You read so much about the harm of 
    petticoating, but there are thousands of feminine males like me who welcomed 
    the opportunity to wear girls' (and now, women's) clothing. I had an elder 
    and younger sister and my mother raised us, my father leaving us very early 
    in our lives. There was always going to be a heavy feminine influence on my 
    life whether in play, emotions, attitudes and yes, even dress. I am not 
    ashamed to say as a child I preferred having longish hair, wearing a kilt 
    and wearing knickers (I hated boys pants). All my life (I am now in my 50's, 
    writing in 2009) I have worn knickers. As a child growing up in Scotland in 
    the 1950's, many boys wore knickers under their kilts, mainly blue or green, 
    but sometimes white, and I preferred white. Having an elder sister and money 
    being tight, I did wear school blouses sometimes and my sister's T-shirts 
    and shorts to play in the garden.
  
     
  
    My introduction to petticoats was not 
    the traditional girls' garment. I started wearing really long vests under my 
    shirt and kilt. In some circumstances when glimpsed it looked like an 
    underskirt, and at church my mother used to take great delight in reaching 
    under my kilt and smoothing it down for my comfort. It earned me the 
    reputation of being a bit of a sissy, but I really didn't care. From there I 
    graduated onto my elder sister's kilts for church on Sundays and readily 
    agreed to wear a cotton underskirt for comfort. Later in my early teens, 
    this would often be thick nylon and lace trimmed. 
  
  
     
  
    My family knew and encouraged my 
    preferences, and wearing knickers through my grammar school and university 
    days continued, as did wearing a ladies' kilt on Sundays for church (no 
    sporran, too masculine for me). By then I had a number of lacy underskirts 
    and full slips of my own, many received as birthday and Christmas presents. 
  
     
  
    My mother was astonished that I came 
    home one evening with a woman friend who later became my wife. This in no 
    way implies I was the masculine one in the relationship - my mother had 
    always thought I would end up as the girl in a relationship with a man, not 
    the feminine half of a relationship with a woman. When we married in 
    Amsterdam she wore a trouser suit; I wore an above-the-knee kilt and during 
    the dancing at the reception onlookers were left in no doubt who was the 
    feminine partner: the exposure of my "something borrowed" white 
    layered petticoat, matching satin knickers and blue garter as I was spun 
    around the floor produced whistles from the men and claps from the women.
  
     
  
    A lot has happened since then and since 
    retiring I spend rather more time in skirts and dresses and, particularly 
    when my wife's girlfriends are round in the evening for drinks, I often wear 
    a pretty dress and make-up. Although I will never take the risk of full SRS, 
    we have discussed the possibility of taking other steps to remove masculine 
    influences and developing a more feminine shape. I have no doubt at some 
    point in the near future I will live full time as a woman and it is 
    something I look forward to with all my heart. I am at my happiest wearing a 
    full skirted dress and hearing the swish and rustle of petticoats as a 
    walk.  The thought of re-affirming our wedding vows where I finally get to 
    wear that wedding dress makes me swoon with delight.
    [Janet responds to 
    comments posed by Tessy]
 
 
  
    
      Your belief that nothing is worn under 
      kilts is confined to real macho men. Young boys would often wear girls' 
      knickers as instructed by Mum to avoid their thingy popping out. The 
      popular colour for boys was bottle green or navy blue, but a few of us 
      wore white. Most boys would stop wearing a kilt around eight or nine, but 
      it's something I never grew out of (kilts and wearing knickers). 
    
    
       
    
      The sporran is a rights of passage 
      male item, and when I was a boy it was rather like breeching in England. 
      You got a sporran when your father considered you man enough. A teenage 
      male wearing a kilt in Scotland would always wear the male garment and 
      always wear a sporran.  Since my father left us early and my mother 
      never considered it, I really don't think I would ever have qualified! In 
      families with elder sisters it was quite common for their kilt to be 
      passed down, yes even to a boy. Girls' kilts fasten on the left (boys' on 
      right) and were made of lighter material, and usually above knee length, 
      and sometimes had a wrap round bodice. I wore girls' kilts from the age of 
      eight and I wore a plain cotton underskirt at my Mum's behest for hygiene 
      reasons and to make it hang better, but only to church on Sundays and 
      visits to my aunt. Later, we all dropped the pretence and I wore lace 
      trimmed nylon, satin and sometimes layered slips and petticoats. I did 
      argue a bit at first, but in truth I quickly learned that I loved wearing 
      skirts and kilts.  I never grew out of wearing them (and later 
      women's), wearing female kilts to weddings, funerals and on other special 
      occasions. I was married in Amsterdam wearing a ladies' kilt and my wife 
      wore a trouser suit.
    
       
    
      It did take a practiced eye to spot 
      the difference - it's really not a problem in England, but not north of 
      the border in Scotland. You could get away with wearing a girls' kilt at 
      junior school, but from around the age of ten it was certainly seen as 
      slightly effeminate for a boy to wear a girls' kilt and easily spotted by 
      the female population. This is particularly so for a "man" wearing a 
      ladies kilt.
    
       
    
      Yes I was called various unsavoury 
      names as a boy as I'm sure you can appreciate, but we are who we are.