Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Dressed to Thrill (Passing Optional)

I didn’t decide my legs were exceptional. Other people did that for me.

My mother was the first. She used to say I had beautiful legs and then, with a mix of admiration and regret, add, “You should have been a girl with legs like yours.” My wife has said the same more diplomatically. Other cisgender women have been less diplomatic, admitting outright that my legs are nicer than theirs.

At some point, you stop arguing with that kind of consensus.

I’m tall, so my legs are long. Maybe that length creates an optical illusion that elevates them beyond their actual merit. I honestly don’t know. What I do know is this: if people keep noticing, complimenting, and occasionally envying your legs, it would be foolish not to treat them like the asset they clearly are.

Which raises the obvious question: if you’ve got it, why hide it?

My answer has been skirts and dresses with short hemlines, sometimes unapologetically short (“Stana Short”) and heels ranging from two to four inches. Add four-inch heels to my six-foot frame and I don’t just enter a room; I announce myself. I top out at nearly six and a half feet, tall enough that strangers start inventing backstories. Some assume I’m an Amazon. Others think I played for the WNBA. A few decide I must be a man in drag.

They’re not entirely wrong but they’re missing the point.

There’s a well-worn rule in crossdressing circles: dress your age if you want to pass. If you’re an XX-year-old crossdresser, you should dress like an XX-year-old cisgender woman. At my age, that rule translates into longer skirts, lower heels or worse.

By “worse,” I mean this uncomfortable truth: many cisgender women my age now dress like cisgender men. Slacks, trousers, and flats dominate. Skirts, dresses, and heels have largely disappeared. Camouflage, masquerading as practicality.

I saw this vividly one night while dining with four other T-girls in downtown Hartford. The restaurant was packed with twenty- and thirty-somethings men and women. Want to guess how many people I saw wearing a skirt or dress? Two. One of the T-girls at our table and me. Not a single cisgender woman in the room was wearing one.

If I’d truly wanted to blend in, I should have worn slacks instead of the short black skirt I had on. And if I really wanted to pass, I should have committed fully: flats instead of high-heeled boots, socks instead of pantyhose, a plaid shirt instead of an animal-print top, boxers instead of a panty girdle, a T-shirt instead of a bra. Skip the makeup. Leave the wig, jewelry, and designer bag at home.

I would have passed effortlessly.

As a man.

That’s when I decided passing is wildly overrated.

If the choice is between dressing to pass and dressing to thrill, I’ll choose thrill every time. Dressing to pass is joyless. The clothes rarely make me happy, and the entire experience becomes an anxious audit: Do I pass? Did they clock me? What about now?

It’s exhausting. It drains all the pleasure out of being en femme.

When I dress to thrill, the opposite happens. I like what I see. I feel confident, expressive, alive. I’m not policing myself or monitoring strangers. I’m simply being me and here’s the delicious irony: that’s often when I pass anyway.

One of my favorite examples happened during outreach at Southern Connecticut State University. I started the day in three-and-a-half-inch stilettos but tossed a pair of flats into the car just in case. After shopping at the mall and visiting the first of two classes, the stilettos finally won. I headed back to the parking lot to change shoes.

That’s when I saw it: a university dump truck parked directly in front of my car. The driver was chatting with another university employee beside the truck.

Perfect. The classic nightmare scenario. Crossdresser versus Macho Guy, center stage.

Bracing myself, I made a beeline for the car and tried to disappear. Instead, the man standing beside the truck looked at me and said, warmly and unmistakably flirtatiously, “Good afternoon.” The driver smiled, lingered for a moment, and then drove off.

They flirted with me.

I wasn’t trying to pass. I was trying to get to my flats.

So now, when I go out en femme, I dress to thrill and show off my legs. If I pass, that’s fine. If I don’t, that’s fine too. Passing is optional.

Thrill is not.



Source: Boston Proper
Wearing Boston Proper


Source: Boston Proper
Wearing Boston Proper

20 comments:

  1. As a child I had long, thick black eyelashes. I still do. I remember from age 4 or 5 being asked by adult women to bat my eyelashes for them. Frequently they would comment that the lovely lashes were “wasted on a boy”. I had already identified a yearning to wear dresses and all the other feminine accessories while also knowing I would be teased mercilessly if I said it out loud. I think I believed that if I wore a dress I would be exempt from the rough and tumble punching and shoving that were part of the social role of being a boy. In the third grade, I stopped cutting my hair. As my hair got past my shoulders people would say I looked like a girl. I’d get upset at these comments, but I knew I had brought it on myself. I secretly wanted my mother to offer to take me shopping for dresses and give me opportunities to be out and occupy the social role of a girl.
    When I go out now in my feminine finery, I crave compliments. I always choose a checkout line with a young stylish woman cashier. I love the rare sight of a woman in a dress and I always give her compliments for making an effort to honor the elegant femininity of the skirt.
    I had planned to make tomorrow my feminine day out. I got a J Crew plaid skirt and was going to wear it with a navy sweater and tights with pearls and MaryJanes as I typically do when I meet with my therapist. But ICE is active here in Minneapolis and I’m sure they would love to make an example of a sissy liberal pinko crossdressing freak given the chance. So I’m going out in boring old boy mode tomorrow. I’m back hiding in the shadows. For now.
    Angie

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    1. Up until I was a young adult, women would marvel at my curls and long eyelashes and I got the "you should have been a girl," comments. None of those girls and women had any idea that often I'd dress up as a girl.

      Sometimes I wondered how they'd react if they'd known my secret. Not well I suspect.

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  2. Dear Stana,

    You look STUNNING! What a picture. Yes, you are right the thrill is necessary not optional.

    Jade

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    1. Thank you for the kind words, Jade!

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  3. My height peaked at six foot two. Now? The aging process has collapsed my spine to six foot even money, so I am still tall. I always got compliments on my long legs. As a bonus my genetic profile has blessed me with no hair follicles on my legs and no hair follicles at my underarms. Hardly any chest hairs. My wife says my lack of hair is "wasted on a guy." It's great to roll up a pair of thigh highs on my legs. My preferable dress length is about three inches above my knees. It's a rarity to see a woman in a dress or skirt. The only place I do see a lot of women wearing a dress is on Sundays at Costco after churches services. There are always women in dresses because their churches dictate that attire and they are there with their kids for the $1.50 hot dogs and sodas.

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  4. this article hits on a sore subject with me. from talking to a number of women I've concluded that most fear being out of line so they conform to being dull when older.
    conformity is the key-not laziness.
    after spending years envying women in their beautiful clothes I finally have the opportunity to wear them and I agree with the author--go for it! and the funny thing is that I get a lot of compliments from women strangers. Instead of my "thank you" I want to say 'why don't you dress like this-you would look great"

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    1. One of the things I've always envied most about women's clothing is the limitless variety of colors and patterns and fabrics, while most available menswear is so incredibly dull. It makes me sad that some women feel pressure to dull their shine as they get older. Perhaps some gentle words of encouragement would be just what she needs to express herself:)

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  5. "I mean this uncomfortable truth: many cisgender women my age now dress like cisgender men. Slacks, trousers, and flats dominate. Skirts, dresses, and heels have largely disappeared. Camouflage, masquerading as practicality." UGH!
    On Sunday mornings if I'm not wearing a man's coat and tie outfit, I go all out in my "en femme" presentation. I have blond hair well beyond my shoulders, a bust, and painted nails. I wear earrings, makeup, dress, and heels. Very few women do all that at my church. When I'm done I sure don't look like a bass singer.
    I see people of both genders wearing jeans and sneakers. I rebel against such casual attire.
    John

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    1. Added remarks: Yes, I sing second bass in my church choir. A new female choir member wondered who was singing bass as I pass as a woman when so attired.
      John

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  6. Hello, I'm from Poland, Łódź (Lodz), and it's exactly the same here. When I cycle to and from work, along the longest promenade and through the Old Town (Piotrkowska Street), I count out of curiosity how many women I meet along the way in dresses or skirts. My commute to work is 10km each way, and I'd say fewer than 10 during the day. Best regards to all the readers, Martina, and to you, Stana ;D

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  7. Sing it sister!

    I always say "Wear what you want to wear" and you were kind enough to post my thoughts on the subject a few years ago.

    I'm not 6 foot, nor am I 20-something, but I like dressing age inappropriately. I've been told by GGs that I have great legs and I should wear shorter skirts and dresses, most surprisingly recently by the wife of a high school friend (she knows, he doesn't) Another GG friend told me a couple of years ago to expand my comfort zone, and so I did. That opens up another range of clothing options to choose from.

    I have decided others may know it's a guy in a dress, but they don't know it's ME in the dress--and I just want to make sure it's a pretty dress. I've gotten compliments while out in the wild on my dresses (and my legs), so I must be doing something right.

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  8. I think the repeated “criticism” of women wearing slacks and flats instead of dresses and heels is very much misguided. Everyone should be free to wear what they feel comfortable wearing! Such criticism is not unlike the criticism addressed to crossdressing men—unnecessary and misguided. Wear what you want to and let others do the same!

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  9. I too have long legs.If you’ve got ‘em,flaunt ‘em.Why be a shrinking violet ?

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  10. This post and that gorgeous photo of you bring to mind 2 quotes that go hand in hand: "nothing beats a great pair of legs" and "if you've got them, flaunt them"!

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    1. Thank you for the kind words, Elise!

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  11. Two comments:
    I don't think that the adage to dress your age is even correct even if you believe the intention is correct. If your goal is to fit in and not not push the fashion police to take you into custody, you should go by the rule that "you should dress your apparent age". Some of us look significantly younger than we are and should at least flout it if we can! The calendar should not rule! So, if you are 75 and look 55 you can play like you look old for your age and dress as if you are 45! Go for it.

    About those comments about legs. I had one encounter that still puzzles me. I can't tell if it was a true compliment or if someone was telling me that she had read me. While boarding a plane at the White Plains airport, an airport that at the time had you walk to the plane and climb the stairs, I was dressed in a business suit for the trip. When I got on the plane, a woman, who I think had walked behind on the tarmac me but was already seated, made the comment that I had nice legs. While I might agree with her, I don't usually get random comments like that. So, I still puzzle over the comment. When I told my therapist, she wasn't much help in guessing either!

    Ladies, show your legs and bring a bit of elegance back into this world that needs as much as it can get.

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  12. If I had a nickle for every compliment my legs have received a compliment! Plus, if I'm going to toss out male clothing for female, then why would I choose to be wearing pants? So I agree, take the compliment and run with it! When I do get a legs comment, I usually respond, "I owe it all to years of tap dancing".

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  13. Stana, that picture of you in the green dress is one of your best.
    Penny from Edinburgh.

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    1. Thank you for the kind words, Penny!

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  14. I don't have anything to add to these remarks but I am just stunned with Stana in that green dress! I'm in awe of such as one as you. What would I do if I had what you have. Such confidence and beauty all in that gorgeous attire.

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