I was a tomboy growing up and my parents were super liberal about the whole thing so I never ever was told I couldn't do something because i "was a girl". As a result, right up till puberty my gender had no real significance to anything. I think I might have been far more miserable and dysphoric had I been forced to wear dresses and play only with dolls and not permitted to roll around in mud and stuff lol.
I was super awkward around girls for sure, but I was never excluded from having male friends either. But the older I got the more bewildering I found female interaction for sure. I felt like an alien, an imposter among them. I just didn't understand. Of course as an adult I now know there were several things at play there. Not only my gender identity but as a demisexual panromantic austistic I didn't really stand a chance with preteen girls right?
But puberty was traumatic. I always assumed it was traumatic for anyone. I didn't WANT to be a woman and I didn't want to grow up but I didn't really understand. I was under the impression I had no choice, my body was changing and I hated it but I didn't really know WHY I hated it beyond that it made me feel "like a freak"
I hated being different, I hated having boobs and I resented a body that was changing around me in such confusing and unpleasant ways.
I could never admit I was menstrating, I was SO ASHAMED. I wore tight vests to hide my bust. I only started to shave because the other kids started to tease me in the changing rooms and made me self concious about not looking "right"
And even when the other girls started to go through puberty as well I still just felt horribly awkward and uncomfortable about the whole thing.
In my teens I found I got on better with guys, they made more sense to me. I didn't feel quite as much of an imposter around them. I could actually be ME, the me that's not at all feminine or particularly good at the whole female communication thing (socially girls really do communicate differently to guys, it's kinda wierd actually)
I found girls petty, two faced and vindictive and grew to resent them because of my unpleasant interactions with them unfortunately.
I couldn't understand WHY I didn't fit in with them. It wasn't that I particualrly wanted to, I just thought I was SUPPOSED to.
Social conditioning is a powerful thing.
Once I fell out with literally every girl in my class at a party (eugh) and was forced to have to hang out with the guys instead I found myself honestly a lot happier.
Ultimately, that horrible experience I think did me some good. It pushed me across the gender divide by neccessity and I realised I vastly preferred that side of the fence.
As I reached my late teens I started to joke that I was "a boy brain in a girl body" and everyone around me would laugh and agree. NONE of us put two and two together.
I didn't present with any major dysphoria. I was under the impression that to be transgender you had to literally sit in front of a mirror and cry and want to rip your own skin off! That's what media and society had told me! Gender dysphoria was greatly traumatising and painful, and I wasn't traumatised by being in my body. I didn't much like it sure, but I assumed ALL women weren't overly enthused about being female. I mean we had the whole pms and periods thing for a start, which always sucked, and societal expectations and sexism and all that. What was there to like about it?
But because I didn't want to rip my own skin off I assumed this was just normal "bah, down with the patriarchy" thinking.
At the time I NEVER noticed my behaviour wasn't normal, my kinda numb "it's all i've got" attitude toward my body wasn't totally normal and that my "i'm a guy in a girl body" jokes weren't really jokes.
I grew up, I had kids, I battled with my poor health as a result of my biological sex (Hormonal disorders suck) and I grew to resent my body sure, feeling like it was failing and betraying me and wishing more and more I didn't have to deal with it, but I was still in this denial fog. I was depressed for many reasons, I was struggling with life in general and that took priority. Caring for my children took priority.
I became the least important thing in my own life and so I sank into a dull routine. Slowly my sense of self started to just disappear all the more and it wasn't till recently when I finally got given antidepressants that WORKED that the fog started to lift and I came to realise that i'd really just been going through the motions for so many years. That i'd been wearing a costume all this time, a mask to just get by. Several really. A neurotypical mask. A girl mask. A "i'm happy really" mask.
I'd lost myself. I wasn't me, I was who other people expected me to be. For so many years i'd been told "oh you're such a HAPPY person" (I wasn't), "you're so CONFIDENT" (I never was), "you look nice" (I didn't think I did.)
I was wearing clothes I was given because it meant I didn't have to go clothes shopping, a process I had, over the years, found increasingly more and more distressing. I found trying on clothes that didn't suit me or didn't fit me incredibly depressing and stopped wanting to do it. My mother would still try to drag me into stores but I resented it. I hated it. I felt she was torturing me without really listening to me telling her "I don't want to be here, I don't like this."
But just taking items she gave me meant I didn't have to set foot into a shop, even if I didn't really like it, it was clean, it was clothing, it was free.
And it would be ungrateful not to accept.
So I was wearing clothing that wasn't me, clothing I just sort of tolerated because it wasn't massively uncomfortable and I didn't really need to look at myself.
I'd ceased looking at myself in mirrors, banned people taking photos because I didn't recognise myself (Weight gain contributed a large deal to this) and supressed a flinch every time my mother found some new fad diet to follow and commented that I had "lost weight" (i hadn't, she was lying)
I didn't know myself anymore. I was just a shell, functioning but not really living.
But as the fog cleared I started to realise that that feeling I got when I DID look in the mirror and remarked "wow, looks like someone photoshopped my head onto someone else's body" WAS dysphoria.
that dysphoria didn't always look like how the media portrayed it.
That sometimes it's not "i want to rip my skin off" but a more subtle insidious "I don't quite feel right and I don't know why" feeling.
and I think growing up female masks and awful lot of the worst sensations of "not fitting in" or "not being quite right" because girls are actively encouraged to BE gender non conforming anyway.
And so you explain things away, justify things to yourself, wrap yourself up in a big ball of denial because it's easier and because nobody TOLD YOU there was any choice, nobody told you what you felt WAS dysphoria.
Nodody ever asked "hey, you think maybe you might actually not be a girl?"
And when I told my husband this, over the next few days we both started to unravel my past and both of us would go "wait.. how'd we never see that before?"
All those times i'd called myself a boy. All those times i'd mentioned I couldnt' write female characters because I found it really difficult to get into the mind of a girl (eugh), all those times i'd complain that something a woman in my life had done made no dang sense and I didn't get women at all (I don't, women bewilder me), all those times i'd said things like "I wish I had a penis" or "Damn I wish i'd been born a boy". All the times i'd described myself as a guy in a girl's body.
I grew up in the 90s but to be honest, it wasn't till the mid 2000s I really started to pay much attention to lgbt stuff.
It doesn't help that for so so long all the trans narratives weren't just "trauma, trauma, dysphoria is such torture" but were ALWAYS MtF.
the idea of FtM wasn't something on my radar till much later.
I'd dip into that world, facinated by the transformations, but what just hormones alone could do to someone's features and how confident and happy these youtubers seemed to be and then i'd go back to my shadow of a life without making any connection.
In fact it wasn't till I read someone saying "if you've ever questioned your gender identity, you're probably not Cis" that I started to think "Oh... maybe i'm not"
I flirted with gender fluidity, for years i've had "boy days" where i'd dressed in a more boyish way but that was always just a bit of fun... I thought.
I mean I am a person who for years also had "today I am a pirate" and "today I am a zombie" so...
it was just "another costume"
Right now i'm still working things out, figuring out who the real ME is but one thing is certain, I never was and never have been a GIRL.
It took me over 30 years to work that out and stop doing mental gymnastics to lie to myself.
and it's rather liberating to realise I don't HAVE to be a girl and I don't HAVE to be the person other people want me to be.
For the first time in so so long I can look in the mirror and see a face I actually recognise.
I'm still more feminine than i'd like to be of course, next month I intend to cut my hair AGAIN (I only just had it cut to shoulder length as a sort of test to see how I liked having it shorter, having never really been permitted to have my hair cut dramatically in my youth and believing my mother when she claimed i'd regret it and it was too much work. She lied, and it's MY hair. The past couple of years i've finally accepted that it's MY body and she had no say. But that's been a difficult process. I suppose I still do care about what she thinks, desperate for her love and approval. Which is sad)
I feel like once my hair is a bit more androgynous I should be able to judge what I want to do next a bit better.
I went clothes shopping for the first time in a very very long time and I bought ONLY male clothing and you know what? I actually ENJOYED it. I enjoyed being able to put on pants and have them FIT and be comfortable. I enjoyed going through all the garments i've always loved but never been able to convince my partners to wear (turns out I just wanted to dress them the way I wanted to dress hahaha) and i've felt more comfortable in my own skin than I have in well.. ever.
I bound my chest for the first time in a changing room and let me tell you, I NEVER expected to almost burst into tears trying on a compressing sports bra but I nearly did.
I assumed i'd try it on, go "yep, that'll do fine" and move on like I do with t-shirts and stuff. I didn't expect such a surge of emotion. I left the changing room GIDDY!
and that right there was my confirmation. I never realised how much I hated my breasts till that moment.
All my life i've just sort of had this dull dislike for my body, a detatched numbness. Like.. it's just there.
I tend not to look at it much.
tl:dr, I think it's actually not that uncommon to not realise as a child. Quite a lot of people don't come to know their true selves till they're older. That stuff takes time, but we're also very very good at lying to ourselves.
Very good at deluding ourselves and conforming because we feel that's what we're MEANT to do.
I've had a lot of realisations about myself in my adulthood. I realised I was bi when i was about 17 or 18 but I didn't really realise I was actually demisexual till I was in my mid twenties. I knew I didn't experience primary sexual attraction but honestly I thought that was NORMAL!
I didn't realise! Nobody ever told me!
I didn't really understand I was dypraxic till about 21 when the problems I had in university got too much and I sought help and assessment from the university itself. Suddenly those years of sitting in class sobbing and feeling like a moron because I couldn't remember how to do something I could do perfectly the day before made sense. My inability to tell left from right or read clocks wasn't just me being stupid like i'd always been made to believe. I had a learning disability!
and it wasn't till I was in my late twenties I came to understand that i'm also quite probably autistic. It explains SO MUCH about my childhood and the older my kids get (who ARE diagnosed) the more of me I see in their behaviours and stims.
But in the 90s, in NZ, even in the big city, these things we had no real understanding of. They weren't talked about, they weren't mentioned, in many cases we didn't really have the words in common knowledge. Much like being trans, I knew nobody who was anything other than straight or gay, I knew nobody who was dyspraxic rather than dyslexic (I have NO dyslexic traits at all apparently, which is unusual), I knew nobody who was autistic or even really what aspergers WAS.
I didn't know. Nobody knew. We didn't have the vocabulary or the understanding.
Knowing those things, so much makes sense. had we known back then, so much would have been different. I wouldn't have been punished so much, i'd have had support. I wouldn't have grown to hate myself quite so much.
but it didn't, we didn't know.
Later generations are fortunate that we DO understand a lot more than we did 20-30 years ago. My own children are SO LUCKY that they're growing up in an era that understands neuro divergance, that understands gender non conformity and isn't so scared of it. When my youngest declared himself a girl for 6 months everyone just rolled with it, when he said he was going to be a boy again we all just went "okay cool" and went with it. Even his nursery and school genuinely don't seem to care if he goes into school wearing a skirt or carrying a handbag. I've had NOBODY ever say a thing about it other than to smile and remark upon how confident and happy he is.
Point is, there's so much more acceptance and understanding and I hope that means that later generations are going to find it far easier to find the words to express who they really are, find the support and community.
I look forward to that.
and in the meantime, for those of us only just finding those words? Well, better late than never right?