Lt Col. Cate McGregor is not the same person today as she was when she joined the army.
Born Malcolm McGregor, she endured decades of a private struggle – unsure of why she felt the way she did – before finally coming to realise that she was a transgendered person when she was in her 50s.
Her story was told on ABC’s Australian Story last night, with Cate to sharing her perspective on the most difficult decision of her life.
Cate says that throughout her life she felt, “conflicted”, describing the feeling as being “like an out of tune orchestra. It’s like some screeching that’s not right”.
She was serving as the speechwriter to the Chief of the Army David Morrison – Cate penned Morrison’s landmark speech last year, which went viral – when she realised that something had to change.
A few years before that speech, Cate had fallen into a deep depression, and went back into therapy, where she says she “started to disturb my subconscious”. After seeing a newspaper story one weekend about a transgendered woman, it clicked.
“At the next therapy session I went to, I just burst into tears and said, ‘It’s really simple. I’m a transsexual’.”
“We all wear masks. At some point you have to rip it off, and say, who am I?” Cate says.
But Cate had always known – on some level – that she was confused about her gender. Cate’s father died when she was eight, which had a profound effect on her family.
“The year after my father died I tried on some of my mother’s clothes,” Cate explains, “And she found out that it happened, and she was very very upset about it. I learned that it wasn’t a good idea.”
Cate, as Malcolm, went on to join the army, before working for both the Labor and Liberal parties.
“I was overachieving at one level, but my personal life was in turmoil,” Cate says of that time. “I guess I always had some level of ambiguity or tension about my gender. But in 1985, it reached a real intensity, and I sought out specialist medical help.”