One week after TV star and Olympic champion Caitlyn Jenner asked members of the transgender community if she was “doing it right,” she returned to her blog to answer some of the numerous questions she’s received about her transition.
In a Monday post to address fan feedback, Jenner started by sharing a comment she’d received from a transgender woman who went by the name of Dawn R.
“I was touched by your question, ‘Am I doing it right?’ I felt an overwhelming need to respond,” Dawn wrote. “The best thing you can do for the rest of the trans community is to *be* Caitlin. Be who you really are. Be unashamed, honest, and brave, as you have been thus far. Be Caitlin. You’re doing a wonderful job so far, and I have every confidence you will continue to be so in the future. Trust yourself. Hold your head high, and be amazing.”
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Acknowledging that this was “one of the many notes that I’ve received that has a smart, positive outlook,” Jenner seemed particularly affected by this response. “What a powerful message for all walks of life,” she wrote. “Let us all trust ourselves, hold our heads up high, and be amazing.”
According to her blog, the submission was one of many routed to Jenner, whose website “crashed” due to volume. “Even though I can’t get back to each and every one of you, I want you to know that I’m reading your kind words and that they mean the world to me,” she wrote.
Jenner, who first rose to fame as Olympic athlete Bruce Jenner and won the decathlon gold medal at the 1976 games in Montréal, found a new fan base in 2007 as a star of the reality-TV series, “Keeping up with the Kardashians.” She publicly revealed her new identity through a June 1 Vanity Fair cover story.
According to Jenner’s most recent blog post, fans had also inquired about other aspects of her transition.
Addressing a query about a defining moment that prompted Jenner to announce she’s transgender, she replied that she needed time to feel comfortable revealing her “true identity” to the world.
“I was growing up in a very different time and I had no information,” she wrote. “Meanwhile, I had all of my diversions — sports…this…that…married…family — but after 65 years, here I was right back with the same problems that I had when I was 10 years old and I had to finally do something about that.”








