Becoming Jane
There are moments in life that donât announce themselves as turning points. They arrive quietlyâtucked inside a bus ride, a trembling voice, a cup of coffee shared with someone who sees you. This is the story of how I began to live as myself. Not all at once. Not without fear. But with enough courage to take the first step.
Back then, I worked as a coal minerâa job that demanded everything from me. The physical toll was relentless: aching joints, blackened lungs, the constant hum of machinery echoing through my bones. But it was the emotional weight that nearly broke me. The darkness underground mirrored the darkness I carried inside. Noise and grit surrounded me, yet I felt invisibleâlike I was performing a life that wasnât mine.
I followed the script I was expected to follow. I dated girls, did the usual guy thing, and got into trouble with the law a couple of timesânothing too serious, just fighting. It was all part of the act. I knew how to play the role, but it never fit. Every gesture felt borrowed, every word rehearsed. I was surviving, not living. And the longer I kept up the performance, the further I drifted from myself.
I didnât drink to celebrate. I drank to disappear. Alcohol dulled the ache, blurred the edges, and made the days bearable. But it also pulled me under. My life felt like a slow descentâone I couldnât stop. And I knew, deep down, that if I didnât change course soon, Iâd end up in a coffin. Not just dead, but erased. Never having lived as myself, never having lived as Jane.
And my death would have been a pointless waste of a life.
Eventually, I hit a wall, not in a blaze of drama, but in quiet desperation. I stopped drinking and began the slow, painful process of rebuilding. It was messy. Lonely. I didnât know who I was without the bottle, without the mask. But somewhere in that silence, I began to listenâto myself, to the parts of me Iâd buried for years.
Around that time, I met Tony in an online chat room. I wasnât looking for salvation. I just wanted someone to talk to. But our conversations became lifelinesâthreads of hope in the murk. He was kind, curious, and open-hearted. We talked about music, memories, and dreams we hadnât dared to speak aloud. He didnât flinch when I shared my truth. He leaned in.
Tony didnât just listenâhe saw me. The real me. His support was unwavering as I prepared to move to Bolton. He visited me a few times in Castleford before the move, and during those visits, we shared stories about our lives over steaming cups of coffee. Those moments felt like tiny sanctuariesâspaces where I could breathe, laugh, and begin to imagine a different kind of life. A life that felt possible. A life that touched mine.
I made several appointments to see my doctor, but kept cancelling. My carriage kept letting me downâsometimes literally, sometimes emotionally. Iâd get dressed, ready to go, then unravel. My heart would race, my hands would shake, and Iâd tell myself, âNext time.â But next time, it kept slipping further away.
Tony never pushed. He just stayed close. His quiet encouragement, his belief in meâit chipped away at the fear. Over time, I began to believe I could do it and that I deserved to be heard.
Eventually, I made another appointment with the family doctor. This time, I promised myself Iâd go. I didnât sleep the night before. I rehearsed the words in my head, over and over, until they became a blur. I was terrifiedânot of being laughed at, but of being dismissed. Of being told I didnât matter.
I walked into the surgery with my heart thudding like a drum. The waiting room felt too bright, too quiet. I wanted to run. But I stayed.
When I sat down with the GP, my voice trembled. I could barely look her in the eye. But somehow, I got the words out. I told her I was Jane.
To my surprise, she didnât flinch. She didnât question me. She was kind. She looked at me gently and says, âI wondered why you kept changing appointments.â And in that moment, something softened. I felt seen.
She told me Iâd need to speak to a psychiatrist, and she set that up for me. I went to the appointment, still nervous but steadier. I told him my life storyâevery jagged edge, every buried truth. He listened, then says, âYou have gender dysphoria.â And just like that, he referred me to the gender clinic at St Jamesâs Hospital in Leeds.
My first appointment at the gender clinic was still in Castleford. I didnât go as Janeânot yet. I hadnât found the courage to step into the world as myself. That part of me was still tucked away, waiting for safer ground. In Castleford, being Jane full-time felt dangerous. The risks werenât abstractâthey were real, and they could have cost me everything.
So I boarded the bus to Leeds, quiet and anxious, carrying the truth inside me like a fragile flame. I remember watching the towns blur past the window, wondering if anyone else on that bus had ever felt like thisâhalf-formed, half-hidden, aching to be whole. I wasnât dressed as Jane, but she was with me. She was always with me.
When I arrived at the clinic, I sat in the waiting room with my heart thudding like a drum. I felt exposed, even though no one knew. My hands trembled. My throat tightened. I wanted to run. But I stayed.
The woman I met with was calm and kind. I explained everythingâthat I wasnât yet living as Jane, that doing so in Castleford could have been dangerous. I told her I was moving to Bolton in two weeks, and that once I arrived, I would be living as my authentic selfâfull-time, without apology.
She didnât blink. She smiles gently and says, âThatâs fine.â Then she adds, âLetâs book another appointment for four weeks. Youâll be a little more settled in Bolton by thenâand living as Jane.â
I nodded. âYes,â I says. âI will be.â
We talked for a while about the treatment processâabout hormone replacement therapy, what it would mean for my body, my emotions, my sense of self. She explained things clearly, but more than that, she listened. She saw me. Not as a problem to solve, or a case to manageâbut as a person. As Jane.
It was the first time Iâd spoken to a professional about Jane without fear. The first time someone looked at me and didnât flinch. The first time I felt like I wasnât alone.
I walked out of that appointment lighter. Not because everything was fixed, but because something had begun. A door had opened. A path had cleared. And for the first time in a long time, I believed I could walk it.
I didnât become Jane in a single moment. It wasnât a dramatic unveiling or a sudden transformation. It was a series of choicesâsome trembling, some boldâthat slowly stitched me back together. Each conversation, each appointment, each step toward truth was a thread in the fabric of my becoming.
There were days I doubted Iâd ever get hereâdays when the silence felt louder than love. But I kept going. I kept listening to the voice inside me that whispered, Youâre still here. Youâre still Jane.
And now, when I look back at that bus ride to Leeds, at the trembling words in the doctorâs office, at the quiet smile from the woman who saw meâI see something extraordinary. Not just survival. Not just transition. But a reclamation.
I didnât just become Jane.
I returned to her.
And this time, I stayed.