He’s six feet tall, taut and toned. When he was on the cover of India’s leading men’s fitness magazines in 2014, he had a 40-30-36 physique, eight-pack abs and 16-inch biceps. His fitness routine was emulated by countless modelling hopefuls and body-sculpting enthusiasts. When he was being pursued by a bevy of beauties on MTV’sSplitsvilla (S8), his fan following and social media status went through the roof. He posed for a flurry of fashion shoots in various publications and was sought after for the ramp as well. Everywhere this Delhi boy went, he tells us how people wanted to shake his hand and bask in the associated glory. His parents and sibling were happy to see him making a mark on the modelling world, even though it was far removed from their business background.
She walks in, the picture of willowy glamour. As she glides through the coffee-shop, all eyes swivel towards this gamine yet graceful young girl. They all admire her impeccably classy chic, her beautifully manicured hands gesticulating to make a point, her short but comely hairstyle that she wants to grow out. We talk about everything from bras to boyfriends and how she’s busy styling, honing her make-up application skills and even counselling others in her situation. She shares how her parents have never liked her choices and even physically beat her with belts to try and change her mind. It depressed her no end, but didn’t daunt the dainty damsel. At 24, this Mumbai model has already had offers from Bigg Boss 10 and several agencies for shoots, but has stars in her eyes about achieving a 32-24-36 figure and making it to the cover of a fashion magazine in the near future.
Such stereotypical stories of two young and good-looking people living a charmed existence in modern India, right? Not quite.
For this is the tale of ONE person’s life. That of Gaurav Arora, who was born a boy but who has always wanted to be a woman! Today, as he slowly transitions into his female avatar over several months, Gaurav is open about being transgender. This has come as a surprise and even a shock to many of his fans, but it’s how he has felt right from his early years as a child. For those who don’t understand the terminology, transgenders are people whose gender identity differs from the sex they are born into. It isn’t always related to sexual preference, so it’s more about expressing themselves as who they are, than who they are with.
Gaurav, who is often called Gauri now, as he has completely embraced his female identity, recalls, “As a young boy, I was drawn to my mum’s and sister’s clothes and make-up and would often wear them. Many times, I would be scolded for putting on heels to go visit relatives. My family were aware of how I was but they didn’t want to acknowledge it. They didn’t approve of my behaviour and they were worried about how people would react. I think it would have been easier if we weren’t as wealthy with so many important connections. But they found it very difficult to accept me.”
Gauri is so inured to the world’s cruel nature that she mentions quite matter-of-factly that she was raped as a child, when she was just about 11 years old. She narrates how it happened, “I was blamed then, that it occurred because I dressed like a girl. These were boys from my tuition class who were about six or seven years older than me. One day at the park, they got me to stay late and talked to me affectionately. Initially, I was revelling in the attention from the big boys. Maybe it was my innate attraction towards boys, which I am aware of now, but I was very innocent at the time. Before I knew it, they were caressing and kissing then manhandling me and molesting me and I was in pain. I knew this was wrong although I didn’t know exactly how.”
Later, her mother even dissuaded her from telling her dad that this had happened. Still, she went ahead and told him. He called the cops and took her to the class to confront the boys. Everyone in the area came to know of it and wherever she went, they’d laugh at her. “Because I was different, it was as though I had asked for it,” she says, ruefully.
Gauri’s eyes swim with tears as she shares those memories and confides that her younger sister has not been able to accept the changes in her life even today. “I really want her to understand. She’s educated, she’s an architect… but she doesn’t. For her, maybe it’s what her friends say or even somewhere about me being prettier than her or having nicer clothes than her. But she doesn’t know all that I have to do to achieve that beauty. And I wish she would understand that whatever I do, I have to be content with just these beautiful things,” she gestures disparagingly at her sparkling red nails. “I will never have what she has – to truly be a woman biologically, to be able to have babies…” her voice trails off wistfully. When we press her for details, Gauri explains haltingly, “What I want most in life is to be someone’s wife, the perfect bahu, to be a natural mother.”
It’s as though the little child who loved playing with dolls and dress-up is speaking to us, breathlessly mentioning, “I used to be happy and it never bothered me that I was different. I always felt like a girl. I used to tell my dad, ‘I’m your girl… Treat me like a princess’. Today, it’s like a new birth for me and I’m hoping the same thing.”
