In a quiet suburban neighborhood of a midsized Midwestern town, lived a young boy named Mark, experiencing a life that was far from ordinary. His mother, Susan,was a strong-willed and independent woman who had always been fiercely opposed to the traditional gender roles that society imposed, and she was determined to ensure that her child would not turn out like her 'ex-husband', whom she hated very much. In fact, over the course of her nine year common-law 'marriage', she came to a point when she hated all men.Susan decided men were unnecessary in society and held no value, only serving to hold women back. This came about from several sources, two in particular; her childhood and her common-law marriage to Jed. By the time she met Jed, at the age of 17 she already harbored a distrust for men, due to her childhood experiences (sexual abuse), so once she experienced several years of her 'husband's increasingly horrible mental abuse, physical mistreatment, and infidelity, she came to the conclusion women were superior to men and men were nothing more than a drain on society.
One year after Susan gave birth to Mark, Jed went to prison for attempted murder, attempting to murder Susan due to the misery she was putting him through. This left her to raise Mark alone. This is when Susan saw her opportunity. She knew Jed might try to return for his boy when he got out of prison. She was afraid he would end up abusing her child the way she had been and she didn't need a man anymore, anyways, so she decided she needed to hide from him. She didn't want him back in her life. In fact, she didn't want any man in her life, not even a son, so she made the decision to raise him, from that point forward, as a girl.
That day she dressed Mark, for the first time, in a frilly dress and sandals, with cute earrings dangling from his ears. From that day forward his mother dressed him this way in dresses and skirts. She styled his hair in soft curls with pretty ribbons, and he was always impeccably groomed, with painted nails and sparkling pantyhose or tights. As he got older she went so far as to put him in heels and taught him to sit with his legs crossed at the knees, forcing him to sit in a way that was considered more feminine and prevented one thing that triggered her, manspreading. Marcia, as she was now called, was not allowed to exhibit any behavior that was not ultra-feminine and ladylike.
Susan herself wasn't at all very ladylike but she forced this on her son in order to counter the natural masculinity he exhibited and to help hide him from his dad. By the time Jeb was due to be released from prison, Susan had changed her name to Rory and moved to a very large city, Los Angeles. She was certain he'd never find them now.
Mark, being a year old when he was transitioned to take on the identity of a girl named Marcia, adapted to the new identity pretty well. However, she exhibited a very rambunctious masculine personality. Everyone saw her as a tomboy but this didn't please Rory. She wanted to erase all traces of masculinity from her daughter's personality, so anytime she acted in a way that her mother considered even remotely masculine, she was punished severely.
Her mother enrolled her in dance lessons, where she learned to move with grace and poise. She was a natural performer, and she loved the way that the sparkly costumes and glittery makeup made her feel.
As Marcia grew older, she began to accept her identity as a girl, resigned to the idea that this was her lot in life. By the time her friends started to enter puberty, she was also looking forward to the changes that puberty would bring for her as well, and her mother eagerly obliged by putting her on hormone blockers to suppress any further secondary masculine development; facial hair, muscles, deeper voice, etc.
Soon after, Rory started her child on female hormones, which caused her to develop breasts and softened her features. Marcia embraced her femininity with an enthusiasm that surprised even her mother, which was a relief for Rory, because had Marcia not been accepting of the hormones, it would have been a fight because Rory was going to give Marcia the hormones whether she wanted them or not.
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Life 2.0oooh Boy: The Naughty Collection __ for mature audiences only
General FictionAnother collection of sweet short stores exploring the theme of transition from male to female. However, this collection is different from the other books in the Life 2.0 series. This collection is intended to only be enjoyed by those over the age o...