Semantics battles are often a never won fight
Here is a question.
You say you 'feel' like a girl, regardless of the body you are in. How do you know what a girl 'feels' like?
What is it to 'feel' like a girl?
If you have always 'felt' like a girl, how do you actually know that is how a girl 'feels'?
Have you eve 'felt' like a boy, and thus can know the difference?
What does it 'feel' like to be a boy though?
How do you know that is how boys 'feel'?
I have spent a life time surrounded by males and females, and yet, how do I actually know what the boys and the girls are 'feeling'?
They can describe their feelings, but, that's like describing something that has to actually be felt. Feelings are not a sound, and not a sight, so describing them with words we hear or things we see, might have no point.
One day, I realized, I don't have a male and a female in my mind, it's just me in there, and part of me was merely a confused portion of me trying to be something I wasn't all based on observations, perceptions and stuff I was told. In truth, I have never felt any other way, and I choose to call that female, because that is how I feel.
During sex, my body's sex organs operate in the fashion they must. They are what they are. And if I get the operation, well they will look different, but they will have remained attached to me all the time during the procedures I have watched. They will have been modified, but, the parts, they are always mine. In the end they will still be mine. And after some recovery, they will likely feel the same way if I indulge them. They will function slightly differently of course. There won't be any cliche male finishing though, as some parts are ditched in the process. The on button remains though.
Telling me I am still a male even after an operation, is really just a reflection of an attitude that some in society require. We have people in society though that demand and believe in a wide range of things, and some of it absolutely idiotic, some merely unprovable and some just due to being plain stubborn.
I am not the planet I live on, the country I live in, house I live in, I am not the car I drive in and I am not the body my mind sits in.
I am a person, I call myself Lesley so that you can distinguish me from a person standing next to me in a conversation.
I am not a letter on a credit card, nor a code on a birth certificate.
I am not a lot of things society forces on me without my permission.
I know who I am.
I don't know why I am, but I at least know who I am.