I've only been out to my family for something like five or six months now, which doesn't seem long at all, but they've all been generally accepting of it. My mom still has moments where she goes on about how heart-broken she is that she's losing her daughter and best friend, but she's been good otherwise. I think she's getting over that.
That's not the point of this particular post, though.

It's been a couple of weeks now, but I just thought about it again last night. I was visiting my dad over Spring Break, and we had a couple of conversations regarding the issue, and he jokingly said something like, "You know, if you want to be a guy, you'll have to go fishing and watch football." And that was funny, I laughed. I'm not much of a fisherman, but I like football well enough.
So - it's not offensive, to me, but it is stereotypical. I get the feeling there might be other male stereotypes that my friends/family might seriously expect me to fall into (because in this case, my dad wasn't being serious; my younger brother hates both football and fishing). For example, the way I dress and wear my hair, the way I talk, and my sexuality. Not to say that being heterosexual is a stereotypical male behavior, you know, just that that's what they might expect I'm transitioning for - to get chicks. Haha.
I know that my boyfriend's mom is a little confused because he wants to be, in her words, a "feminine guy and dress in feminine clothes". There's definitely a mentality for some people that's like,
If you're not going to conform to the stereotypical manly, masculine male, why transition? - Or it seems that way sometimes.
What do you think? Do your family/friends expect you to behave or dress a certain way because you identify as male, and if they do, is it frustrating for you?