There's something I've been hearing a lot recently, and it's been putting me on edge. Thanks to the gay marriage decision, a lot of very angry religious people have been going to war with a lot of very angry LGBTQIA people about anything: transgender people, gay people, etc. The argument is that each person, gay, straight, trans, or otherwise, is 'born that way'. I don't... really know what to think about that. When I was a little girl, I loved the quintessential 'girly' parts of my life. I played with dolls, I wore skirts and stockings, I absolutely loved My Little Pony and pink and glitter and dress-up. I couldn't have been more of my mother's perfect daughter. Unlike a lot of my peers, I wasn't already feeling that gender ache that I feel now. I never longed to be a man, I was still in that stage where 'boys were icky' and I couldn't talk to them without feeling grossed out.
That didn't change either. In 5th grade, a friend and I used to chase around this one boy in our class named Logan, and we considered ourselves deep enemies. I wasn't born thinking that I wanted to be a man. I didn't want that, not back then. So, when people say that, it makes me really, really nervous. If I say something, does that not make me a 'real' transman anymore? I feel what I am with all my heart, and I devote a lot of time to helping people with similar issues out. I didn't have gender dysphoria at a young age, and I barely have it now, though it does happen occasionally. I don't know if I'm even taking the saying right, because I've been too shy to ask people in case that they treated me like a lesser person for not being like them.
It still happens, and I don't know what to do about it. Maybe I'm just overreacting. Sorry about that...