I heard a newscaster ask one day “Just who are crossdressers we hear about from time to time?” It started me thinking about that very question and the more I thought, the more I decided it might be a good idea to put it down on paper. Here are the results.

To start with, let’s first make it crystal clear who we are not.

We are not those people you see regularly on the Jerry Springer show. Yes, they put on a dress and profess to be crossdressers. But they’re a far cry from a real crossdresser. The problem is that this tiny group of people are the very ones who are in the limelight and produce all the negative images that are so degrading to those of us who aren’t that way at all. We are not the perverts, child molesters, murderers or sensationalists seen on TV, internet news and read about in the news every day either.

So Who Are WE?

En Femme Style

We’re the doctors who have performed life-saving operations upon you and your loved ones. We’re the airline pilots who have taken the responsibility for your safety at 600 mph going up to 40,000 feet. We’re the dentists who relieved your toothache or attended to your braces so you would have a pretty smile and healthy teeth. We’re the policemen who risk our lives daily to keep you safe from the criminal element that is so rampant in our society today. We’re the soldiers who have gone to battle and returned home missing a foot, hand, arm, leg, or worse yet come home in a cold steel box. We’re people in the trades such as carpenters, electricians, and plumbers who built the house you live in. We’re the politicians all the way from the mayors of the smallest towns to senators, congressmen, and high-ranking military leaders.

Some of us were at Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941. Or in the World Trade Center on 9/11 when tragedy struck home. And some of us were the fireman and emergency medical technicians who were inside those three buildings when they collapsed. Yet others were those of us who faced the gruesome task of recovering the bodies we could find and mourning those we couldn’t.

We’re the truck drivers who sacrifice weeks at a time away from home delivering your goods and services. We’re the farmers who work to keep food on your table. We’re the teachers who educated you and who are now educating your children. We’re your pastors and Sunday school teachers. We’re the common citizens who rolled up our sleeves and gave blood when disaster strikes. We’re the ones who cared enough to donate our organs in order to save lives. When that tornado or flood or whatever other disasters come along, we were the ones who neglected our own needs and dug in to help everybody else. We’re the ones who were out in the cold, rain and lightening the night that awful storm came through and knocked out all the power just so you wouldn’t freeze to death. We’re the mechanics who fixed your vehicle; the construction workers who built the roads you drive on everyday. We’re the waiters who served your meal when you went out to dinner last week. We’re the ambulance drivers who got you to the hospital safely after that bad crash. We’re the friends and neighbors who supported you and gave you a shoulder to cry on when a loved one passed away. We’re the drivers who cared enough to stop and see if we could help you when your vehicle quit and left you stranded on the roadside that cold and rainy night.  Remember that star quarterback that scored the winning touchdown in the biggest football game of the season? That’s right, he is a crossdresser also. And let’s not forget about his teammates and coach. Football isn’t the only team we’re members of.

We Touch Your Lives Every Day.

Nature Day 3

Who Are We? We are everybody and everyone. Crossdressing crosses all barriers of race, creed, age, national origin and social status. Realizing that 10% of the male population crossdresses to some extent makes it pretty obvious that you know several of us. You just aren’t aware of it because society has not yet educated itself about us. There remains a great deal of ignorance within society about crossdressing. Until society Does acknowledge that we are no more abnormal than any of the rest of its average members, we are forced to maintain our anonymous position.

Crossdressing is not a disease and it’s not something to be fearful of. It’s not contagious so you won’t have to be concerned about someone passing it on to you. It’s something one is born with. The primary reason for crossdressing is to provide an outwardly visible outlet of expression to an invisible inward feeling and emotion. It has nothing at all to do with one’s sexual persuasion; (I just find crossdressing relaxing from everyday stress).

The next time you see someone pointing an accusing finger at a crossdresser, poking fun at them and proclaiming them to be a freak/pervert/fag, stop and think about this. What if that crossdresser happened to be one of those people listed above who possibly did something in the past that saved your life or that of someone you love. Just how perverted was that person at that time?

Going a step further, what if this person is one destined to save your life next week? When we were born we didn’t have a choice about being that one in every ten who would become a crossdresser.

With this in mind. I leave you with the following. What if the person pointing their finger had been that one in ten who was born a crossdresser? Something to think long and hard about. Isn’t It.

Missie Cook

EnFemme

More Articles by Missie Cook

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    Gisela Claudine
    Duchess
    Active Member
    5 years ago

    Amazing read. I love it Missie. We are ordinary people doing their jobs to make the world a better place to live on. Sometimes heroics, always willing. I crossdress beacuse it makes me feel good.
    Gisela

    Delbra Dawn cordry
    Lady
    5 years ago

    very well writen and thought out some of it fit me love it

    Jessica
    Lady
    Member
    5 years ago

    I love this article. Great writing well thought out. Thank you for taking the time to write it. Who are we?

    charlie
    Lady
    5 years ago

    Loved it great job.

    Emily
    Lady
    Active Member
    5 years ago

    Great article with lots of good insights. In a nutshell, we are people. And we deserve the same respect as anyone else.
    It is a ahame that the only “crossdressers” most of the world sees or knows about, are the ones we are not.
    Thanks for sharing this

    Cynthia Dubois
    Lady
    Member
    5 years ago

    Exactly.

    Rozalyne Richards
    Member
    Rozalyne Richards
    5 years ago

    Truely amazing article missie you are right we are everywhere and nowhere because we are one of the most discriminated parties of society we are called alsorts of dirty name’s and made fun of and ridiculed by people who have no idea of what we are about they say things like why can’t you be normal but this is our normal we are who we are and if we do decide to stand out from the closet most of us pay the price of losing our family’s, x hugs Rozalyne x

    Masie
    Masie
    5 years ago

    Great article showing great insight into who we are. Thanks. I am one of those dentists. Being as i am helps me to be a truly empathetic dentist.
    Thsnks again
    MASIE xxx

    Amanda Patrick
    Member
    5 years ago

    Hi Missie,

    What an awesome Article. Would you believe I one time actually use to think that Trades people, Sports people, Professional people, and labour type people, could not possibly be in to cross dressing. Yes that is how Naive I actually was one time about all this. I use to just feel something was wrong with me. But thanks to this wonderful site and all of its great ladies I know better so I do better.

    Hugs,

    Amanda

    ANDREA RAVEN
    Lady
    Active Member
    5 years ago

    Thank you Missie, you have put it very well. We seem to be universally depicted in the media as some sort of evil force. That ignores the fact that we are valuable members of the population in our day to day lives. As you say we are the people who are there when help is needed, something needs to be built or repaired, we are the ‘normal’ people of the world. I believe when Grayson Perry, British artist and transvestite, at some major event was told “I believe you’re the first transvestite we have had here" his reply was, “how… Read more »

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