These days, more and more teens are being allowed to live as their real gender in schools. I'm happy for them. The period between fifth and 12th grades are crucial to the development and fitting in to their correct gender. Our personalities are being formed at that age and you don't get another chance to relive it.
Maybe I have no business saying this, but I wouldn't advise a teen or preteen telling even friends that they are transgenders. If you have been living as your true gender rather than what your chromosomes say, and are blending in, I'm afraid that telling someone else will change the way you are treated. People are more liberal about that, true, but its a subconscious thing.
Because girls and boys are segregated in locker rooms starting in fifth grade, if you are a transgender male but can't stay with the guys in stealth, all the behaviors, inside jokes etc. will be lost. Those things are important even though they may seem that they aren't. when the split came, and I had no idea of what was going on, I was forced to be in the girl's locker room and wear a little gym suit rather than the shorts and Ts the guys wore. I faded into invisibility from fifth grade to highschool graduation.
The result is an arrested development. I know how I'm supposed to act and talk to an extent, and some of it comes naturally, but there is a whole gap there that is gone forever.
When you do start going into councelling before HRT, and get the ok to move forward, its like a high greater than any drug. I was twenty six and thought I had everything under control. At the time, having an inexperienced therapist and surgeons seemed like a gift because I didn't have to go through the long time in therapy. Had I stayed, most likely I wouldn't have wound up going forward so quickly and trying to make my life as normal as it should be. I probably would not have gotten married. My emotional position as far as the years I had missed would have been worked out. I guess the point is that if you are going to a therapist, stick with it even though you might feel like you don't need it. The thing is, you probably do. You'll never be completely prepared for living as your correct gender, and some of that just has to be experienced, but you will have had more preparation and be less apt to rush into things.
sam1234