Hey b/d. I dig, you hep cat...you life-encrusted starlight...you, I don't know, I ran out of Beatnik terms...LOL
Like you, I am struggling for a better understanding of just what my gender identity really is. Kaelin is right in some ways...forget the labels and stereotypes until you get a better understanding of who you are. On the other hand, people need labels and we can't stop ourselves from assigning them...just realize that labels should be a starting point, not a destination. The total you is no more defined by a "gender" label than it is defined by what kind of car you drive (oh, you're one of those Volvo-driving yuppie wannabes...real yuppies drive BMWs) or where you live (you bloody Americans are all alike).
For me, the best label that seems to fit is androgyne, but I'm pretty fluid. Just yesterday evening (in a matter of around 3-4 hours) I went through feeling extremely feminine to feeling like a guy in a dress to somewhere in the middle. It usually doesn't fluctuate quite that fast, but it's not unusual. There are times I look in the mirror and there is a woman looking back at me, sometimes it is a man and most of the time, it's just me. It has nothing to do with how I am dressed or whether or not I am wearing makeup...it is a sense of self that is perceived.
Then again, I could be full of crap and just making excuses for why I like to wear my nails long and polished, wear women's clothing and makeup, and shave my body. Sometimes I feel like a girl and other times like a guy who wishes he were a girl but isn't. Or maybe it is how I deal with the fact that I sometimes have fantasies about sex with men and my denial that I could truly be bi-sexual...if I'm a woman it's OK?? Yes, I know it sounds bad, but these are some of the thoughts that go through my head. Without being open and honest about these things, how can anyone understand our struggles?
Anyway, I hope this helps you know that you are not alone with questions about your gender or the flip-flopping that goes with it. We are each following our own paths...the amazing thing was finding out it was OK to follow your own trail instead of marching down the highway with everyone else.
......Laurie