"I could have jumped up and down and screamed and no one would have taken it seriously. I could have written a press release, gone on national TV, and the effect would still have been the same.
And it really is that way until that day that people see you dressed right. Until you "look like a transsexual". Awkward, self conscious, kinda dazed, scared, hopeful, panicked.
That's coming out for a transsexual." - Dyssonance, from
her blog^ That.
I've been coming out to people for 3 years now, released music as Maya for a year, recently started living pretty much full-time, and the other day, I had a job interview and only male formal clothes. As soon as I got to my current job, my boss (who I came out to about a year ago) asked, "So, if you're dressed like this, should I call you Mich?".
In my experience, the longer people have known you one way, the more distrustful they'll be, for longer. You just keep being true to yourself and over time, they'll realize that, in order to reject your gender identity, they have to reject you. And they might do just that.
But you'll also meet new people who will only know you as you are and you'll find great advocates in your pool of existent friends and family.