (Premarin) and a diuretic (spironolactone) that counteracts testosterone.  Changing genders can require about six months to a year of counseling and at least a year of living full-time as the other gender before having surgery.   When that year is up, Jenny will have "sex reassignment" surgery, creating a "neo va­gina" that will be so real, she says, only her gynecologist will know for sure.

But, for now, Jenny is still "pre-op."  She proudly shows me her pills.

"This one," she says, "makes you cry at movies and want to be in a relationship."  She pulls out another.  "This one makes you hate professional wresting and the Three Stooges."

The hormones have not only smoothed her skin and caused her body fat to migrate from her chin and belly to her breasts and hips, she says, they've also changed her brain chemistry.  She doesn't     compartmentalize her emotions the way Jim did, turning off her feelings when it's time to go to work.  And she listens more.

For the next few days, I follow Jenny around as she makes her usual rounds as a "mom."  She's still living with her partner and children. This wasn't exactly what Jim's wife signed up for when they walked down the aisle, but the two seem to have worked things out. On a day-to-day basis, they function just like any other family.

I thought I would be able to teach Jenny something about being female--or at least give her some makeup or fashion tips from years spent figuring out my own personal style.  But she's already secure about how she looks and dresses (even though I think she could ditch the upscale-country look for something a little sassier).  Which means she's either really good at being a woman, or she's got a lot of leftover male confidence. Career-wise, Jenny has certainly benefited from her time as a man. It’s possible that she'd still have tenure and be the author of seven books if she'd always been a woman, but maybe not. "If I'd been female all along with the same talent, I would have doubted myself," Jenny says.

But even as a former man, Jenny has to confront difficult feelings about body image that so many women face.

"As a boy, I got to eat any­thing," she says. "Now that I'm a chick, I go to a restaurant and this little, messed-up voice whispers, 'Have the salad!' I just think, Shut up. I want the baby-back ribs."

It's taken Jenny some time to grow into her femininity, but she's fast-forwarded her way through the process.  In truth, she is still something like a teenager.  Her nails are a lit­tle too pink, her tops a little too tight, her makeup a little too bright.  Sometimes, she acts a bit like a teenage girl, too, in that she's naive about the effect she has on men. At a brewpub where we eat lunch, a biker guy pointedly checks her out (and not me).  Jenny has an openness toward creepy men in bars that women like me have long ago learned to subtly turn off

 

Among Jim's old friends, some of the men are mystified. "He was always such a guy," one says.  Another confesses that he was floored: "She was the best man at my wedding!"   He then responds in a typi­cally masculine way, musing about whether or not he'd sleep with her now.

These days, I've been won­dering about those knotty questions about friendship and sexuality, too. In one inti­mate conversation, we talk about whether, since I'd been attracted to Jim as a man, I would be attracted to Jenny as a woman.   I've never been interested in sleeping with women, but the question was provocative.  I mean, Jenny is still Jim-Jim hasn't died and gone away--and yet she's different; she's a woman.  So why had I been attracted to Jim when I'm not to Jenny?  Attraction can't simply be a matter of equipment.

At heart, what makes us male or female is elusive, but it's also the first thing we rec­ognize about people.  She's not a man anymore, and for what­ever mysterious reason, I like having sex with men.  I love Jenny, but part of what I love about being friends with her, as with all my woman friends, is that I don't have to worry about whether or not we're going to sleep together.

Clearly, Jenny and I will be much better friends than Jim and I were. She listens to me and tries to understand me in a way Jim never did.  I don't know whether that's because Jenny is now female--or be­cause she no longer feels like she's hiding a secret. Still, I expect she can at least give me some firsthand insight into men, advising me about some guys I've dated.   But when t ask, she shakes her head.

"You know," she says, "I've never understood men either."


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