Read My Brother My Sister: Story of a Transformation Hardcover Online
Authors: Molly Haskell
ably the truer thing is that they’re just not talking about me at all. I was a somewhat restrained male— I don’t want to say conservative because
that has more negative connotations. I was reserved. I’m the same as a
female. Nothing changed. I was an identical twin, but it’s like twins
who are so similar in many ways, but they each have their own differ-
ences. I’m just the other half now.”
Some friends have dropped away. I ask about Karl, the buddy with
whom he went to gun shows. Chevey waited for the occasion and told
him about his plans, and Karl seemed to take it in stride. It was only
later that Karl admitted that he’d pulled over to the side of the road
and had a meltdown. And now he’s sort of dropped away.
On the other hand, Toney, the maintenance supervisor from the
pre- Ellen past, has been a supporter, and made a real discovery relat-
ing to the voice problem.
“At first, when it started dropping during a conversation, Toney
would say, ‘Voice.’ It worked, but it always threw me off whatever I
was talking about. Then he came up with a signal, thumbs- up. He
does that now, my voice rises a register, and somehow the brain doesn’t get sidetracked.”
She’s delirious when someone fails to “read” her and tells me about
an incident when she was at a benefit dinner for the foundation. First
of all, she was invited to replace someone who had cancelled.
“They didn’t need to call me,” she said, “I would never have known
the difference. And that has happened over and over again.
“I sat next to a woman I didn’t know, and we hit it off. We talked to
other people at the table, but she and I kept talking. It was a relaxed setting in a beautiful home, we were all laughing and carrying on, and
then it emerged that this very laid- back woman practices law in three
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different countries. That’s very characteristic of the people here— very casual, then you find out they are retired admirals or diplomats.
“Then an hour into the party, she asked me about my past and I
mentioned that when I got out of college back in the late sixties I went to Wheat and Company as a stockbroker. She knew of the company
and said ‘You must have been the first woman stockbroker there.’ And
of course I glowed. It had been a long day, I felt tired and my voice
wasn’t doing very well, and I just said, ‘You don’t know how good that
makes me feel.’ And I explained why.”
There’s a cocktail party to introduce me to her friends, and I’m
impressed by their cosmopolitanism. One’s an ex- professor, another a
woman in real estate, still another a Frenchman who loves Virginia.
I meet Cindy, one- half of a couple who are sort of Pine Mountain’s
First Family, perched on the uppermost aerie of the mountains, re-
spected by all. Cindy’s husband John, who’s agreed to speak with me
the following day, is in Omaha— he’s a consultant in what’s called cor-
porate citizenship, advising companies on how to carry out charity and
philanthropy, whether or not they should start a foundation. He turns
out to be, like Cindy, open, genial, intelligent. In the course of our
conversation, he will characterize himself as a fiscal conservative and a social liberal, but there are plenty in both camps who are far less enlightened.
“Pine Mountain is not a microcosm of the world,” he reminds me.
“It’s good for Ellen. It’s not clique- y. I’m a golfer and skier but also interested in the Nature Foundation. We full- timers are mostly retired,
fairly smart, open- minded, a good mix. There’s a jock contingent,
maybe a little more conservative. The Nature Foundation where she
spends so much time is more liberal, not all tree huggers; a lot of them like to ski.
“The real issue is understanding. A golf friend of mine met Ellen
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Ellen Is a Welfare Mudder
and the next time we were playing he told me he met this new woman,
and when they shook hands, they were the biggest hands of any woman
he’d ever met. I told him she used to be a he. ‘Oh, gay?’ he asked. ‘No.’
‘A cross- dresser?’ ‘No, physically changed,’ I told him. ‘How in the hell do you do that?’ he asked. I think I finally made him understand that
it was not just surgery, it was hormones, it was a whole kind of life
change. It was an education. Most men are thrown by it because they
can’t understand how or why anyone would . . .” (He decorously omits
the obvious.)
John feels the Christian conservatives have it all wrong in thinking
that people can be seduced into being gay, transsexual, whatever. The
daughter of one of their friends was a compulsive cutter, but when she
was hospitalized, and had some biopsies done, they found a growth in
the brain, and she was treated successfully.
I learn more of the mental divide between the present company,
who live on the mountain, and Pine Mountain’s other community,
down in the valley. Like two tribes in ancient Greece, they regard each other with mutual incomprehension. The mountaineers, who are definitely closer to Spartans than the valley is to Athenians, look down on the softies, wondering why they would live in those little plots with
neither views nor amenities, a sort of suburb without an urb. The val-
ley people can’t imagine living on the mountain, where it’s always ten
or more degrees colder, fine in the summer, but summer is short com-
pared to those long winters when residents are often marooned by
snow, icy mountain roads, electrical shortages, a rugged life.
Chevey always loved mountains, from the time we spent summers
as children in High Hampton in North Carolina. I, too, loved High
Hampton, and went to camp in the mountains of North Carolina. But
I’m a fair weather friend. I hate the cold, not to mention wind and fog.
Ellen’s apartment, 3,500 feet above sea level, is sometimes in the
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My Sister
clouds. We’ll wake up, unable to see a tree forty feet away, while it’s sunny down in the valley. The mist will sometimes hover all day. But
whatever the weather, she enjoys sitting by the window, drinking her
coffee, communing with what’s there and what’s not there. I may not
love the mountains, but I begin to understand something of the bond
these people share, a love of nature that overrides class, gender, ori-
gins. They’re adventurous without being compulsive or self-
congratulatory (or maybe just a bit, in contrast to the soft mudders
below).
I look at the plants again, and realize that many I had previously
classed as artificial— the African violets, the ivy— are in fact real. I notice things I hadn’t noticed before: the exquisitely hand- made hon-eysuckle to which is attached a paper caterpillar one inch long, and the green- red hummingbird, made of wood, held to a blossom by the tiny
end of his beak.
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c h a p t e r f i f t e e n
Looking Backward and Moving Forward
“R
emember that fear I told you about,” our conversation continues,
“that I’d be in the Village shopping center and some little girl would
come with her mother and say, ‘Why is that man dressed like a
woman?’ It finally came true,” says Ellen with a laugh. “I was volun-
teering at the Nature Foundation where I stand behind the desk and
man (well,
woman
) the cash register, gift shop, and give advice. It was a busy morning, your voice gets tired, you’re tired, not doing your best job. There were two young women, asking about hikes; I was showing
them the map and explaining. They had one or two children, one lis-
tened beside her mom, and right in the middle— we’re talking about
different trails— the girl pipes up and says, ‘Are you a man wearing
lipstick?’
“I gasped inwardly, thought a minute, and said, ‘No, I’m a
woman, but I used to be a man.’ The little girl went off to look at
something else.
“Her mother looked at me and said, ‘You handled that very well.’
When you’re tired, things slip. It was bound to happen sooner or later, and I’m glad I got it behind me.
“Remember how I told you that when I go into a ladies’ room with
friends, I don’t talk? If I’m in a stall and someone hears my voice, it might cause a panic. I have visions of police waiting for me when I
come out. But if people just see me I’ve got a pretty good chance of
passing. When I’m on the phone— that’s when I always get ‘Yes, sir.’ I
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call to make a reservation, I say ‘It’s Ellen Hampton, E- L- L- E- N,’ and it’s ‘Yes, sir, how may I help you?’
“There are times now when I’ll be at a social gathering or a meet-
ing and a man will put his arm on my back or hand on my shoulder, or
grab my hand and hold it longer than normal, and it sends a delicious
electric shock through me, like a lightning bolt. It doesn’t necessarily mean anything, but my imagination runs wild. Don’t tell me anything
important for the next thirty minutes, because I won’t take it in.”
Has there been anything like a hit or a flirtation? I ask her.
“One day I was volunteering for the Nature Foundation block
party, a barbecue, so I’d get to know people. I was hosting a card table, signing people in, giving them a name tag. There was a long line, and
people would arrive at the table one by one. It was another of those
times when I was tired, frantic, and forgot about the voice. This guy, a hippie type with a ponytail and camouflage pants, arrived at my table,
and was filling out a form. Then he crouched down near the card table
and the next thing he says is ‘I love your deep voice.’
“ ‘Oh, I’m trying to raise it,’ I said. But he went on and on. He got
his application, then he came back again and again. The woman next
to me was having a ball. ‘He’s looking at you,’ she’d say, then ‘He’s hit on you again.’ I was getting more and more irritated but I was trapped: I represented the Nature Foundation and couldn’t just leave. By the
end of the evening, as soon as the time was up, I scurried out the back door.
“Another time I was coming into my apartment. It was November,
a cool evening. I’d been hiking. I was in old clothes, and bringing in
firewood from the outdoor pile. As I walked in a man came out, a guy
in his forties, in bicycle clothes, fairly bright and distinctive. I go in, put the firewood down, go back for another load, and pass him a second time.
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Looking Backward and Moving Forward
“The next day, I had business to do in town. I came home, laid the
fire, and was getting ready to have a bit of dinner, when there was a
knock on the door. I asked who’s there and it was— I’ll call him ‘Jack’; he was renting one of the apartments in the building. He’d brought
some firewood for me, so I had him put it down by the fire and made a
quick decision. He was good- looking, a real hunk. I invited him to
have a drink. For three hours we had a wonderful evening, talking,
laughing. While he was there, there was no problem with the voice. It
wasn’t great but I kept the pitch up. It turned out Jack was actually
fifty years old, an extreme athlete who did marathons, mountain cy-
cling, had his own company, a girlfriend in the town where he came
from. He would stop the conversation and pay me a really nice compli-
ment, saying how beautiful I was, something specific about my looks.
“About an hour into it, he said, ‘I can’t believe, as good- looking as
you are, any man would ever divorce you or let you divorce him.’ As
I’ve said, I don’t get into the fact that I’m a ‘T’ unless it’s somebody I think I’ll have a relationship with, and most of the times not even
then, only when the conversation seems to require it, and if the subject can slide in easily.
“I paused for a long time, thinking he’s really put me on the spot.
How to answer? So I told him the truth. I thought that he’d found me
attractive enough after the previous night, that maybe he was just after easy sex. Which I actually found a morale booster. And the fact that
I’d gone for an hour or more without blowing it.
“He said something like, ‘I wondered about that,’ but I don’t really
think he had. It was a nervous reaction; he was caught by surprise. It
turns out he has two grown sons, and he’s a little unsure about the
sexual orientation of the one in college. If it’s true, the boy is probably scared to death of his dad finding out anything. He’s a nice, gentle guy
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but also very macho. He doesn’t act it but he looks it, with the bulging muscles.
“I tell him at the end, ‘Have a conversation with your son, tell him
about the wonderful evening you had with a transsexual; that will let