It's very difficult to describe what it's like without a point of reference to compare with. As I've always been trans, I can't really say what it's like because it's all I've even known. It feels 'normal' I guess.
That is completely different to whether or not I enjoy it or like it, no I don't. It's difficult, and as others have said, trying to fit into a cis-gendered world just doesn't seem to work. So I feel like the odd one out, not quite one thing or the other.
It seems like before I accepted I was trans, and tried to do something about it, I was just trying to fit into the world as a cis-gendered male, and it didn't work because that isn't me.
However, now that I've transitioned, I often find I'm trying to fit into the world as a cis-gendered woman, and that doesn't really work either. Admittedly it's better than before, but still not really 'me'.
I guess on a world where most of us were trans, and it was the cis-folk who were the minority, then I'd fit right into that world maybe.
For instance, there are some 'guy-centric' things I actually like, and trying to cease with that stuff and making steering myself towards more female-oriented interests and subjects and roles didn't feel right. Like I wasn't being true to myself.
Reading earlier posts, I'd actually be more comfortable sitting at the "guy-end" of the table, chatting about cars and stuff, than with the women chatting about children and home and fashion and cooking.
But here's the thing, I am happy being a woman sitting with the guys, I never wanted to stay as a guy.
Except now society would on the whole prefer I sit with the women, and if I don't then I appear as an enigma, and someone quite different to the whole cis-gendered norms.
I generally find it quite difficult fitting into the world at all, it almost always requires some form of compromise.
The difference is that pre-transitioning, I felt totally disconnected from the world, like I was watching myself on a cinema screen, but not really being there fully. Whereas now, post-transition, I at least feel I'm part of my life, no longer a watcher. hence I've done far more daring and challenging things as a woman, than I ever did as a guy.
It's all a big spectrum, and I'm just somewhere on it, as we all are. So we'll all describe being trans differently.