Let me quote my colleague, Dr. Judy, MD . . . (She's a forensic chemist/pathology, retired) Dr. Judy is a "sof' butch lesbian" -- first time I met her, I thought she was cis-male.
"You're no more female physiologically, than I am male. We shouldn't be required to tweak our endocrine systems to be who we already are!"
And so, take a look at my signature -- We need to change social attitudes, not our endocrine system.
Here's a "scale" for figuring out where you sit:
Cis-F 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 Cis-M
I sit at 1 or 2 on the right of Zero. I understand perfectly well that I'm born male. But I feel like I lost the gender crap shoot. I don't like what I got handed to me.
(Childhood sexual abuse, uncle on me, for years . . . This complicates my perspective. Naked in the mirror I look like my abuser, and it's threatening. 100% service connected, PTSD, for childhood sex abuse, aggravated my military service.)
Physically, wishing the genitals would go away, along w/ beard, 2ndary male body hair. Heterosexual (cis women), but at 67, not sexually active with others. I am not willing to change who I am so I can "pass" as a fairly ugly female. I wish I could be Kiera Knightly . . . I know lots and lots of cis-F who wish they looked like Kiera Knightly . . .
Brass tacks honest here . . . I want the full-boat, not a "transition" . . . I want periods, risk of pregnancy, real mammaries (b cup would be nice).
And so my "solution" for all this is that I am open about being "trans" (as in "transcendent") and I move to the middle, ('Mahu" in Hawaiian culture, although this idea gets bastardized on Google.)
My "mantra" -- guide lines . . . "authentic" "integrated" "ME" . . . I'm not going to "become someone else." Not going to change my name, (I'd like to get the "M" off my ID).
We wear (seamlessly) both gender clothing . . . JUST LIKE THE CIS-F LOCALLY . . .
Recreational beach casual, cargo shorts, shorts, beach sandals, tank tops, T's, button shirts, earrings (6 lobe piercings), shoulder-length hair worn pulled back or let down.
This results in a sort of "gender neutral" look, obviously "cis-M" but neutral enough that no one notices that essentially everything I'm wearing is "women's" clothing. (Lot's of political assertion on this point.)
NO ONE NOTICES, but also it's perfectly apparent to anyone who pays attention that I'm NOT "one of the boys." Not "sissy" or "femme" -- I own/ride a Harley full-dress, guns, knives, active recreation/exercise --
JUST LIKE MY CIS-F SISTERS ! ! !
I'm not broken, and don't need to jump through a litany of medical/legal hoops to be ME.
We need to CHANGE the expectation of the hetero-normative dyad.
Wish I were cis-F,
Being cis-M is sexually threatening for me, on acct. of the sexual abuse.
What we have learned from all this, in the past six months and I've been dealing for 65 yrs at least. What we have learned is that there are more choices for us than "cis F and cis M" --
Women cross the gender boundary in clothing all the time, women's fashion adopts a lot of "boy style" fashion for women. Women can wear men's clothing, but it is taboo for men to wear women's clothing.
THIS NEEDS TO CHANGE --
(dresses/skirts are about Patriarchal sexual access, and a DIFFERENT political issue for another thread.)
Men need to be allowed culturally to express the aspects of their ID which don't fit the "Male dyad" -- Lotsa different kinds of males out there, and females . . . Pretty limited gender expression, but it's changing.
I looked at Finasteride and HRT, even bilateral orchiectomy (surgical castration), in order to mediate the "threat" I feel with testosterone, male pattern body hair, penis, testes . . .
Dr. Judy warns, "Endocrine balance is delicate. You don't want to mess with that balance to become who you already are."
We don't need medical intervention to liberate ourselves and become who we are, who we always have been. There's a broad, safe, liberated, joyous "MIDDLE" in gender presentation that is open to those of us who search.
I still wish, continually . . . wish I were female.