DrZoey: Yeah well uhm. I'm glad you can see it that way. Thing is, I don't have a unique outlook or life. I haven't "seen life as a guy". Or lived as a guy, for that matter. Only as a girl, and that normal outlook is only special in that it's crippled.
I don't think anyone ever acknowledged me as a "real guy". (Hell it was a running gag in high school that I was "Gender: Undetermined"). I never understood guys, and I never interacted with people as a guy, because people just don't interact with a "guy" that gives no sign of being one as they interact with a guy, not at all. Yet because of my body I still wasn't a girl.
Guys interacted with me roughly like they would with a girl, but a girl they wouldn't be interested in in a hundred years. With the occasional awkwardness where they tried to do something that one would usually do with guys and it only ended in awkwardness and me not understanding. It's very hard not to act awkwardly with someone whose body signals is a guy but whose personality signals is a girl. As for girls, they'd roughly treat me like a girl like them, but they'd often leave me out, because "girls' stuff" doesn't allow guys, and because there are some things like sexuality that teenagers just won't talk about around guys. And there were awkward moments when I was expected to get a clue and act like a guy, with them, too.
The best way I think I can say I've lived is as a very lonely, misunderstood, rejected girl.
Does that give me a different outlook? Yeaaaaah, I guess you can say someone who was social and popular won't see life the same. But lonely, rejected girls are a pretty common class of people. Whoever was nerdy, poor, ugly, out of fashion, tall, fat, flat-chested, weak, academically weak or whatever reason kids find to bully people is the same. So my outlook on life is only special in the same way as any socially disadvantaged girl's is. That is, I'm probably more compassionate than average.
But being trans is more than being unpopular, internally. It comes with a lot of "bonus" negative stuff that most unpopular people don't get. And to begin with it's a bit sick to say having been bullied is a good thing.
Emmaline: Not that it's any consolation, but statistically there are more lesbian/bi than straight trans girls.