What is real courage?

Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

I read a story tonight on this site that got me thinking what if...it was fiction, it was so real.

It doesn't take courage to put on your sister's dress when you're eight and when no one else is looking...

It takes courage to ask your mother if you can wear that dress on Halloween...which is something I wanted to do, but never got the courage to do...

It doesn't take courage to sign up for youth baseball when you're eight, even if you don't have athletic ability...I did that and struck all of the time...

It takes real courage to ask your parents to let you take ballet when you're eight. Another thing I wanted to do but never managed the courage to ask....

It doesn't take real courage to go out for football when you're a teenager. When you are a boy that's what you're expected to do...

It doesn't take real courage to take on an all-star linebacker in bull-in-the-ring. Not with full pads. He may knock you to the ground, plant you in the soil, as this guy did me. He went on to letter for four years at Alabama and was drafted by the Chicago Bears...

Nah, that didn't take courage. Stupidity maybe. But I never felt a thing...

It would have take real courage to have tried out for B-team cheerleading that year. Only 12 girls tried out for the squad and they took 10. I couldn't help but think I would have had a real shot if I had mustered up the courage...

It would have taken real courage to have tried out for flag corps in band, something I wanted to do throughout my high school years...but I didn't have the courage...

Don't get me wrong, there are a few things I've managed to have courage to do. At 16 I finally lived those ballet dreams. It does take real courage to enter a room dressed in tights (the boys kind, not the ones you'll find in some of the fantasy stories here) in a room full of girls...

But then again, I still concealed the fact I took ballet from as many people as I could, so I guess I wasn't that brave afterall...

It took courage to take ballet up again at 39 and perform in the Nutcracker at 41...which means I don't really conceal it anymore...

And you can say it takes courage to raise two children on your own, which I do now...

But I often wonder about the time I really came close to showing real courage. I came close so many years ago in college in confiding to my modern dance teacher that I might be transgendered...

I often wonder if I had done that, how my life might be different...would I have had the courage to have walked the path to being the woman I sometimes feel is inside.

Do I really have courage, or did I settle for the path of least resistence?

Comments

What if...

Isn't life full of could have or should have or would have?

I think you'll find that the majority follow the path of least resistance, holding on to the mantra "anything for the quiet life" and at the end they will find themselves reminiscing and asking the question "What if..."

We often look at the people here who have followed their hearts and gone for it, looking up to them as a source of inspiration and aspiration, but are they being courageous?

Of course they are, but I feel that somewhere there although they are probably going through some real deep shit, might they be following the path of least resistance as it exists for them? Might the alternative be even worse than the crap we perceive them going through?

Possibly; possibly not.

We can't pit ourselves against someone else, or liken ourselves to others, because we are not them. We don't have the same feelings, aspirations, hopes and fears and even if we did, there would be other things that each of us does, no matter how similar we may be to those we look up to, that will be different. Even if it's only down to tolerance or pain threshold.

So don't undersell yourself.

I never had the courage to do half the things you have and neither do I have the courage to do many of the things others have done, but I feel it takes courage of sorts just to wake up in the morning and begin a new day.

It takes courage to go to a new contract and believe that you are as good if not better than the others that they turned down.

It takes courage to believe that the mortgage payments will be covered and that the bailiffs won't be knocking on your door or the credit card companies writing snottagrams to you, demanding their money.

A guest on Oprah said that twenty percent of the world is black and white, but eighty percent is grey. The trick is to look at the parts that are grey and see them as a form of the white and not the black. It's kind of being a glass half full person.

I'm still trying that...

Best of luck dear heart.

NB

Jessica
I don't just look it, I really AM that bad...

I did have the courage

Angharad's picture

to 'follow my dream', although I'm not sure I'd have described either in those terms. It wasn't courage, it was desperation, it wasn't so much a dream as moving on from a nightmare.

At the same time, I had to leave my home and my children - although I kept contact with both, I missed seeing them growing up, I wasn't invited to my son's wedding, and am very much the second parent.

So my what ifs are much more about what would have happened if I'd stayed married and at home. I probably wouldn't be alive now nor had nearly half my life as I should have been. I don't regret my life, only missing out on my kids growing up.

Life has been good, insofar as I've managed to practice my profession equally as a woman as I did a man. I have a home, a cat and a bicycle, what more could a girl ask for?

Angharad

Angharad

Courage?

joannebarbarella's picture

Different for everyone I think. Often the supposed path of least resistance can actually be courageous. Not exposing your children to opprobrium for who YOU are, for instance, sacrificing your own happiness for theirs. Is that not courageous? Going to work every day as a male when YOU know you are really female, but that's what it takes to feed your family. Is that not courageous? Courage and cowardice take many forms and nobody should condemn another without really thinking about the circumstances which shaped a particular action.
To me the only immutable is that we should stand against those fundamental injustices and evils that pervade our society, otherwise be very slow to judge,
Joanne

Life takes courage

People have used the word courage when describing me, yet I was not doing anything that I did not feel I needed to do. You put up with it; take it; keep doing what you are doing until one day it has to end and you can't stand to do what you are doing any more.

I think it takes a great deal of courage for anyone to get through life.

When I came out at 5, it was quickly made clear to me that to survive, I would have to go back in to live. Some of us get almost all the way through life knowing that something is wrong; that they are not being real; and when they start being who they are... Well, it's chalked up to selfishness, sin in your life, or worse.

I didn't feel brave when I put on my sister's skirt and came to join the family. I just wanted to be like her. The 39 years I was married to a Woman more troubled than I was, didn't make me feel brave. We were like waifs in a hurricane and we clung together; rescued one another not because we were brave, but because we wanted to survive.

We raised three children together, not because of courage but because they got in our hearts; touched something barely alive in there. We were trying hard to survive, just like they were. There was no courage, we just wanted to live. I wanted them to be happier than I was. One of our children was one of purpose. She surely would not have survived had we not adopted her. I was very frightened when we made the decision to do it. Mercifully, the day that I held her in my arms and looked into those two olive eyes, I was hopelessly lost to her. There was no courage; only love.

I came out the second time by accident. I had grown increasingly depressed when the children grew older and I could see they were going to be gone. Through a series of painful but unavoidable events my circle around the black hole called death grew smaller and threatened to end. The events around 9/11 were traumatic for us all and my working for the government and seeing what some power hungry creeps were doing made it worse. Soon I was heavily sedated because of the stress. My child with Olive eyes had her heart captured by a boy and soon she was gone. I had a serious fall at work and became disabled. My mate, perhaps growing weary of my presence in the house began to work more and more. A few days before Christmas, in constant pain, and too heavily sedated to think clearly, I decided that I had flirted with the drain long enough.

Inexplicably I found myself taken to the hospital by a cop, a friend of mine, "Gwen, this is hard for me. Please don't give me a hard time." A week later, I came home from the hospital. I had totally been outed by the medical staff by a series of events that the new Hipaa rules failed to prevent. It was two days before Christmas.

Christmas is still extremely difficult. Each year gets worse.

4 years later, I am post op by a year. The family I loved so much is entirely gone. The job is gone, I could make this a real downer right now... In my opinion, transitioning should be the last posible choice a person like me should make. It needs to be death or transitioning.

Is life as a twoman courageous? It can certainly be unimaginably hard. It is imposible for me to stand on this side of the gap and look back. Would I be happy? Would I be alive if I had not transitioned?

Do you have loved ones around you. I personally never do a sudden transition again, given the choice. I was not this time. Far wiser would be family counseling with a person familiar with T matters. Of course, all counselors are human and have an axe to grind. I started out, years before my transition with Christian counselors. They gave me a huge resevior of guilt. Later using secular counselors through Kaiser, it seemed better; more professional.

I will say that there are counselors and their circle of friends out there who are nothing more than circling sharks seeking to devour you. They want to rush you right into transition so they can make money off you.

I would say the surest mark of courage is in simply staying alive and doing the best you can.

Much Love

Gwen

Courage? I dunno...

Does it take more courage to tell your "significant other" you're transgendered? Or, to keep it to your self, if he/she is in the middle of some personal crisis or battle?

Does it take more courage to be true to your self? or to pretend to be someone else, in order to help others, to be there when needed, etc.?

Does it take more courage to. Well, you get the picture. Sometimes the choices we have are NOT between which is easier, but between two issues where one is for us and one is for others.

As Angharad indicated (unless I missunderstood), sometimes it's not a matter of courage at all... It's a matter of despiration and courage has nothing to do with it.

Important decisions are rarely truely easy. They have short term and long term benefits and consequences. Whether we recognize them, or whether they are even important to us, they exist.

As to some of your examples, which takes more courage? Continuing to play baseball, when you have skill, or quitting, cause you really don't like the game? Or continuing to play football, where you may have some skill, or quitting? Sometimes the easy answer, is NOT the one we want. Sometimes it's what is expected of us. I don't know how others decide these difficult questions.

Personally, I find making a choice that truly hurts others, even if it greatly benefits me, a VERY difficult thing to do. Based on your thoughts above, it might sound like a lack of courage. I'm not sure that's the case. Maybe it's just a lack of sufficient self interest. I don't really know. But then, I'm different from you, and everyone else. We ALL have to decide for ourselves. Allowing someone ELSE to make the decision for us - That's a lack of courage IMO.

Enough rambling...

Annette

Courage?

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

What is courage? I'd say that courage is being faced with an unacceptable option and weighing the cost of tossing everything against the benefit of taking that option.

What kind of option am I talking about? How about a woman with a two year old daughter who walks in on her husband of five years years and finds him in her clothes. This was not the "man" she married. No the man she married was a woodsman's woodsman, a macho man, not a sissy, not pantywaist, not... not... this, what ever this is. The woman, repulsed by what she's discover, opts not to kick his butt to the curb, but instead, stays, trying to salvage her dream from the rubble this discovery has made of it. She endures for ten year, bearing another child to complete her family in that time, and finally, she somehow finds the courage to fall in love with and trust this person all the while tolerating his aberration, and end the end embracing him and all that he is.

This woman is my wife, she has more courage than I. For me, it was easy, all I had to do is do what I said I would do, earn the living I would have had to earn anyway. She took the risk and stood by her commitment, hoping against hope that she could be happy.

How much easier would it have been to divorce and look for another man, a manly man, to marry and raise her daughter with. But her courage, and sacrifice resulted in happy marriage and wonderful grandchildren she's happy to share with me.

Did I have courage to stay and be the man of the house? ... the father of my children? I don't know if courage had anything to do with what I did, but I do know that it had everything to do with what she did.

Hugs
Patricia
([email protected])
http://members.tripod.com/~Patricia_Marie/index.html

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper ubi femininus sub ubi

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt