My Story 4. Learning How to Become a Woman

Guidance arrived quietly and from an unexpected place.

My mother had a new live-in boyfriend, John Georges. He became my mentor—not through lectures or grand speeches, but through practical instruction and explanations. John helped me understand that I was developing into a woman and that there was strength, dignity, and confidence in that transition. I remember coming home one day from the beach in tears, convinced something was wrong with me—that I was becoming deformed. I had hips. Real hips. I was terrified.

 

John laughed so hard he nearly fell over. He told me to show him this “deformity,” and when I did, he smiled and explained that nothing was wrong with me at all. I wasn’t broken. I was growing into my body. Into myself. Into a woman.

He believed in women. Truly believed in them. He believed women could be strong, poised, and self-assured without losing their femininity. I only wish his influence in my life had lasted longer. It was brief—about four years—but it mattered deeply.

 

John taught me how to value men and how to relate to them with ease and respect. He encouraged admiration rather than fear or confusion. He also protected me in ways I didn’t fully understand at the time. At work, he made sure men didn’t sexually harass me—something I didn’t even realize was happening or could happen. Looking back, I see how much he was watching out for me when I couldn’t yet watch out for myself

 

One of his lessons was unforgettable. He placed a book on my head and made me walk from room to room until I could do it smoothly, with balance and grace. Over and over again. It transformed me—from a full-on tomboy into a more feminine young woman. I learned posture, presence, and how to carry myself in the world. That simple exercise changed how I moved—and how I was seen.

 

At the same time, I found guidance in unexpected places. Cosmopolitan magazine helped me build self-esteem and taught me how to dress in a way that attracted men’s attention. Later, I read Fascinating Womanhood, which offered moral and spiritual support as I tried to understand relationships, femininity, and my place in the world.

 

This guidance helped me talk to men more easily. It helped me feel more comfortable growing up and becoming a lady. What it didn’t teach me was how to choose a man—or how to truly be with one. I was still naive. Very naive.

 

Much later in life, in my fifties, I learned that I am autistic. That knowledge finally explained why social graces had always felt like a foreign language to me, especially in groups. It explained why I struggled to read cues that seemed effortless for others.

 

Once I understood this, I began paying closer attention to how people interacted with one another—how they spoke, how they stood, how they connected in groups. I was still learning. Still studying. Still trying to understand the invisible rules everyone else seemed to know.

 

John didn’t give me everything I needed. No mentor ever does.

 

But he gave me something essential: permission to become a woman with confidence, dignity, and presence.

 

And for where I was at that moment in my life, that guidance changed everything.

Well—not everything.

To my surprise, I was told I was mean.

I didn’t understand.

Mean?

Published by Paris Humble

Greetings, I am Paris Humble, daughter of Jim V. Humble the creator of MMS/ Chlorine Dioxide and all its 29 years if Health Restoration for billions, through grassroots phenomenon. I have picked up the ball where my father left off to continue his legacy and to continue to make his work available to the public who are looking for viable answers for their health. For years I’ve been quietly developing something that lights my soul on fire every single time I step onto the floor: Ecstatic Dancie – Joy Rhythm. “Dancie” is the word I coined for all of you who feel this special magic with me – because once you learn Joy Rhythm, you’re never just a “dancer” again… you’re a Dancie, a carrier of pure, contagious joy. What makes Joy Rhythm so different (and why I know it’s meant for the whole world) is that it works everywhere. You can take it to a nightclub, a wedding, a festival, a living-room gathering, or a sacred circle under the stars… and within minutes you own that floor with total confidence, zero judgment, and a smile that won’t quit. It’s simple, it’s freeing, and it instantly turns strangers into family. This is my new mission – the one my heart has been whispering ever since I was a little girl dancing life with my Dad. I’m writing my second book right now (the first one after carrying Dad’s torch) and it’s all about birthing Ecstatic Dancie Inner National – a worldwide movement of Joy Rhythm circles where families, friends, and total strangers come together in safe, loving, non-judgmental spaces to move, to laugh, to share, to connect soul-to-soul, and to remember who we really are underneath all the noise. Imagine: Joy Rhythm communities popping up in every city, every village, every country – no alcohol, no ego, no performance pressure – just pure music, movement, eye contact, and heart explosions. A global family reunion happening every week, everywhere. That’s the vision Dad taught me to dream big enough to hold real health, real freedom, real connection. So, if your body is already swaying just reading this… welcome home, Dancie. The floor is calling, and together we’re going to dance the whole world awake. I can’t wait to move with you – wherever you are. All my love and freefoot joy, Paris Humble Ecstatic Dancie Inner National – Joy Rhythm Revolution

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