One day we got a call from the White
House asking if we would be available to meet President Ronald Reagan in
the Oval Office as representatives of the Juvenile Diabetes
Association. I was still nursing Brandon, and the timetable was,
basically, "We would need you here in Washington the day after
tomorrow." We didn't want to miss the opportunity to have an audience
with the leader of the free world, so I barely had time to store up some
breast milk, find something appropriate to wear, and get on that plane
to our nation's capital. It was a quick turnaround. We were back in
Malibu in a matter of hours, but the honor of meeting the president of
the United States is a lasting memory. I was very content to be back
home in Malibu with my sweet baby Brandon in my arms and an interesting
memory to tell him about when he was older.
Bruce possessed such a
natural athleticism in everything he attempted to do. He seemed to
excel in every sport he tried. Whatever he did, he was daring and cut an
amazing form. Bruce was pretty much the perfect specimen of a man. Men
aspired to be like him and wanted to hang out and play sports with him,
and women were clearly attracted to him. The Bruce I knew back then was
unstudied, affable, and seemingly very comfortable in his own skin. So
it seemed.
One summer Bruce and I were asked to do a summer stock production of
Li'l Abner
in Birmingham, Alabama. We thought that sounded like fun, so we agreed
to do it. Bruce was surprisingly very musical and liked to dance. We
traveled to Birmingham and went into rehearsals. Of course we took
Brandon along, and he had a great time parading onstage right along with
us, in his very own Li'l Abner costume. We actually got good reviews,
although I discovered live theater was incredibly nerve-racking. I had
done plays in high school before, but this was a full-on musical and was
really quite demanding.
Bruce and I spent our days living at the
beach, jet skiing, walking on the beach every morning with our coffee,
sailing on a Hobie Cat, playing tennis, and otherwise just enjoying each
other and many of the same activities. I thought we lived a pretty
idyllic life.
When Brandon was just over 1 year
old, we thought it would be nice for him to have a younger sibling.
Pretty soon I was delighted to be pregnant with my second son, Sam Brody
Jenner. I named Brody after my brother Sam. Brody was born Aug. 21,
1983.
Those were the happiest days of my life. I had a wonderful husband, who
was the most athletic, high-spirited, energetic, easygoing,
manly
man imaginable. I had two beautiful, healthy baby boys. I had two great
stepchildren. Life was just about as good as it gets. We had moved into
a sweet, one-acre mini-estate where I planted roses, fruit trees, and
flowers, and where many lasting memories were made.
Bruce traveled a lot, doing motivational speaking, working for NBC
SportsWorld, racing cars, and throwing himself into other assorted jobs
and activities. I often accompanied him, always bringing our sons, and
sometimes I stayed home with the boys while he traveled.
When Brody was about 18 months old and Brandon was about 3 and a half
years old, Bruce came to me one day with a very somber look on his face
and said, "There's something about me that I really need to tell you,
something you need to know." I truly thought he might possibly tell me
he had had an affair while on the road. But that's not what he wanted to
confess to me. Bruce told me that he identified as a woman. Not
understanding exactly what he meant, I questioned him. "What do you mean
you identify as a woman?" I asked. "What does that mean?" He replied
that it meant that for as long as he could remember, he had looked in
the mirror and seen a masculine image staring back at him where there
should have been a feminine reflection. Bruce lamented, "I have lived in
the wrong skin, the wrong body, my whole life. It is a living hell for
me, and I really feel that I would like to move forward with the process
of becoming a woman, the woman I have always been inside."
People
have asked me, "Were there any signs or clues through the years that
Bruce might have had this issue? Any evidence he wore your clothes?"
No. Not a clue. Nothing. Nada. Never.
I would venture to say that
30 years ago, very few of us were adequately educated about the world
of gender dysphoria. I certainly wasn't. I was living in my little
Malibu cocoon of marital, motherly bliss with my world-champion,
muscular, athletic, handsome husband. So my reaction to Bruce's
shocking declaration was one of confusion, even desperation. I suggested
that we go to therapy. I needed to understand fully what Bruce's issue
was, and then to determine if it was something we could overcome or
"fix." I was naïve. As I said, I was pretty ignorant of the fact that
being transgender isn't something that can be overcome, fixed, prayed
away, exorcised or obliterated by any other arcane notion. Being
transgender, like being gay, tall, short, white, black, male, or female,
is another part of the human condition that makes each individual
unique, and something over which we have no control. We are who we are
in the deepest recesses of our minds, hearts and identities. I had to
learn that life lesson and apply it to my own expectations for my future
and the future of my family.
I found a therapist who specialized
in gender dysphoria. Her name was Dr. Gertrude Hill, and we began going
to her right away. She was a lovely woman who very calmly, and as gently
as she could, massacred me with the information that broke my heart
into a million pieces. She told me in one of the first few sessions,
"Linda, this is who Bruce is. His identity is that of a woman, and that
will never, ever go away. You have a choice to make. If Bruce goes
through with his gender reassignment, as he is now planning to do, you
have the option of staying with him after
he becomes
she,
or you can divorce him and move on with your life." She told us that 25
percent of transgender people commit suicide because they are so
depressed and feel so hopeless.
Around that time Bruce considered
traveling out of the country, possibly to Denmark, to have the
gender-confirmation surgery and then come back to the U.S. identifying
as female. I asked Bruce, "What about the children?" He thought maybe
he could reenter their lives as "Aunt Heather."
As devastated as I
was, my heart bled for Bruce and what he must have lived with his
entire life. It's impossible for those of us who are comfortable living
in our own skin to fully grasp what an imprisonment that must feel like
to be born into the wrong body. I know it's difficult to understand, to
emotionally or even intelligently wrap your head around. It was
extremely difficult for me to comprehend, and adjust my life accordingly
to, the realization that the man I had married -- the very masculine,
gorgeous, ideal, wonderful hunk of a man -- would be no more. The human
entity was still alive, but it truly was like mourning the death of the
person I had grown to know and love.
Bruce and I separated after
going to therapy for about six months -- just to exhaust any hope of
keeping our family together. Being married to a woman was not what I had
envisioned for my life.
I was so heartbroken that I would get in
my car day and night and aimlessly drive up and down Pacific Coast
Highway, crying. I mourned the death of my marriage, my man, and my
dream of enjoying a lifetime of family togetherness. But I was also
empathetic to, and mourned for, the pain that Bruce had experienced
every day of his life. As earth-shattering as his confession had been
for me, pulling the proverbial rug out from under my world, Bruce's
struggle made mine pale in comparison. I now had to "man up," support
Bruce and his decisions regarding his own body, take care of my sons,
and move on with my life.
Bruce went to see a Dr. O'Dea and began
taking female hormones. Thirty years ago the only hair removal that was
permanent was electrolysis. There were no laser hair removal places
then, as far as I know. Poor Bruce began the process of having
electrolysis performed on his heavily bearded face. He then began having
the hair on his chest removed. One excruciatingly painful hair at a
time was targeted by an electrical current. Unimaginable. Bruce began
to grow breasts as a result of the female hormones he was injecting. My
life, my psyche, my femininity, my sexuality, my sanity was in a state
of upheaval. I panicked about what I would ever tell my two boys about
their former Olympian father, and how I would raise them alone. And
then I would experience waves of crippling sorrow, not only for myself
and my sons but for Bruce.
I may be the only woman in the state of
California to have waived child support and alimony. But when Bruce and
I divorced, that's what I did. As confused and sad as I was, Bruce was
also very confused and extremely distraught. Again, Dr. Hill had told me
that one in four transgender people commits suicide. I knew I didn't
want that to happen. I had an open-door policy for Bruce when it came to
visitation, letting him see his sons any time he wanted to. Brandon and
Brody went over to his home occasionally but never spent the night
there.
One day, after having spent a little time at Bruce's house,
both boys came into the kitchen and said to me, "Mommy, we saw Daddy
getting out of the shower naked, and Daddy has boobs!" That day I began
trying to cover for Bruce, trying to protect him and trying to explain
away what was clearly happening to his visage. I said, "Well, boys, you
know how your dad was super-muscular and trained very hard for the
Olympics? He had big muscles, and some of those muscles are called
'pectorals.'
When you stop training and you stop lifting weights,
sometimes the muscle turns to fat. So his pectoral muscles have
probably just gotten a little flabby and look like boobs." I was trying
to shield Brandon and Brody from the truth and protect Bruce at the
same time. It was exhausting.
I began dating David Foster, whom I
subsequently married a few years later. Bruce dated several women,
even though he had begun his transition and showed signs of it. He had
no facial hair, no chest hair, and boobs, and he had gotten a nose job
and trimmed his Adam's apple. Clearly he was still confused and
conflicted as to how fully he was ready to commit to changing his life
completely.
If Bruce had told me about his gender issue when we
first began getting romantically involved, I would not have married him.
Pure and simple. But looking back, I'm so grateful to God, the
universe, and Bruce that I didn't know, and that Bruce played the role
in my life that he did. What a tragedy that truth, if Bruce had
confessed it in 1979, would have been for my existence as I have known
it! I would never have experienced the joy, the honor, the privilege of
being the mother of the two most precious gifts I have ever known,
Brandon and Brody. As life has a way of unfolding as it is meant to,
I have learned to trust life.

I felt such a reverent obligation
to keep Bruce's gender dysphoria a secret for Bruce to reveal or not
that I did not even tell my sons until they were 31 and 29 years old,
respectively. I wanted Brandon and Brody to experience enough life and
garner enough knowledge, confidence, and compassion to be able to deal
with their father's true self. We are not defined by our parents, but
we don't know that as young children. I tried to raise my sons to
embrace open hearts, forgiveness, kindness, tolerance, and compassion.
They have been imbued with good values and are remarkably noble, showing
incredible acceptance, understanding, and forgiveness toward Bruce and
others.
I
wouldn't be completely
forthcoming if I didn't disclose in this writing that after Bruce and
Kris married, there were periods of several years going by without Bruce
attempting to contact or visit his sons. No birthday cards or phone
calls, no "Merry Christmas," no "Everything OK?" after the big
Northridge earthquake. Brandon and Brody will never have those
"Hallmark memories" of father-and-son moments. They were saddened by
his lack of participation in their lives, and my heart ached for them.
When Brandon asked me, "Mom, what kind of a father doesn't come to his
son's graduation?" I meekly replied, "Honey, your dad may have been the
world's greatest athlete physically, but emotionally, you have to view
him in a wheelchair. If he had emotional legs, he'd get up and walk to
you, but he just doesn't right now. Just try to understand him, love and
forgive him." It was an analogy that seemed to soften the blow at the
time, and I do believe that forgiveness is a gift we give ourselves;
it's really not even for the person we choose to forgive but for us. We
only do harm to ourselves when we harbor resentment and vitriol toward
another. I do believe that everything is forgivable; some things are
inexcusable but forgivable.
After Brandon and Brody were grown and
I did reveal their father's issue, I think the knowledge helped them
put the pieces together and explain some of Bruce's dysfunctional
parenting. I certainly did my share of rationalizing through it all.
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