Jsellebelle & Susan
"Knowing who you are shouldn't require "therapy"". Let's discuss.
I certainly envy, to some degree, people who were always so certain about their gender that they didn't need help to figure themselves out. But many of us were not innately aware of the wrongness of our birth gender, and the righness of the other gender, from an eary age.
Gender is something of a continuum, and some of us find ourselves stuck along the way, or worse, continually moving around some point on the continuum. This can be as horribly disconcerting to us - the urges that Jasellebelle spoke of in some other post - as it is for others to live every second in the wrong gender.
@Susan, perhaps you never had this level of denial; a lot of us did. Huge amounts, brought on by a combination of society, religious and self-imposed pressures. Some of us have had to deal with the massive contradictions of putting on a suit to go to work, being a man, and then, during our contemplative time at home, wishing for a vagina, a husband, and heaven knows what else. This breeds huge confusion. Am I a boy, a girl, or seriously mentally ill?
To "figure things out for oneself" in such a case is no more possible than it is to take a kitchen knife to ourselfves because we beleve we can fix that kidney stone by ourselves.
An imperfect analogy: many companies hire management consultants. The executives know that something is wrong, but, from where they stand, they simply cannot see the wood for the trees. A complex interplay of forces may make it virtually impossible for an insider to get to the nub of the problem, and that's often how it is for us. Yes, the role of a therapist is somewhat different, as advocacy should be minimal, but I think you get my point.
@Jasellebelle: so that you understand that realisation does not necessariy lead one inexorably to transition: I was a strange kid. Those "urges" you talked about. At 25 I had some type of gender/orientation breakdown (yes, both, simultaneously) and did my therapy - 18 months of it. I realised who and what I was. I would never have reached this realisation in a careful and controlled way had I not spent time with a therapist. I then did nothing about it for 20 years, got married, willingly, and would not have done anything about it, ever. This post is not the place to explain what lead me to decide to transition - PM me if you want to know more - but the point is that for me, remaining in my birth gender was an option.
Regards
Julia