I think I mentioned somewhere that I don't really know for absolute sure if I am male, because of the quandary of how can my brain - or any brain - really know what other brains feel like - but I know that I'm not a very effective nor happy female, and there's got to be a good reason for that. I don't think I can class myself non-binary, but I don't believe a person has to have a binary presentation, and belong to one camp or another when it comes to dress and mannerisms and all that.
I could live with it if I never wore another piece of female clothing ever again, but if someone decided that say, I couldn't use certain products or do certain activities because male I'd tell them to go jump. I tell ya, I love a nice long hot bath for the hell of it, I like living in a comfortable, nice-looking space (I take my comfort pretty seriously) and my profession is clearly something more females are doing than males if what I see out there is anything to go by. I don't really go by gender as a guide to what I should and shouldn't do. Luckily most of the things I'm interested in and like to do have no real gender barrier attached to them.
I remember as a kid actually wishing I had a male body, but that I didn't have the junk and had a genderless space there or something. I think that was my way of dealing with the problem of belief that I'll never have anything there that works exactly as it 'should'. It just seemed easier to my kid brain to erase the sex aspect altogether, but I remember the body was very much of the male frame, the narrow hips, broad shoulders, flat chest. Strange, I suppose. I would have expected the penis to mean more, but to me it really doesn't define a man, like it did for the ancient Greeks and such. So it's not all that important to me. It would be nice, but not as imperative as having the blood of a man (testosterone flowing in there) and the basic shape of one.
I do have a kind of aversion to male and female stereotypes. The further they are to the extremes, the less I like them. I'm apparently bisexual, and I've always been drawn to women who're more on the masculine side - i.e. short hair, a bit of muscle tone, competitive hobbies, etc. And if a man happens to have a more twinky body or long hair and happens to be more self-expressive like an actor or an artist... I'm more drawn to that than I am the typical beefcake. It's reflected in me as well. I don't like the extremes of sexual dimorphism, and more comfortable playing around closer to androgyny, and with people who are also closer to center and comfortable enough in themselves to blur the line sometimes.