Quote from: Dietlind on February 04, 2019, 08:45:08 PM
You are correct in your assumptions. I never ever had the desire to be with a man. Because of my screwed up biology, I should have always be interested in men, too, because I always lived with female emotions, inside a mostly female body.
Hardly. If this were true, there would be no such thing as lesbians.
Gender orientation is a different thing than gender identity. The correlations found in the brain that have been identified in the tiny amount of research done so far point to activity in different areas of the brain involved in gender orientation than in identity.
Quote from: Dietlind on February 04, 2019, 08:45:08 PM
But this did not cut it either. I rather lived alone for more than 16 years than trying to get into a romantic relationship with a man. You can believe me, I did lots of soul searching because being Bi would have doubled the possible numbers of partners, but I just can't get the men part to click. I seem to be a lesbian through and through, I don't know why, but who knows anyway, why one has a certain sexual orientation. I just don't know, it might change, once I would have had SRS? But for now, the only sexual interaction I could have with man would be anal, and I have a deep sitting horror about this (both my wife and I never liked this kind of sex). This might be one of the reasons that i don't want o even start with guys?
I might be screwed up m ore than I ever thought I was?
So, you have a strongly feminine gender identity, and are attracted to women. That describes very roughly a third of the community of transgender women. Broadly, very roughly a third of trans folks are oriented toward their identified gender, a third towards the other side of the gender spectrum, and a third are asexual. (
There are also biisexual, pansexual, aromantic, and hundreds of other labels in here somewhere. This is just a very broad and vey rough description, so please don't be upset with me.)
You are hardly screwed up. You have a pretty common identity and orientation for the trand community. You have some sexual acts, positions, or roles that you don't like.
Gender Confirmation Surgery (GCS) will change what's between your legs, not what's between your ears. Your actual orientation won't likely change, although you may find that you are open to considering some things that you might not have before, due to internalized social gender roles and taboos.
Dietlind, you just do you. Don't worry about not being what someone else says you should be. Don't fret about the 'proper' social roles. Just be open to unexpected thoughts and emotions, even if they make you slightly uncomfortable, and consider what these might be telling you. If you have a gender therapist, be open to mentioning and discussing these matters.