It was instant. I looked at your avatar and I knew you were a Lance. Dignified, masculine, classy, but obviously a bad boy at heart. Seriously though, it just popped into my head. So I'm so sure you will like it, I have already filed the paperwork and you just need to go to the courthouse and sign the papers.
I look forward to speaking to you more in the future Lance. Lance, I'm sure you will make a fine addition to the company. My god Lance, I think you've discovered a cure for cancer!
Anyway, at the risk of losing whatever fragile anonymity that I've got here, my changed name is zoe (I will omit the full nomiker for obvious reasons, and you probably wouldn't believe it anyway--its not necessarily that I don't want to have myname attached to my posts, its just that I don't want it to end up as a number one post for a search on my name--and something like that happened to me once elsewhere).
At any rate: zoe. While it doesn't strike me as overtly feminine, and I didn't change it specifically to match my gender, the rest of the free world somehow doesn't see it as a guy's name. Thus, were it not for the humorous last name (that I have omitted) I would have a whole lot more explaining to do I think. The unique last name was the real reason I thought to change my name at all, and zoe just kind of happened in the process of thinking of all the possible first names that would go with my new surname. zoe meant, "life," which I felt represented me more than my given name which meant, "leader." And it didn't bother me at all that it felt sort of feminine. But apart from zowie bowie and some guy that called into a radio station as a putative "zoe", I have yet to meet another male zoe. And yet, despite the occasional, "isn't that a girls name?" when I first meet some people, nobody seems at all phased by the whole thing, and would likely agree that it is somehow a fitting name.
So Lance, I hope my story helps you out. I think you are going places Lance, handsome fella such as yourself! Take care Lance!