Quite the spectrum.
It is funny you ask this question. Within the last two weeks I had told my therapist that one of the difficult things for me at work is returning to our busy time. I feel different but am so early that no one sees anything different(I am wearing women's clothing that is no different than I used to wear-I am not out there). I mentioned I was apprehensive because everyone will expect me to behave like I always have. They will expect me to grow a handle bar moustache that I always cut in June and grow in September, expect the fast acerbic wit, the saturated sarcasm, and the slick hard edges). I told her that I very knowingly created the persona that most people see at work. It was a way to be less internal and create a bit of harder shell. My wife works with me and knows that I am a little different at work than when we are home(and this is before coming out to her). However, she works in communications and conflict resolution and has always sort of known what I was doing.
I had not accepted myself as female till recently. So, while I created these personas to protect I never really recognized who/what I was protecting. I never fit in and was bullied, like many of us. It took me till my sophomore year at high school till I had had enough and made a shell. From then on, when I would go somewhere new, college, first moves from home, new jobs or working out of town, I would experiment with a slightly different shell. While I have always tried to be myself, it was always with a veneer covering.
In answer to your question, yes, my persona was created and morphed to protect me. I don't know that I was fully aware why I needed protection. I don't know that I accepted that there was a girl in there. I was just a kid who's Mom would call the other kids Mom's and ask if they could talk to their son because, " He is a very sensitive child...", no matter how I begged her not to. It is weird to me that I never really thought of myself as female or male, just me. For years this seems to have left me vulnerable. So much like my realization that I am transgender, it took a while to figure out how to protect myself. I did learn how to pretend to be a boy by watching my friends, my brother and his friends and guidance from my somewhat frustrated father(not that he knew why he had to guide me-but that is part of being a father anyway).
Now, with where I am, I am at the point where the shell is becoming a problem. I have realized I can't grow my moustache again(even though that in itself is a mask-I started to and had to get rid of it), I can't keep all that hair on all my body anymore, I can't even really wear male clothes 100% anymore. Not that I am presenting publicly yet. I am sure I will hold on to some of the wit and sarcasm but I am just so tired of the expected negativity. Added up this is all so exhausting(funny I read a post the other day about how tiring transition is. It truly is but this other is exhausting to my soul).
I too am grateful for the protection he has provided. I very much identify with the dot in the center of the circle. I never really recognized myself in the mirror, so it is like he was a mask the whole time. However, at this point I am only saddened by how others will be saddened to see him go.
Joanna