So much of this thread rings so true for me. I was always a male character if allowed to be (Lisa Squirrel - I wanted to be Braker Turtle

)
I'm not sure if I actually remember it, or if I'm only constructing a memory based on my mother's repeated telling of the story, but apparently the only huge tantrum I ever threw as a small child was at 4 years old, when I freaked out about having to take ballet and not being allowed to play t-ball. I used to play He-Man games with two neighbor boys from 5-8, and I convinced them to let me be He-Man for the longest time, because I had the same haircut as him

Then came an incident when I was 10 and cut off all of my hair, and my mother flipped.
Then came puberty: I felt like I was mutating into some sort of freak creature in middle school. Long before I knew what binding was, I tried substituting a tight ace bandage for a bra when I was 13. Unfortunately, I fell out of it in the middle of gym class...
I've always been more apt to jump and cheer or cry over the smallest things, so I always figured my personality matched my body - except that I never wanted to discuss specific emotions with anyone, as most girls seemed to. I always knew that I was into both genders, so I figured my hatred of my chest and my growing dislike of my other parts was down to my not being straight. Then one night, my first girlfriend (also bi) and I were looking at magazine photos of different men and women, commenting about how they were all so hot, and she pointed out some actress and said, "I wish I looked like her." I pointed to a pic in the same magazine (I don't even remember of who) and said, "I wish I looked like him." She gave me the most disgusted look on earth, and broke up with me soon after. I never understood why she was so grossed out by my wish, and not hers.
My parents stuck me in counseling over my professed orientation, and doubled-down on it when I told them I wanted to be a guy. Unfortunately, it was Catholic counseling. I was told that some people are naturally lesbians, and that it was my job from god to try and ignore that. I asked about wanting to be a guy, and I was told it was down to being a lesbian. I pointed out that I was bi, and I was told that TV had told me to say that. The biggest shame I feel in my life now is over the fact that I believed all that nonsense for so long.
Then came college... My roommate convinced me that, "even though you're too short and chesty to do real work, you can make a lot of money doing this..." and I started catalog modelling. I stayed firmly in denial land, laughing off every bad thought I had about my body as being due to the pressures of my part-time job. It paid well, and it certainly made my parents happy, and it gave me that perfect false target for all the reasons I was so dissatisfied with my body.
As college faded into grad school, I started having more sexual relationships, and wow, this sounds familiar:
QuoteProbably TMI, but sexually I was never interested in my own sexual pleasure until I figured out that I'm male. I loved giving others sexual pleasure but I just felt weird and uncomfortable having my partner's focus on my body, rather than on their own pleasure.
THIS. I had no problem going down on boyfriends or girlfriends, but I flat-out refused to let anyone return the favor on me, and any time anyone wanted penetration, I made them "use the back door."
Once I was out of school and living alone, working a sedentary job, I put on a lot of weight, and again, all the bad thoughts about being female I attributed to my weight gain, and not to my not being the correct gender. This was definitely me:
QuoteI started to imagine myself with short hair and wearing whatever I wanted, thinking of myself as a butch lesbian. But then I realized that I wanted MORE. I didn't want to just look like that, I literally wanted to become the man in the relationship, go beyond the butch lesbian look, etc.
I started being more and more butch, whenever I went home, my parents begrudgingly accepted me as butch and bi, and life went on. I finally managed to secure a job that matched my education, and most of my coworkers, like a lot of my fellow students in college, were male. And then one day, I was talking with the only other physical female in my department (a cishet woman), and she started bringing up all of the family pressure she felt to follow her life path. And at the end of the conversation, she just blurted out, "a good little punjabi girl should want to be a good engineer and mother, and not go to art school - just like how you are a good little catholic girl and you don't become a boy like you want to." I was floored. I couldn't believe I was that transparent. I couldn't believe she knew.
After that, I got over my fear of therapy, instilled by the crazy catholics when I was younger, and I started going to see a real therapist. I lost all the extra weight, and started heavy lifting and boxing, seeking a more masculine physique. I started researching transitioning, and waivering on whether I would take the plunge, out of fear that I've just got too female a form to really do it. Five years on, I am 32 and I'm finally ready to admit that I'm a man, and I want to be one as wholly as possible. I hit a massive roadbump with the first endocrinologist I saw, which prompted me to join this board, and well, that's it. Tons of hints, tons of denial, and now - well, now is the time for the truth. I wish I'd listened harder to what all of those little incidents were telling me, and to myself.