Talk about walking on eggshells!
I've been following the thread, and with every additional post, I seem to relate less and less to some of the perspectives.
I am a woman. I live as a woman. I'm treated as a woman. But be darned if my
value is decided by the rest of the world.
I'm very self confident, strong, assertive and self assured woman. These are qualities I earned, and gave myself. I didn't have them while living as a man. No, they are qualities that I earned as I transitioned. And now this innately shows in the way I interact with the world.
I'm not very pretty, though I am tall and slim. For that I get some attention from guys ( sexual ) and some attention from girls ( criticism or jealousy depending ). That's just par for the course and something I even do myself, at least to women. I'm always looking at women, for their fashion, style, and to compare myself to them. Men however, I totally ignore them. One plus of not being attracted to guys

.
So with my worth decided by myself, I seem to have something that some of you may be missing. That elusive
there's something about her quality mentioned before maybe?
@sad panda - Perhaps it would be very different for me if I were pretty like you. Maybe my worth would have been my appearance. I just don't know because that will never be my reality. And I'm sorry that you've not found peace or what you need in either gender roles. I hope you find the answers you need soon. xx
@FA - From a different perspective, I saw the way women were objectified by men. I hated it with the core of my being. Mostly because I was the very thing men were objectifying. But while that was happening, I also noticed the difference in women that were self confident and women that were insecure. God, I admired the self confident women! No man could alter their worth! They owned themselves and looked so secure in themselves. Anyway, I still struggle to understand your perspective. Yes, I think men do have life easier then women. It's just the way the world seems to work. But I don't see that generalisation as anything defining for each gender role. Just because the world thinks one way, doesn't make it so.