Feature

The surprising fitness challenges that come with transitioning

When Queensland trans woman Ada Macey started hormone therapy, she had to cope with the fact her hard-earned running times would slow.

Caucasian woman

In some ways, I think I was running to chase away the demons I was dealing with from my gender dysphoria. Source: Getty Images

Growing up, I was always the kid picked last in the sports team. When I was 39 I decided it was time to try bring my weight down. I wanted to feel healthy and comfortable within myself and thought 'running is cheap. I'll try that'. I picked up the Couch to 5k app and quickly started to see fitness gains and soon I really enjoyed running.

At the time, I was still in the closet – I still hadn't come to terms with my own identity and my plan was to continue to ignore and repress my gender identity. That had a lot of mental health consequences and running was one of the only times my mind was quiet. I would look at the world around me, being in the moment without any deep thoughts – it was wonderful.

Around the time I finished the two-month Couch to 5k program in 2015, started in my area. It's a free 5km community running event every Saturday morning, and I found a wonderful community to run with each week.
supplied
Ada Macey. Source: Supplied
I started to ramp up my mileage in training and was surprised to discover I was actually quite good at running. I pushed myself really hard and got a PB of 19 minutes and 41 seconds for 5km. It was an amazing moment, finding success and joy and happiness.

In some ways, I think I was running to chase away the demons I was dealing with from my gender dysphoria. Eventually I was running up to 90km a week, then I got injured, and it was during that time that I came out of the closet.

I began hormone therapy, knowing that I was going to lose the ability to reach the same running times that I was so proud of. It was a real struggle to get my head around because my running success was the one thing that had given me pride in my body.

The hormones change everything – they impact every part of you in ways that you don't predict. They've changed my body hair; my feet have shrunk; I've lost 5cm of height; the hair on my head has regrown and thickened; my body fat has gone from 15 to 23 per cent; and my thighs rub together when I run.

When I push myself on a run, everything feels harder – my heart-rate is higher, I find myself short of breath and my recovery is a bit slower. My post-transition PB is 23 minutes, which is still an excellent time in the women's category, but if I'm honest, I still haven't found complete peace of mind about having such a slower time.

I'm in my 40s, so my running times were going to come down with age, but it's just been accelerated for me because the hormones have made such a radical difference.

Parkrun keep records of everyone's performance and I didn't want to start a new account with my new name because I wanted to keep hold of that history. I put a lot of blood and sweat into those times, but at the end of the day, I was powered by testosterone. I spoke with parkrun about this and we decided to mark my past runs as "assisted", which meant I could still see my times and the runs I did, but it wouldn't count as anything official because that would be unfair for the other female competitors.

I'm still pushing myself in running but I'm deliberately trying to find a better balance – I play roller derby now and I cycle to work. I'm trying to make it a more mentally sustainable approach to fitness.

Long-term, reducing my running times is just a blip on the radar – the changes, the comfort and the ability to walk the world as myself more than makes up for it. 

As told to Kimberley Gillan.

Share
Published 17 January 2019 8:31am
Updated 17 January 2019 9:25am

Share this with family and friends


SBS News in your Inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS On Demand
SBS News
SBS Audio

Listen to our podcasts
Join host Yumi Stynes for Seen, a new SBS podcast about cultural creatives who have risen to excellence despite a role-model vacuum.
The day's top stories from SBS News.
Ease into the English language and Australian culture. We make learning English convenient, fun and practical.
Get the latest with our sbs podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch SBS On Demand
Over 11,000 hours

Over 11,000 hours

News, drama, documentaries, SBS Originals and more - free.