I haven't shared the whole story before, might as well at least try to do some of it now.
I've done a lot of looking back over the past few months since being on HRT, and I don't know the answer still. I remember as a kid not understanding why my cousin got to be called a girl and I didn't. My grandparents showered her with affection, but my brothers and I got "meh" most of the time (it wasn't really us kids, it was my grandma's favoritism towards her dad over all the other siblings, it just ended up filtering down to the grandkids). My cousin and I were close, and house was a favorite of ours to play. Me, being the totally passive one, always played the dad, but I was jealous all the time.
I probably had an inkling back then... but I learned really quick that it was out of bounds. My dad's youngest brother (my dad was the oldest of six) was effeminately gay, and dad wasn't very fond of that. I really liked him though, had a good time around him. He ended up dying of AIDS in the mid-80's, and I remember the near total isolation he received once it was known he was dealing with that disease. He was marginalized before then, and isolated after. It pretty much told me that being different was not kosher.
I was a quiet kid... never had friends and had to be forced outside. I didn't know how to socialize (still don't... I'm still amazed how much I've opened up over the past couple of months) so I kept my nose in the books. I knew I was different... I preferred crochet and cross-stitch to playing football and that never went over well with dad. Don't get me wrong, I love my dad and think the world of him. He was no-nonsense and hard on us at times, but he was doing what he thought was best for us. Maybe a bit close minded about things, but it was how he was brought up and I can't fault him for that.
School was a chore. I lived in the shadows, the nerd and loner nobody understood. I was super helpful with homework and all things school-related, but when it became about just being social I would clam up and run away. I didn't fit in, I knew it, and so did everyone else. I used that to my advantage though. Bullies only picked on me one time. EVERYONE came to me for school help... once bullies realized that my help seemed to be wrong and they started getting zeros after picking on me, it was like I had purchased an invisible force field of protection. And so it was through school... I was the computer they came to for help, then left alone when social life was calling. I was flat out jealous of the girls, and I didn't know why.
On to college, the perennial nerd that had every chance in the world in front of him. I walked that college campus the first few days every semester, the distant observer watching everyone and everything around me, but involved in nothing. I saw the guys and knew I was not like them. I saw the girls and knew I was not one of them. Here I was, smartest kid on the planet, and I couldn't figure this one simple thing out. It ate at me then, knowing I wanted to be like the girls but never would be and not understanding what those thoughts really meant. And I feared the wrath of the professors... what would they think if I missed a class? Inevitably, I would be distracted by my thoughts and miss one. I would never go back to my class after missing one. Needless to say I flunked out. Smart as could be but no social ability or understanding whatsoever.
I met a girl, lost my virginity, and we got married (another weird, long story for another time, perhaps). That's what guys are supposed to do, right? Get married, make a family, go to work and support them? I got my oldest son from her, and that was it. She left me when he was one, and I convinced her that she wouldn't be able to take care of our son alone, so she left him with me and all but disappeared from the planet. Now I was a single parent, and it occupied my brain for a long time. I didn't allow myself time to dwell on my little "problem". After divorce , I met my second wife. That's what guys are supposed to do, right? Get married, make a family, go to work and support them? It was all I knew: do what you're supposed to do. Be a man (STILL don't know what that means) and be responsible. I think it was about midway through that marriage that I figured out I was gender dysphoric. But as fate would be so cruel, she got diagnosed with breast cancer and I spent the next four years of my life being caregiver, student at the local community college, and breadwinner. That's what guys are supposed to do, right?
She passed, leaving me with three kids now. I knew what my problem was, and I knew what would happen if I told anyone, so I did what any guy would do. I found a girl I really loved with kids of her own and I got married. Be responsible, take care of the family, my feelings aren't important... guys aren't supposed to have feelings. ENOUGH!!! I couldn't take it anymore. I was more than mostly dead inside. I had been through too much, too many suicidal thoughts and plans, to keep going like this. I told my wife, she was (impressively) supportive and wanted me to deal with it, so we've started dealing with it together.
My lord, I could probably keep typing forever. So much I left out LOL. HRT makes you a chatterbox! For those of you that made it to this point I should probably roll credits and all

The End
-hugs to all-