Hi, I hope I didn't read incorrectly and that this is also a board to talk about children. If not, let me know. If so, hi! I'm the mother of a thirteen year old girl. She hasn't asked to change pronouns as of yet, so I will still be referring to her as a girl, using she, etc. Also, I am aware no one can tell me what my child identifies as except for her, but I am here hoping to find a little insight or maybe connect with someone who has gone through the same thing.
Here's our story:
She's never been a girly girl. As a child she loved My Little Pony, dinosaurs, the movie Cars and The Last Unicorn and every movie about dinosaurs. She'd get fiesty when the drive thru person at McDonald's would say she wanted a "boy toy" because she wanted the Power Ranger. She told them once "I'm a GIRL." I've always believed in gender neutral toys, programming, etc, so she basically played with and did a mix of things, but she was never the "stereotypical" girl child, playing with dolls or barbies, playing house and pretending to be the mommy, etc. Her favorite toys (that we still have actually) was a huge pink My Little Pony castle and a big plastic fold up batcave lol. Oh, and the ninja turtle van. The pony's would go riding around in that. :p
Most of her life she's worn shirts from the boy's section and girls jeans because the boy's section just always had the kind of cool tees she liked, though there were exceptions of course. For a very short period she insisted on only wearing "shirts that fit" from the girls section, but that lasted less than a year. Her interests have been: dinosaurs, video games (minecraft, Animal Jam, Wizard 101, Pokemon) and drawing. Draws all the time. When she was 7, I believe, she was designing her own video game and she said you could choose to be "a girl or a boy or a non-gender person." She's constantly drawing and making up her own characters and I can never tell what gender they are because she draws them all very androgynously. Also for most of her elementary life she hung out with the boys. That's who she sat with at lunch, played with at p.e, etc. But she did have a handful of girl friends. She pretty much just liked everybody but I think related to the boys better. Oh, and she was in two (really, really lowkey) beauty pageants that her school put on each year. She totally hated getting her hair and makeup done, but it was her choice to be in the pageant, I'm no pageant mom lol. She liked trying on the sparkly dresses.
SO. Okay. Then puberty happened. I didn't realize it until NOW, but that's when she developed what -- I laughed about then -- as an unnatural attachment to her hoodie. She's wear it in 90 degree heat. She'd wear it to sleep it. I realize now it was because she'd hit puberty and started getting boobs. The boys she had always hung around started treating her differently. That was fifth grade. Her boobs didn't STOP. She's a thirteen year old with 38c's, man. She's miserable.
Like I said, I think the dysphoria started in fifth grade although I'm not even sure she was aware why she was wearing her hoodie all the time. Either way, she didn't come to me about her discomfort until about sixth months ago. She just randomly asked me if I cared if she wore two sports bras. I was kind of like

because I'd totally never heard of doing that and we live in Florida and I just told her it would be super uncomfortable. Then I noticed her getting really upset if the neck of her "girl" shirts was too low. Then she came to me asking if I could get her a binder. That's when I really started looking into things. After that it just really snowballed. During one crying fit about how much she hates her boobs and wants to get rid of them she says, "I just want to be a guy. I just want to be transgender."
She has days where she spends hours on my bed with me crying about how uncomfortable her chest makes her, asking if she can shower in a sports bra, wearing huge baggy shirts and hoodies, and days where she doesn't seem to be bothered, wears fitted "girl" shirts and seems okay. I've taken her shopping for clothes specifically out of the boy's/mens section. She wears boxers instead of women's underwear now. But she doesn't want a short (boy) haircut. She did get it cut, but it's just about chin length. Also she freaked about a month or two ago that her legs were too hairy and begged me to let her shave them. Now she doesn't want to shave them anymore.
SO. If you were amazing enough to read that entire wall of text basically what I'm asking is, has anyone else had a teenager girl go through this? I honestly, HONESTLY have no problem with having a transgender child. However, I don't feel like that's exactly what's going on. Or -- I don't feel that she feels that she is a male in a female body. I definitely believe she is outside the gender binary. But I feel as a teenager going through puberty she is seeing things in black and white and thinks that becoming a boy will make her life better. Does anyone have any thoughts/experience on this/advice?
Also I just don't know what to do about her dysphoria with her breasts. I've tried googling but it's generally "my daughter hates her SMALL boobs." Not the other way around. Of if it is, there is nothing offered as a solution. We've tried layering. We've tried sports bras and camisoles. Right now she's wearing a sports bra with a looser sports bra over that and a tight cami over that with a large-ish t-shirt on top. It just doesn't do much to hide 38c's. I'm worried about binders because of the health risks and the tissue damage and he fact that she's only thirteen, but I also don't want her to be miserable in her own body.
Help?