Hey,
So, my bf and I have been living together for years, and we'd marry, but he thinks I'm a normal girl. I've mentioned the word trans gender in relation to me, and he knows I'm questioning my gender identity at the moment. I think he thinks that I'm going to decide that this is all a phase and that I'm a regular girl, albeit a tomboy. The reality is I've been more feminine with him than I've ever been, and it's not working out. I think he'll probably leave when I come out to him, but he has said that he loves my soul, regardless of whether I call myself a girl or not, and that he's never met anyone as special as me, so there's hope. The annoying thing is he sees me as a girl, and he thinks there are aspects of who I am (other than my body) that are inherently feminine simply because I have a female body, and he puts me in those categories even when they don't apply to me. It was a problem even when I first met him, but I just ignored it because everything else about the relationship is awesome, and I hadn't considered that I could be trans gender then. He loves women; he thinks they're beautiful, sweet, nurturing, etc, and I think women are awesome too, but I'm not one.
on a side note, it's weird to say that because women are beautiful, the ability to nurture and care for a child is beautiful, and despite the wild mood swings once a month, I think the whole concept of female fertility and the cycles female bodies go through in order to prepare for pregnancy is beautiful and powerful and wonderful (maybe I'm weird.) And I have a body that can do that, and I understand it to an extent because every month without fail my reproductive system ->-bleeped-<-s with me, but I'm still a boy. I think this is all beautiful, and I have the parts, but I can't do it. It just seems weird to me... like why wouldn't I want beauty? I'm an artist; I love beauty. But, uh, a pregnant me would not be beautiful- it would be very bitchy.
Sorry for rambling... anyway, he's generally an intelligent, open-minded person, and I think if he truly educated himself he'd have no problem with trans people. At the moment, he's incredibly ignorant. I tried to explain the difference between sex and gender, but he just doesn't get that you could have a body that doesn't match your gender- I guess it's difficult to understand what you can't experience.

I'm not all that good at communicating, and he's not going to read more than about a page unless he's really really interested. Also, I don't want to come out to him right now exactly. I want to present a few basic things about being trans that would get him thinking, without making a big deal out of it, so he hopefully won't think I'm up to something, and press me for answers immediately. When I do come out to him, it'd be easier if he's already had time to digest some facts about being trans instead of just going off of myths. Of course, coming out will probably still kill the relationship, but it's worth a try.
Basically, right now he says that he feels bad for trans people because they want to be something that they never can be. He has a point; I will never have a penis. However, I want to find a way to explain to him that just because I'll never have the body, and I don't yet have the socialization, I already have the mind and soul of a person that is not female (I'm still deciding on a label for myself.) Also, he uses the fact that I can't judge corners when I drive my car very well, and other stupid stuff like that to prove that I'm a normal girl. More so than anyone I've ever dated he genders life, which I find real annoying. In fact, that's the biggest argument that we had for a while. For the longest time I tried to argue that men and women are not inherently different, and it's all due to socialization. I abandoned that theory when I realized that my need to prove that I'm just like a guy and not like a girl might stem from not actually being a girl... not because men and women are exactly the same. He thinks that while men and women are different, the different roles that they typically perform are equal, and he personally prefers the company of women in general. He was raised by sweet women, and he loves them. He thinks I've just been brainwashed by this culture to believe that being a nurturing mother, being compassionate and gentle, being expressive and emotional and all of that is inferior to traditionally masculine roles, and that if I could just move past that, I'd be proud to be a girl. I agree with him, but I don't agree that I have those traits. Technically my body can nurture a baby, but that doesn't mean that I have the heart/soul/emotional capacity/whatever to actually be a good mother. I'm sweet and sensitive, and I want to work on being more thoughtful of others and on caring more about communicating and connecting with others, but I'm still a dude. He thinks that because I'm compassionate and sweet that I'm definitely a girl too. I'm openly compassionate and sweet because that was encouraged when I was a kid. I remember being about three years old and being comforted while I cried over something that my best friend, a boy, was being reprimanded for crying over. I know plenty of guys and ex boyfriends who are very sensitive and sweet; they just wouldn't be caught dead hugging or crying in front of another guy. I think that's just a cultural thing. And <not allowed> whoever says I can't be a sensitive gay artist.
Anyway, if anyone has any advice on ways to break into trans oriented discussions, or of anything that would be useful to correct the myths that he believes, it's be greatly appreciated. Thanks!