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http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129631536
Becoming Miles: The Journey Of Changing Sexes
by Sarah Reynolds
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Enlarge Courtesy of Miles Taylor
Megan
Taylor grew up feeling she was living in the wrong body. In her 20s,
she decided to do something about it. First, she changed her name to
Miles.
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September 6, 2010
Megan Taylor grew up feeling she was living in
the wrong body. In her 20s, she decided to do something about it. First,
she changed her name to Miles. Miles began taking testosterone,
scheduled a double mastectomy - part of sex reassignment surgery - and
began changing his body into one that felt right. The hardest part was
telling his parents.
Through it all, he kept an audio diary.
Miles
lives in Boston with his friend Chris Jacobs, and first started
recording his diary in November 2008. His parents, Vicky and Bill, live
in Texas.
The Letter
For Miles, the first step of changing his name was a milestone.
"It's
interesting that so much can be attached to your name," he says into
his recorder. "I've kind of already divorced myself from Megan. It feels
separate from who I am now. And I really haven't latched on to Miles
yet. Some days, I feel more Miles than Megan. It's kind of weird. I
have no problem saying 'Megan.' Now I need to say 'Miles.' But I need to
say it in an ownership sort of way."
On Feb. 2, 2009, Miles is working on a letter to his parents. He reads the letter into the recorder.
"I
need to talk to you two about something. Months ago I started writing
you a long letter, but having edited it and revised and picked and poked
at it for so many months, it started to feel more like a paper for
school. I have a gender identity disorder. I've had it my entire life
without really being able to put a name to it and it has become severe
to debilitating over the past couple of years. My body may appear and
function as female, but in my head I have never felt a connection to my
body. The sex of my body is female, but the gender I feel in my head is
male.
I've always known that I was different,
but I know now that it was only covering up what I feel I've known all
along, what I've known since I was 6 years old, when I began putting a
sock into my pants when I was alone, or when I used to pretend to shave
my face with toothpaste and a toothbrush. What I'm trying to explain
here is that there's always been a disconnection with my gender and my
physical body, and I have tried endlessly to figure out what was wrong,
why I simply didn't feel right in my skin. For the first time in my
life, though, I am starting to feel a connection to who I am.
For
the past few months, I have been living my life as male everywhere with
the exception of my work. What that means is that all my friends have
been using male pronouns when referring to me, and have been addressing
me by another name. The name I have chosen is Miles.
I'm
delivering this information to you in the form of a letter for a couple
of reasons. One, I never would have been able to say all of this to you
in person without completely losing any and all composure. And two, I
wanted to give you a safe space in which you could react however you
needed to react without worry of judgment, as I realize this is not easy
news to hear. However, I know this is right for me. You would not be
sitting here reading this letter if that were not the case."
When Miles finally sends the letter several weeks later, he does it with Chris' support.
And Chris is there when Miles receives an e-mail back from his mother. Miles reads it aloud.
"It
says: No matter what you do, it will not affect your relationship with
us," he says. " 'Those are Daddy's exact words. He is, however, still
digesting. I'm not as surprised as you might think, but I dread the
further anguish you will endure. Health risks are a big concern. There
are lots - in capitals - lots of questions. Bottom line, we will always
love you. Do hope you already knew that. Love you infinity, M.'
That's my mom's sign-off."
Home For The Holidays
A year later, after months of testosterone treatments, after his voice changed, after surgery, Miles records how he's feeling.
Enlarge Courtesy of Miles Taylor
Miles Taylor before his transition.
"Last year sucked. I just, I felt like I was,
you know, carrying around this secret. My parents didn't know. You wanna
just scream at them and say, 'I have this news! Something's changing.'
But now they know. They're really, they're really trying. It's always a
big to-do when I return to Texas for the holidays, just because I don't
see them all the time."
Over the holidays, Miles has a difficult conversation with his parents.
"We
have had this tumultuous year of all the emotions, and as you said, the
mourning," Vicky says. "And then to finally get you here. And by this
time, now we've been waiting and waiting and waiting to see you and meet
you and say, oh, here's Miles. And there you were, and it was like.
oh, your shoulders are bigger. And the hug. You appear to me to be
happy in your own skin.
"But you said you lost a daughter," Miles says. "I'm here you know, it's not like I died."
I felt like the
child that I knew, the child in the picture on the ice box that I knew
and grew up with, was gone. Just pure and simple, was gone.
- Bill Taylor, Miles' father
"The hardest thing was the loss," Vicky says. "The sad thing is, here you are flesh and blood, lovable, our child."
"Do you still feel like that?" Miles asks his parents.
"I
don't anymore," Bill says. "But I felt like the child that I knew, the
child in the picture on the ice box that I knew and grew up with, was
gone. Just pure and simple, was gone."
"I
just felt like somebody had taken a cannon ball and shot me through my
middle, and I was walking around and living my life and doing
everything, going to work and acting normal except I had this huge
hole," Vicky says. "It was just there when I got up in the morning. It
was there when I went to bed at night. It was just there. But the other
thing - and I know it's the maternal guilt thing. I don't know if Daddy
has this same feeling, but I feel you have done this heroic feat,
you've accomplished this on your own. Even though you've known that
you've always had our total love and support, but that's all you had
from us. We weren't actually holding your hand. And I still have the
text messages I got when you got out of surgery."
Vicky starts to cry, and Miles cries, too.
Enlarge Courtesy of Miles Taylor
Miles Taylor with his dog after his transition.
"Anyway. Well, we love you," Vicky says. "Always have, always will. It's really nice to spend time with you."
"Really nice to be here," Miles says.
Coming Into His Own
"You
know how when a movie comes to the conclusion and it culminates with
somebody standing outside, and it's just that sigh," Taylor says.
"I
ran around without a shirt on for the first time outside. We had the
reprieve from the cold weather, and it got a little warmer and it was
drizzly, and I went to the park, shed my layers and, you know, cool
breeze on my chest. It was just absolutely amazing."
Produced by Sarah Reynolds with help from Jay Allison and Transom.org, where you can find a longer version of this piece.
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