I have vivid memories from my childhood. I can honestly say that the last few years have been like a slow awakening to who I really am.
Looking back, I am thankful that my free and open minded parents allowed and encouraged me to cross/push boundaries (gender related) and never felt the need to harness me to a particular box and label me.
I am an only child and have always thought that my 'strangness' was because of my alternate upbringing.
My parents were hippies complete with caravan and for the first few years of my life we travelled all over the place, sometimes stopping for a day, sometimes a month.
My parents thought that they should do settle down and try and lead a 'normal' life when I was at the age of starting school . So my parents decided to drop the anchor in what can only be described as the most backwards, small hick town south of the equator where the no of people in the town was only slightly higher than all their iq's put together.

I became great friends with a girl (Tess - Major tomboy) and her and I hung with the boys. The best memories I have are being in the muck hills (old coal mine shafts that had collapsed..quite safe I'm sure) riding motorbikes with the guys, playing cricket with cane toads in our pj's after dark, trying our best to derail trains and causing chaos in Church on Sundays. I loved to go fishing with my dad and would often insist on wearing a dress, one of the few times that my mum could get me near a dress or a skirt. Bless my mum and dad..they never batted an eye.
By the age of 12 I could strip a lawn mower engine to basic parts and put it back together again by myself and I would also cook 2 or 3 course dinners for the family. I could knit, sew, cut hair, drive a car, drive a tractor use a chainsaw, do the washing and go hunting with my dad. I loved every single one of those activities.
I would dress boyish, girlish and often a combination of the two. When my hair was cut short, I would pretend it was long and when I had it long I would often tuck it up and pretend it was short. Frustrated my poor mother.
I basically lived in a bubble. I didn't really pick up on the fact that I was different. I always assumed that the other girls were the ones with the issues and that I was the norm.
Then came secondary school. It took me an hour to get to school by bus which I absolutely hated, trapped in a metal can on wheels with girly girls and macho guys. I went from a primary school of 69 kids to a high school which had over 1500 kids. I was devoured. I honestly don't remember much of my first year at high school. I think my brain has purposely blocked a lot of what when on.
This is where and when I started to realise that I had been living in a completely different universe to these people. Boys had a certain role to play and girls had their role to play and I just didn't fit.
I knew that being 'myself' was not going to tolerated and I would get into some serious trouble if I didn't go undercover. There was a huge battle raging within me. I took a lot of it out on my mum and dad, tried laying the blame at their feet for raising me the way they did. I just couldn't find my niche anywhere. And to make matters worse this was the same year that all the physical changes happened..uuuggghhh! The boys would no longer hang out with Tess and I once we developed boobs and they no longer saw us as buddies. Very difficult year for which I only have a handful of memories.
Slowly I learnt to 'act' more like a girl during school times. Unconsciously I began to live 2 very different lives, school/girly mode and home/'?' mode.
Senior school
Well this is where things got kind of complicated. I spent a lot of time playing sports and was quite fit. I had long curly blonde hair and I was getting a lot of male attention...Awkward!!! I liked it but I didn't know if I wanted it and certainly didn't know what to do with it.
I have always and still do, feel indifferent to my physical self. Some days I wished I had some bits, some days I wished I had no bits and of course other days I wished I had all bits.
I have an extremely warped sense of humour and outlook on life but I still managed to walk the minefields and find some good friends who I guess you could say were misfits too. A lot were males and a lot of them were gay.
I didn't want a boyfriend, I didn't want a girlfriend, I didn't really know what I wanted. I used school time to organise my social calendar and to observe students' behaviour.
For me, school was like starting a gigantic life lesson jigsaw puzzle, sorting out the pieces, building the framework, lots of observing and then diving in to try different things to see if it fits (and even trying to make pieces fit when clearly they don't belong there!) making some good choices and making some not so good choices.
After completing school I knew I didn't want to stay an extra second in my hick home town and naturally I joined the Air Force, 'cause that's what all girls do right?
Time for me to get back to that jigsaw...........