Quote from: ThePhoenix on February 04, 2014, 10:32:29 PM
I started to write a post about my own difficulties passing and assimilating as a guy. But maybe it's more helpful to just point out that when we speak of male versus female socialization, we are speaking of very complex things that are impacted by a lot more than just gender.
For example, aside from gender socialization, I was also socialized as a lawyer by three years in law school plus coming up on ten years as a member of the bar. I may be the "demure" colleague around a bunch of guys who are doing their posturing and such. But having my writing critiqued constantly has squeezed out a lot of hesitation and made me a much more assertive writer. I kept a notebook of poetry and "poetic prose" that I wrote when I was in high school. I'm not sure I could do that now. I think that kind of feeling is a lot harder for me to express these days and I really doubt that I could remember how to write flowery.
If one were to assign a gender to the way I write, I'd be very surprised if they said anything other than male. But knowing what I just explained . . . is it that I am writing male or is it that I'm writing lawyer?
I am probably the absolute worst person in the world to say this . . . And I know nothing about how you look or anything. But I think you'd find there is a lot of variation within genders. There are plenty of skinny, slim guys and lots of hulking, huge women (think Coach Beast from Glee). And there's a lot of role variation too . . . I think you'd find plenty of variation in learned roles too. There are sensitive, gentle men, and hard assed women. So . . . If it is what you really want and what will make your life make the most sense, I suspect that you'd find you could do it. As long as you're being true to who you are, I would bet your chances of finding a way to make it work would be good. 
That makes a lot of sense, about lawyer socialization

I can only imagine that that's a huge character building experience... both going through law school and then surviving the job itself. It sounds very intimidating, but it also sounds like it was worth it?
I'm working to piece apart my socialization and become functional, so I really like the idea that you can choose to enter a new socialization.

I've never had a job, but I know that once I do it will probably change me a lot as well. It is a constant struggle to advocate for myself and communicate that I want to be more independent when my boyfriend is happy to replace the role my dad used to fill... (not that I blame him for that, he just wants to provide for me, but he doesn't understand how it feels to be chronically without any autonomy.)
Unfortunately, I'm positive that I would struggle to pass as a boy if I were truly myself. I lived full time as a girl before taking any hormones and never was gendered male.

It's not that I feel like a boy, I just came to accept that being trans makes me unhappy, I can't force myself to be happy with it, and I happen to have been born as male so that's the only way I can be cis. I still don't totally understand/feel the concept of gender identity in either direction (though I strongly ID with femininity!) and, yep, I just prefer to be cis regardless of gender. But, having a difficult constellation of features and a weak response to testosterone, I would certainly have to make a LOT of concessions in terms of who I am to have even an iffy pass rate, it definitely wouldn't be who I truly am.. so it's very confusing!! D:
Umh, I'm not trying to get off on a tangent/off-topic, sorry lol

I guess I'm just saying that this is why I struggle with assumptions too, because people don't always get the right mental picture of me when they hear MTF. I don't mean that like I could *never ever* pass as a boy, just I would absolutely have to become a stereotype to do it, you know?? Which would feel just as uncomfortable as being trans is for me... so I never know where I stand. I really think it's lovely that more freedom of gender expression is becoming acceptable lately, and maybe if I lived in a big city it would even be possible! But I'm in a sort of farm-y, semi-rural pocket of the east coast, only barely out of the south, and I just don't see it happening here... I couldn't even pass as a boy in plain, baggy men's clothes here simply because I take care of my hair.
OK, I'm done blabbering about me

I wonder though, how many people's transition/de/retransition experience is physically motivated?? Sometimes I feel alone with my set of issues, but this forum comes closest for me to where I am at right now. It's refreshing to hear new perspectives and I think it's awesome that people have the courage to learn from their transition and use that to keep growing