Quote from: Nero on August 07, 2007, 06:45:18 PMWell, apparently my behaviour went beyond the famous 'tomboy safety net' even though I was not the typical sports playing, dirty, muddy tomboy. If my gender variant behaviour as a genetic girl was noted even with the acceptable 'tomboy safety net', then a TS genetic boy's gender variant behaviour should have been much more obvious than mine as there is no 'sissy safety net'. Regardless of the TS genetic male's hobbies or interests.
Because I was as you say - a child who didn't show typical boy or girl interests. I played with both stereotypical boy and girl toys. Played boy and girl games. Played pirates, and soldiers, war, etc. Played with stuffed animals.
And yet I was still seen as abnormal for a little girl. Too masculine. Not feminine enough.
I realize that as a TS child gets older, the need to conform is strong, but gender variant behaviour should have been noticeable at least in the early years.
As I said:
Quote from: Melissa on August 07, 2007, 04:45:49 PM
Occasionally (and this seems more common for FTMs in my observation) what happens is that the person's behaviors will be far enough over into the gender they identify as that parents will have no choice but to notice the child acts "different".
I *did* definitely have some obvious gender variant behaviors (as I noted in my previous post), but for some reason nobody seemed to care and just accepted it as me just having some quirks. My parents never attempted to raise me to some standard they thought a boy should be, they just accepted their children as they saw them at face value. When the parents don't have gender specific expectations, you can do almost anything and they still won't notice.
Quote from: Nero on August 07, 2007, 06:45:18 PMAnother thing - my parents didn't even know what a transsexual was, so they didn't think 'oh this is really a boy', but they knew I wanted to be and that I acted like it.
I certainly brought up many of these things, but they seemed to just shrug those things off and claimed I acted very male growing up. However, what they did is turn a blind eye to any feminine things I did and just saw the more masculine activities I did. Plus I wasn't usually in their presence when I did any feminine things.
My brother actually liked participating in many of the feminine activities as well. Here's some more things I experienced as a child:
My sister loved dressing me and my brother up as girls. He didn't seem to care, but I loved it. She'd dress us up and put makeup on us.
My sister loved doing role playing things like pretending to be a school teacher and having me and my brother in class. I had fun doing the pretending stuff (which tends to be a girl thing), but my brother would usually get bored and wander off.
I loved playing with toys in the bathtub and making up these really long stories with characters that were parts of families. This also tends to be a more female activity.
I liked drawing, artwork projects, and even doing some crocheting as a kid.
Cooking (and especially baking) was another favorite activity of mine.
There's many more, but I gotta go now. As you can tell, it should have been obvious to my parents, but probably due to me not being around them much (because they both worked), they rarely saw me doing any of these things.
Of course they did find my stash of female clothes and made a big deal out of that. I definitely brought that up when I came out to them.

Now that I think about it, I *do* remember my Dad making some comment when I came out to them about them worrying about "something like this happening" while I was growing up. However, in recent conversations, my mom refused to admit to any of this stuff. That could just be a result of the denial she has been in since I came out to her though.
Maybe you're right after all. Oh well.