Quote:
Originally Posted by Leigh
I guess I have a few questions that I will start out with, since I know that we have all started somewhere. I'll begin with just a few basic ones:
1) When did you begin feeling like you were different?
2) Did you always know that you should have been born the opposite sex, or did that come abit later though you always knew you were different?
3) When did you decide to come out, and how did you come out?
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Questions asked a while ago but I would like to answer them from my perspective...
1) When did you begin feeling like you were different?
I've always been treated in ways that made me feel different but didn't really know why. I couldn't tell why I was being called a tomboy, as a kid I didn't think about gender at all...
When I became a teenager I started thinking about gender and how I felt different amounts of boy/girl, different days. At first I assumed that everyone felt like that

lol. I couldn't really grasp the idea of having "only" one gender...
Then it has gotten harder the older I became...
2) Did you always know that you should have been born the opposite sex, or did that come abit later though you always knew you were different?
I've always wanted to be treated like the opposite sex. I don't only mean when it comes to gender equality, I mean for example as a kid wanting to have the same toys as the boys, to play with boys rather than girls etc... I often feel I should have been born a boy, the older I get the more often I feel that... But most of the time I feel I don't truly fit in in the gender binary in general. I feel I'm in between genders...
3) When did you decide to come out, and how did you come out?
I didn't really decide to come out, it sort of happened... I was coming out as gay and realized that there was more to the whole thing... It was really a crisis, it's still not easy at times...
I tried telling some friends I trust but felt pressured to transition and judged about my feminine looks and behavior. It seems hard to explain the concept of "gender-mixture" and "feminine-man" to someone who hasn't experienced it... I have found it can be a bit easier on the internet, but not always...
*posting post keeping fingers crossed hoping that I haven't -without realizing it- said anything that might be offensive to anyone...