Annie was born in South Texas in the fifties, that time of Ike and Elvis and the Edsel. Her family was solidly middle class, and her life was normal in every way except one: she was born the wrong sex.BIOShe always knew she was different, but it wasnt until the onset of puberty that she realized just how bad the problem was. She was simply not a boy. She soon discovered that not going along with the deception would get her in trouble, and quickly became very good at pretending to be what she was not. Sometimes she even convinced herself.
Finally, after too many years of living a lie, she reached the point at which it was obvious that things would have to change. Once the decision was made, things happened quickly. Counseling, hormone therapy, support groups; the transition was scary, but at the same time joyful.
She is still in the process (many say its a process that never ends), and if you think shes going to give you more detailed information than that, youre wrong; some things remain personal.
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Comments (5)
lemonjim
oh, man! that's the scene, alright. dig those big projection displays, the fuzzy toroidal light and the good use of monochrome. o.k.! 9.95 so you will add volumetric spotlights in the upper left. (1950s-60s they didn't have LCDs yet, had to use a projector?)
strata
A strong scene, nice perspective, monochrome yes! :)))
Cinema1954
Yeah, I intentionally put one of the 2001 screens in there... wondered if anyone would notice. And you're right about Ambassador DeSodesky; I'll have to pump him up a little bit.
Elentor
Good idea for the monochromatic scene....I didn't like the chairs, though =) U could put some more details
stealthman
You have a great sense of composition and scale.