Father's Crossdressing Shame Imposed on His Son
By Cathy Laura Peterson
Stana’s recent post, “Like Father Like Son?”, stirred up memories I hadn’t revisited in a long time—memories that go all the way back to the 1960s, when I first found myself dressed in feminine clothing alongside my three sisters.
It was my aunt who encouraged it. She treated it as harmless, even natural—just kids playing. My mother, on the other hand, seemed almost detached. Not disapproving, not approving… just indifferent.
My father wasn’t around much. He left when I was very young—so young that I don’t remember him ever really living with us. But I do remember something else: my aunt’s old black-and-white photo albums. Tucked inside were a few striking images of my father, fully en femme, taken in the early 1940s before he went off to war.
He was young, slim, and—there’s no other way to say it—convincing. Dresses, stockings, heels, even the suggestion of a bra and slip beneath it all. Later photos showed him again, after the war, dressed up at what looked like a costume party with my mother.
My aunt didn’t dance around it.
“Your father liked to dress up,” she told me plainly. “He did it when we were kids, and again after you were born—but he never went out.”
That knowledge didn’t quite fit with the man I would occasionally encounter as a child.
He would show up unannounced now and then. And twice—only twice, but vividly enough—he saw me dressed with my sisters. Dress, tights, shoes, bows, maybe a little lipstick. I remember the anger. Not just disapproval—real intensity. He got in my face, shouting, threatening to throw me outside for the neighbors to see, hurling the kind of language that was all too common in that era.
It frightened me. It frightened all of us.
And then… he was gone.
By the time I started kindergarten, he had moved out of state. We never heard from him again.
Years later, as adults, my sisters and I tried to make sense of it all. The contradiction was hard to ignore: the same man who had once dressed as a woman himself reacting with such anger and shame at seeing me do the same.
In time, we came to a conclusion that felt right. His anger wasn’t really about me—it was about him. About whatever conflict, guilt, or fear he carried but couldn’t reconcile.
As for me, I moved in a different direction.
Those early experiences—playing dress-up with my sisters, encouraged by my aunt—were never strange or uncomfortable. Quite the opposite. They felt safe, affirming… even therapeutic. I loved it. The clothes, the textures, the ritual of it all. Slips, dresses, stockings—it was a world that felt welcoming rather than forbidden.
And yes, I eventually ventured outside.
Halloween became my sanctioned opportunity—my annual “excuse” to be seen. Under the cover of costume, I could step out fully dressed and feel, for a few hours, completely at ease in the world.
By high school, I had gotten more inventive—improvising curves, styling my longer hair, making the most of the era’s fashion trends. It was the early ’70s, after all, and shoulder-length hair on boys made certain things… easier.
Life moved on.
As adults, my sisters and I eventually discarded those old photos of our father. But the conversations about him lingered. They still do, in a way.
I’ve lived my entire life with this part of myself—not as a phase, not as a secret to be buried, but as something that brings genuine joy. There have been close calls, awkward moments, and the occasional anxiety—but the overriding emotion has always been a kind of quiet elation.
My own family took a different path. My sons never showed any interest in dressing, and I never encouraged it. In fact, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel a flicker of anxiety at the thought that they might. It made me wonder: Was this something passed down? Or simply something uniquely mine?
Even now, there are boundaries I haven’t crossed. I’ve never appeared en femme in front of my sons, their wives, or my grandchildren. The thought still carries a weight of discomfort—maybe even a trace of that old word: embarrassment.
And yet…
I still dress. At home. Out in public. On business trips where I can spend days at a time fully as Cathy. I’ve learned how to navigate the risks, the “what ifs,” the chance encounters with someone who might recognize me.
Because in the end, the equation is simple.
The joy outweighs the fear.
And after all these years—since the 1960s, really—that hasn’t changed.
I expect it never will.
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| Peter Butterworth femulating in the 1966 British film Carry On Screaming. |





Thanks to Cathy for sharing her poignant family history. I suspect many more men than just her father have been in similar positions. Sue xx
ReplyDelete"The joy outweighs the fear". Yes. It's gender euphoria, not gender dysphoria.
ReplyDeleteQuite aptly put!
DeleteA counselor I had talks with for over fifteen years is of the opinion that each man and woman has some dna in their chain of the opposite sex; in some it is more than in others. To me, that would explain a lot of the broad spectrum of sexual identity. Perhaps, it creates a predisposition to act out and explore. Then society gets in the way with its approval or disapproval and norms and expectations.
ReplyDeleteCathy, a wonderful article that mirrors so many of our feelings. Thank you for sharing...
ReplyDeleteRhonda
I’ve mentioned on a number of posts in here that my first foray into cross dressing was at age seven, after being chosen at a summer day camp along with several other boys, to portray little girls. We were not asked if we wanted to do that nor were our parents informed we would be playing girls and wear dresses, wigs, and make up.
ReplyDeleteOn stage we sang a love song while holding the hand of a boy dressed as a boy so we appear as sweet little couples.
The audience howled with laughter and I remember flashbulbs firing away and at that moment I believed that my worth and life as a boy had been trashed. At the time I thought that anyone who witnessed me that afternoon dressed up as a girl would simply believe, of course Mike was chosen to be a girl because he’s not a real boy and they must have selected all the day camp’s sissies to be girls in the show.
I thought portraying a girl made my parents irrevocably ashamed of me.
Pure and simple, it was abuse. Oh, and the day camp owner and director, Lou, touched me under my dress before I went on stage. When I was older and realized how sick the whole thing was I concluded Lou was a child molester. While, I never saw him again after that show I doubt I’m wrong.
Yet, to my surprise as I reached adolescence I was drawn to crossdress and when I had the chance I’d don my mother’s girdles, slips, nylons, chiffon dresses and I loved it.. Now at age seventy one, a husband and granddad, I live a pretty traditional life. Though I still occasionally dress up in private.
The notion of forcing a child to dress up as a girl is disgusting to me and I’d view that as criminal. I don’t know whether my day camp experience caused me to become a cross dresser, but that never should have happened. If go a boy wants to be a girl for Halloween or wants to dress up, that’s another matter I’d let him make the choice, but I’d never make it for him.
Emily
Emily, it was wrong for you to have been treated that way. It must be said. That was abuse, and he was the bad guy -- not you.
DeleteThank you for sharing.