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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

I’m Trans, Here’s My Story

1000 replies

SnugPeach · 28/08/2025 06:35

Hi I’m Trans, I know I’m essentially coming into what some would consider the wolf’s den by coming here to make a post. But I’m also a strong believer in trying to help people to understand and am happy to explain my story and experiences if it helps to enhance others understanding.

I kind want this thread to be AMA but also to give a bit of backstory. Now I know some of you are going to hear the next few thing. I say an immediately just tell I’m confused or misled, but yes I have Autism. I was diagnosed at a young age, but Autism is just one part of me. Had being Autistic affected my gender? Maybe who knows, I am me, Autism is not something separate thing that it’s me.

Anyway I’ll try not to waffle as I do tend too. I’m currently 28, have been DIYing for 1 and half years. Have everything updated and changed, Name, Passport etc. I also extensively researched everything I could on HRT over the years as the NHS system takes year and years to be seen.

During Childhood really I was I guess you could say less aware of ‘gender’ than my peers as I was for most things. I was heavily bullied at school by the boys for being ‘weird’, they’d call me ‘gay’ not that I understood what that meant but I doubt they did either, it was the early 2000s afterall. Where as on the other hand I was quite friendly with the girls, they didn’t bully me and treated me often with compassion and I’d enjoy spending time with them. Unfortunately even they would get bullied from time to time for associating with me. The boys often disdained at my lack of interest in football or other ‘boy’ things. Instead I loved working out technology how things worked, along with people. Despite being Autistic I have always been fairly sociable even if it’s been riddled with difficulties and learn curves and I still struggle with that today, but I love connecting with people and sharing feelings.

Skip forward to Secondary School and here is where a few things happen. I’m still very behind my peers in my understanding of allot of things. My feelings on my gender are neutral are based purely on fact of I am what I am because how can I not be. It did learn about Transgender people but it didn’t still click for me. I remained still extremely cautious of the boys but was more of a loner. I wanted more girl friends but the social dynamic had changed. I viewed most of the boys as idiots and bafoons. They would do the dumbest stuff like all this stupid competitive crap and honestly a majority of time I found myself sharing my female peers feelings towards them. It was around this time I found myself more aligned with Femininity and started to self describe as a feminine-guy. But still I would be considerate and respectful towards the girls who knew saw me as a boy even if not the same. Afterall who could blame them when I myself felt the same way. My Mum taught be about the day to day struggles women deal with and I very much took that to heart. Honestly the way some of the boys acted towards girls in my class outright appalled me. I became invested in Feminism and equal rights which also spanned I to my experience with Autism and my own femininity (which had been policed just in the opposite direction, aka made fun of/discouraged). In the later years of Sixth Form I became friendly finally with people again after some therapy which also arose from me being on my own (was supported by a ta for most of my schooling, we had an autism centre in the school I went too) I grew very close to the girls in the group we would natter and gossip about all sorts. I kinda felt honoured that they considered me trustworthy enough to include in conversations they didn’t include the two other guys in. Also around this time people started asking me if I was Gay I was mostly confused, because I wasn’t Gay, Asexual yes technically (but did not have word for that yet), But not gay. I liked Women but romantically only.

Fast forward it’s university and I became a sort of shut in again. I commented to Uni and after my first year I hated the course. But my Mum refused to let me take a break or quit as by the time I’d had enough I was ‘halfway’ so her logic was to push through. Not that my degree has done anything for me. Anyway this is where feelings first started. Now in my early 20s I was finally catching up to my peers not that I’ve ever full caught up. I was fully realised as a feminine guy, however that never felt right. I also still felt outcast for this. That’s when I finally started to explore gender. Upon turning 18 I hate being called a Man and tried desperately to get people to call me a Guy as it felt less Man more neutral. So I after university came out as non-binary, I started to pass my nails get my hair dyed, But it still didn’t feel right. My Mum supported me until I bought a Jumper from the women's section. I cared deeply about my mum and her backlash was enough to push me back in the closet back to bring a feminine guy, but now my mum instead of being sensitive around my gender, it felt like she empathised my manners, which honestly disgusted me. I near had a referral for the gender clinic back here but due to this I basically let it go. One of things that made me so happy was just how unmanly I was including the fact I didn’t start growing any sort of facial hair until I was in my mid 20s and I grew and kept my hair long and it made me so so happy. Anyway back I went for a few years.

Then after finding out about Femboys it all came back, maybe this is what I am. But I quickly came to the conclusion again this was not right. I realised deep down I wished I where born a girl. I had thought that my childhood would have been easier if I was, the my behaviours would have been more acceptable. Which bought me great internal conflict. Afterall I’m a feminist. I adore the women in my life and my immediate reaction was one of disgust and hate for myself. How could I feel this way when I knew full well I struggle women have to deal with, the stereotypes my femininity fell into, the fact I could be a man and be all these things. I had a privilege one that I understood yet never felt, because I completely hated everything about being a man. So many parts of myself were restrained or restricted and I felt completely uncomfortable with myself. It turned out I was asexual for example because I couldn’t see myself as a man in situation like that ever. Still I spent the next 2 years fighting over all this with myself internally. I’d let my mum know and our relationship soured even more so because it. Over the course of the 2 years I fought with myself daily over my feelings, one side of me telling me what I was feeling was an offence to the women (cis and trans) I cared about. The other side in full acceptance that I did feel this way. I’d give away anything ANYTHING to have been born in a body that matched my mind. Again I don’t want to be a Male, full stop. I always have felt more female than male and why that’s something that’s not easily explained it’s just how I genuinely feel. All the acknowledgment and beliefs about you don’t have to be a girl to be feminine don’t seem to matter the logic doesn’t apply to that feeling.

Eventually with the support of some friends I finally go back to get a referral. Meanwhile completely separate thing but my Mums health was getting worse. She had Breast Cancer on and off since I was young also. I 2023 she was finally made terminal after over 23 years since her first diagnose (probably 5ish years of remission between first first and follow ups). Her being made terminal was a big wake up call for me for many things include this situation. For a while the debate stopped in my head because it was filled with worry about her but once that eased off (she lived about a year longer than they predicted) it all came back and hit me really hard. I was training 27 at the end of year. I was miserable my body disgusted me and I didn’t want to waste anymore time wondering if HRT would help and if it would allow me to finally put to bed some of my feelings. So I started to DIY just before my 27th birthday. I felt a tonne better within the two weeks and despite the fact it’s not like a magic bullet pill that took away all my dysphoria and stuff it’s helped to insane degree. My Mum obviously did not support me which was hard and broke my heart deeply since she was the women I have always looked up the most in my life. That all it’s own story really.

Right now I’m sort of back I a bad way. Sure due to my Autism amongst other things I still have allot of mental health issues. I’ve never worked, have allot of anxiety, issues with depression but again I had these before transition and arguably they where better and being more manageable after until the Court Ruling early this year. Since that ruling I have been referred and put back into Therapy again because of the effect it’s had on me amongst other stuff going on. I’m honestly terrified of what it all means. All I want is to live my life in peace as myself. I know you’re all going to have different views on what that should look like but all I ask is to have some empathy. I’m literally scared, I just want to be like any other woman and get on with my life. Instead it feels like the whole world is crumbling around me and people view me as undesirable, undeserving and less of a person. Tell me who would sign on to feel like this?

it’s just so hard for me. I’m not even sure if what I’ve said is any good but I’ve just tried to describe best I can my experience and how I feel. I wish you all a pleasant day and please feel free to ask anything. Also apologises for any bad grammar/spelling mistakes, Dyslexic too.

OP posts:
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6
Helleofabore · 28/08/2025 08:54

upseedaisee · 28/08/2025 08:49

I think I know.
Didn't someone on the Trans Reddit board have a pop at Mumsnet (I'm sure I there is a thread about it somewhere on here). I think they were threatning an infiltration to provoke a response that they could then report in the hope of getting Mumsnet shut down.
Colour me cynical, it all seems rather contrived.

Really?

Well, imagine if they all came across and found the opposite to what they believed. Well except for the ones who buzz through with snide undermining posts. If you know what I mean.

Namechangefordaughterevasion · 28/08/2025 08:54

OP you say 'I just want to be like any other woman'.

What does even that mean? All women are different. We aren't a homogenous group of long haired, lipstick wearing, dress wearing clones. The only things we have in common are chromosomes, hormones and reproductive organs and with the best will in the world you don't have those and never can.

I'm you have had such a hard time in life but trying to achieve a biological impossibility won't bring you the happiness, contentment and acceptance you deserve.

Accepting that you are a man with some stereotypically feminine characteristics might work better.

Soontobe60 · 28/08/2025 08:55

SouthWamses · 28/08/2025 08:34

You sound like a thoroughly decent intelligent man.

Thoroughly decent intelligent men do not falsify their documents, destroy single sex spaces, reinforce harmful sex stereotypes or demand other’s uphold their fantasy.

There is a lot of female socialisation at play in this thread.

You’re not wrong!

TimeForATerf · 28/08/2025 08:59

You see, I read the title and this epitomises Trans to me. Here’s my story, whether you want to hear it or not, me, me, me.

And why I continue to believe that this is a mental health issue. I do not wish you harm, I wish you happiness and acceptance of the body you were born with, but Trans is not real, it’s just a umbrella term for an illness of one kind or another.

SouthWamses · 28/08/2025 08:59

Burntt · 28/08/2025 08:49

I’m autistic and never felt right as a girl. Hang around with the boys until we aged out of that and I wasn’t upset at bullied for being different. I’m so glad I didn’t learn about trans until I was well into my 20s because I’ve never felt right I’ve always wanted acceptance and to change. But that’s not about my sex. You are born the sex you are you cannot change that. I hate female clothes make up the housework, I like DIY and other male stuff. I do everything ‘male’ by the trans definition. But still a woman. Just like you can do anything you like legally that’s feminine and still be fine as a man!

my advice is get a job or volunteer you need to get out your own head. And to be blunt half the female experience is misogyny and sexism, yes you gave experience of bullying but having men paid more, talk over you, get praise for BASIC care tasks while it’s just expected from women? You have not lived in the real world of work and parenthood and have no idea what that’s like for women. If you like female’ clothes go for it. The comments earlier about feminism being about destroying the boxes were spot on. Men can do their nails and wear dresses! Most women don’t care what you wear and look like but we want our single sex spaces safe and we want the prizes and funds and crime stats for women to actually be for women. If you were female brained you would care about this stuff not be so self centred that that’s irrelevant when it comes to your comfort because you are the special call of people- that’s so very very male.

There is nothing female about housework, which is pretty uniformly hated. What there is is patriarchal oppression that demands women do it because men have more power and they hate housework too.

VaddaABeetch · 28/08/2025 09:00

You want whey you want when you want it

You can’t have it. You’ll never be ‘like any other woman’ because you are not a woman nor can you ever be

I’m sorry for you if that makes you sad or adds to your trauma. Your trauma does not give your special status that allows you access to womanhood.

You are a man and will always be one. You’d be happier if embraced that & learnt to deal with your trauma.

MagpiePi · 28/08/2025 09:01

Helleofabore · 28/08/2025 08:54

Really?

Well, imagine if they all came across and found the opposite to what they believed. Well except for the ones who buzz through with snide undermining posts. If you know what I mean.

I can’t see the OP coming back despite saying he wanted it to be a bit of an AMA thread.

GleisZwei · 28/08/2025 09:02

MagpiePi · 28/08/2025 09:01

I can’t see the OP coming back despite saying he wanted it to be a bit of an AMA thread.

The cynic in me wonders if he potentially wanted some material to show how nasty/unreasonable/unkind we were, when really he's seen compassion and clear statements of truth.

deadpan · 28/08/2025 09:03

You're having a difficult time and it seems as though it's been difficult for a long while. Please don't be scared about the SC ruling. A lot of misinformation has been bandied about around this and I fear it's hurt the ordinary quiet trans people, like you seem to be, the most.
Women don't want trans people to not exist, we never have, we aren't transphobic we just want our things to be ours. You seem to recognise that you aren't female, I know you sympathise with a lot of things females go through and that's great. No one is suggesting you are automatically a physical threat, we just want to live our lives the way you want to live yours, but you're a male and si gle sex spaces were meant to be just that, single sex only.
Most of are sad that Stonewall etc haven't spent their time campaigning for spaces and services especially for trans people, instead of vilifying women wanting to keep our spaces just for us. In an ideal world that's what should have happened and I feel a sense of injustice for trans people that that's not what happened.

Helleofabore · 28/08/2025 09:03

Ereshkigalangcleg · 28/08/2025 08:02

Have you never considered that many women also could write their tough life story to “help people to understand” why they need single sex spaces and people not to pretend that men are women? In fact JK Rowling did just that, no? What sort of reaction do you think they’d get from TRAs?

Imagine if we did that? There would be nothing but ‘So your sad story made you a fascist? Get over it and cope and seethe!’

These threads do always have the feeling of waiting for the other shoe to drop. But I remember once it went well enough.

PennyAnnLane · 28/08/2025 09:03

I have a friend who desperately wants to be a famous singer, he went on all the TV talent shows, paid for studio time and sent off tapes to record companies, won karaoke competitions and was told by his mum and all his aunties what a brilliant singer he is and so on, but sadly for him he is deluded, sure he carry a tune in a crowded pub to a backing track but he doesn’t have a powerful or interesting voice, he’s not particularly attractive and he hasn’t got the charisma to make it in showbiz but of course none of his friends would tell him this because it would upset him so he wasted his time, money and energy and got frustrated - why could no one see his star potential?

I feel like a man identifying as a woman is like my friend, you’re never going to achieve what it is you envision in your head, and you’re always going to feel unfulfilled and ultimately waste your energy on something that’s never going to happen, when you could be doing something much more productive with your life.

Didshejustsaythatoutloud · 28/08/2025 09:03

You don't need a label honey. Just be the best you, you can be.
I feel pretty indifferent towards trans people. We are all just people, trying to get on in life.
I wish you peace within yourself.
🫂 💐

Beowulfa · 28/08/2025 09:04

I'm sorry you were bullied at school by toxic macho idiots. Wouldn't the best Fuck You to them be to live your life as a happy, healthy man confidently wearing what you like and socialising with women?

Fetaface · 28/08/2025 09:04

What are you doing to deal with the root cause.....trauma?

DrBlackbird · 28/08/2025 09:04

And importantly GET OFF THE INTERNET! Spend some time in the world - volunteer with those with even harder lives than yours, or with animals, or planting trees. Develop hobbies that put you with people who don't give a damn about your labels - go running, join an art group.

I’d add get off Discord and Reddit in particular where young NGC men are groomed into believing they’re trans. Encouraged to take harmful female hormones. Young autistic people seem particularly vulnerable to having an identity imposed on them by others. Social media does this on steroids.

andthat · 28/08/2025 09:05

Heffapotamus · 28/08/2025 06:57

My heart goes out to you. You have had such a rough time.
But, honestly, in your shoes, I’d give up trying to label yourself in any way. You are not a label (trans, femboy, etc etc etc), you are you. You are snugpeach, trying to make your way in a world that is always going to be challenging for someone who is not neurotypical.
I honestly believe that the current trend for trying to label/categorise everyone/everything, is doing more harm than good both for individuals and in society.
snugpeach, you are you - a unique human being, with your own strengths and weaknesses, precious, important and valued.

This.

wishing you all the best and so sorry for the loss of your mum.

CoffeeLipstickKeys · 28/08/2025 09:06

No wolves, no den. I want to acknowledge your post,and the difficulties you’ve experienced. Bullying and bereavement is a lot for one person to carry. You have written honestly and I imagine it’s all a bit raw.You have experienced bullying and being ostracised and gravitated to the group who treated you with acceptance and empathy - women. You feel aligned and bonded to women,like their company, feel it’s your fit. Affinity or habituation is not an indicator of you being a woman. You can be an ally, be a supporter of women as a man. You’re not a woman.

Going forward,I wish you well. I hope you find some balance and acceptance were you feel safe and happy as the young man you are.

Feelingleftoutagain · 28/08/2025 09:08

Do you accept your autism? Do you know that being autistic will make you feel different? I speak from experience both my boys are and I am too, we have had many conversations about how it affects day to day life.

Corinthiana · 28/08/2025 09:09

I am sorry for your loss. I'm also sorry to hear that you were bullied by boys for being "weird and gay". It must have been so lonely and painful for you.
As pp have said, the problem is toxic masculinity. You didn't fit in with that. That's not a problem. You are you, and need to find the positives there. There is nothing wrong with being a man who has strong feminine tendencies and preferences, it's all a construct anyway.
.I think you need to get some help and support and you need to build your self acceptance. You are a man, but this is the kind of man that you are and there's nothing wrong with that.
Don't imagine that a female identity will be the way to solve all this.

ninjahamster · 28/08/2025 09:09

youre very brave posting here as mumsnet is very anti trans im afraid.

But personally, i accept you. If living as a woman makes you happier, then i have no issue with that. I have trans friends and since transitioning, they are so much happier.
You still sound very confused though so take your time x

OneBadKitty · 28/08/2025 09:10

Your post is full of stereotypical and mysogynistic views. You also have some serious sexist and prejudiced views about men.

We need to lose this idea that men are one homogenous mass and women are another. Gender doesn't even exist in my view, it's completely made up by ourselves, only your sex relevant. You can behave however you feel or see fit no matter what sex you are. Being kind, caring, sensitive etc. does not equate with femininity- you can be all those things and still be a man. You can be none of those things and still be a woman. Having empathy with women because of some men's behaviour and views about women does not make you a woman. Be a man and stand up for women when you see them being treated badly by a man- you do not have to be a woman to stand with women!

timesublimelysilencesthewhys · 28/08/2025 09:10

Seems like the OP had to go for a nap after writing that loooong post.

user1492757084 · 28/08/2025 09:10

Everyone is their own unique person.
Most are born male and female and character traits between the two do overlap all the time.
It is fine to be a gentle man with feminine preferences. Fine to be a tough woman.

Relax and learn to like and love your own body and personality.
You don't have to swap sex surgically or injure yourself to be taken seriously just as you are.

Samscaff · 28/08/2025 09:10

I’m sorry you’ve had, and still have, such a difficult life. You’ve been very unlucky. But your unhappiness, your cruel treatment by boys and men, wishing you’d been born female, and feeling how you think females feel, don't make you female. The plain fact is that humans can’t change sex.

You seem to have old-fashioned, stereotyped views of what it means to be a man or a woman. Gentle, kind, empathetic men are still men, and plenty of women are, unfortunately, not kind or empathetic and are not interested in fashion, long hair or fancy fingernails.

I hope you can lead a peaceful, safe and happy life, behaving and dressing however you like. But every cell in your body knows you’re not actually a woman. Some 'trans' people accept this and still lead happy lives, while acknowledging that they haven’t actually become the other sex.

5128gap · 28/08/2025 09:14

The experiences you describe are not the experiences and feelings of a woman. They are the experiences and feelings of a man wanting to trade a set of stereotypes he feels don't fit him for a set he finds more attractive. They are the experiences of a man who feels excluded from maleness and rejects it, seeking refuge amongst women, and thinking he wants to consolidate his place amongst them by being one.
The irony is, you'd probably find much more genuine relationships with women as a man who doesn't subscribe to male stereotypes than as a man expecting women to treat him as a woman. Ime, the latter tends to involve a great deal of dishonesty. Women, in their pity and 'kindness' may pretend to see you as a woman, but they will always be aware that you're a man, so their interactions will be forced and disingenuous.
The feeling of extra special inclusion and kindness you may experience isn't the way we normally treat each other, it's special behaviour to over compensate due to pity.
This might feel lovely, but its actually unequal and patronising. The best relationships are based on respect, and you may find yourself getting more of that if you live life as a man who challenges stereotypes, rather than a stereotype of a woman.

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