Whirlwind

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My world changed this week, the daily routines wiped away.

I've suspected that making myself public would at least raise a few eyebrows, I vastly underestimated.

Before my first town meeting as myself, I get a text. "You made the news!" It read, with a link to a Texas Observer article. That article began to multiply and spread across the unbounded internet.

The last two days I, my wife and my daughter have been surrounded by cameras and microphones.

And the messages pour in. They are all so amazingly uplifting. Many come from other transgenders, many from parents, siblings and spouses of transgenders. Many profess to have no understanding of transgender issues but still offer support and acceptance. Too numerous for response. I want to say to all of you, Thank you, your words are very much appreciated.

Have there been detractors? Of course. Humans are all unique, and unique does not always go well together.

But the ratio is 100s to one, and those are odds easy to live with.

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Truth

In this time in history where truth seems to be nothing more than a fleeting thought, something to give little notice to, I must stand by the truth, because nothing is more important in reality.
 My 15 minutes of fame began today, Thank you Andy Warhol for that quote. An hour before I made my first appearance as Mayor Jess, and article appeared in the 'Texas Observer'. It was written without yet speaking to me or clarification.
 While it was a wonderful well written article, it opened with a glaring untruth.
It said at was elected mayor, I was not.
 Last year I ran for my alderman seat, a seat that also included road commissioner and mayor pro-tem. The mayor at the time ran against and new comer in town. 
 The mayor suffered a heart attack after the cutoff for filing for election and passed away days before the election. He still won. That left the council without a mayor. As a Class B town under Texas general law, the council was compelled to appoint a new mayor. As the longest serving alderman, road commissioner and Mayor Pro-ten, they appointed me.
 So I am not the first elected transgender mayor in Texas, just the first seated transgender mayor on record.

Not so instant

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As a child I imagined every possible scenario that would change my gender. They all had one thing in common. They were almost instant. With little variation I would be male one day and female the next.

When I was old enough to read about transitioning, the part about living full time as a reqauirement was alway a bit scary. It seemed that you had to start living as female without any training or practice.

Now that reality has set in, I understand that like all things, transition is a long slow process.

It took me 50 years do even leave the house dressed as a female. Another 6 to decide that I wanted it to be permanent. Two years after starting HRT, I have finally made myself known to everyone in my life.

So, I made it, but there was nothing instant about it!

New Year, big changes.

Happy New Year!

 

 

  I begin the new year letting go of some important things. First up is the pseudonym I have used for years. ‘Haust’ is gone, the family name I was born with is ‘Herbst’ and from now on, Jess Herbst it is! Jess is still not official in the eyes of the law, but we will deal with that later.

Also for 2017 presenting as male is, gone, gone, gone. The last people that needed telling have been told, and I cleared my closet of male clothes. Bye Bye safety net.

 I have big plans for the coming year and I hope to blog more often, time will tell. I will leave you with a promise for something big later this month.

 

Jess Herbst