Reading these posts, I'm glad I'm not the only one with doubts, fears, and concerns about whether I am going the right direction with my gender identity. My mother isn't very supportive, and told me I probably have underlying problems that make me think I am a FTM. I stressed over this for a long time, thinking she may be right. It left my stomach in knots considering that I might be wrong, that my longings for being recognized publicly and personally as a male and eventually getting surgery to align my gender with my sex may not be the right thing for me to do.
I didn't have a lot of gender dysphoria as well. Despite my predominant male mannerisms I would still have "girly" moments and habits, I keep my hair long, I was interested in males (bringing on the whole "well why not stay a straight woman? It's easier" counter point) and I love a lot of women's clothes and would continue to wear some post-transition (they're clothes are fabulous and we all know it). I'm also a huge nerd so whenever I went to weekly support group meetings for FTMs down at my local GLBT Center, I would feel like less of a man compared to the others who were much more masculine and better fitted the societal concept of manhood. So Trixie, we shared a lot of the same insecurities and fears.
It wasn't until my loving, supportive husband spoke to me about my concerns that they were allayed. I had this epiphany break over me . I felt like I had come up for air finally after a dark stormy night drowning in a turbulent ocean of fear and doubt. I realized that no one else except me defined my manhood and status as a trans-man.
Trixie, if you feel that you are a lady, then you are one. If you discovered later in life or early on, it matters not nor does it mean your feelings of being a woman are any less valid. Nothing else, but what you feel and know to be true about yourself, matters when it comes to your own gender identity. A therapist can be wrong, which is why it's important to get a second opinion if you feel dissatisfied with the results of therapy. You know better than anyone else. Have a little more confidence in yourself and your knowledge about your gender identity. And always know you're not alone in your feelings and that it's perfectly natural to worry from time to time. Don't let those concerns and fears get you down or stop you from becoming who you were meant to be.
Sorry if I said somethings already said by others in this post.