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Confusion about a family member's gender identity -- no hate please

This is a personal question . Any hateful comments will be deleted! I would love insights from any of your experiences.

A young family member, now almost 30, has gone from being a gentle boy who liked his hair long, to "non-binary" to "trans-feminine". There has been no mention of wanting hormone treatment or surgery, and no name change, but frequent statements like "I am not a man".

This bothers me for a number of reasons but I think the main one is that I see this person as very much like me -- and I would never claim not to be a man. We are both gentle people with long hair, and fairly high-pitched voices, who enjoy wearing flowing clothing. To me it has been very important that the spectrum of manhood includes men like us. I feel like people similar to me who decide they are not men, are leaving manhood to rougher types, and narrowing everyone's possibilities.

The other personal bother is that I can search deeply within myself and I do not have a gender identity. Being a man is simply the hand that nature dealt me through my anatomy. I highly doubt whether most people have any strong sense of gender apart from their body, and I fear that this young person and many others are being carried along on a social trend that tells them they are supposed to have a gender identity regardless of what their body is like.

I have been and will continue to be supportive of this young person, but this place lets me share these worries!

Your thoughts? :)
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the main one is that I see this person as very much like me -- and I would never claim not to be a man
So it makes you question whether you should revaluate that last statement and that makes you uncomfortable.

These two statements seem a little contradictory:
To me it has been very important that the spectrum of manhood includes men like us.
I fear that this young person and many others are being carried along on a social trend that tells them they are supposed to have a gender identity

If you feel like it shouldn't be necessary to have a gender identity at all, why should one include any type at all?
@NerdyPotato Because to me "man" is not a gender identity. It's an anatomical situation that comes with social expectations. I would like those social expectations to be as broad and free as possible.
@ThePatientAnarchist those social expectations are pretty much what a gender identity is. The only problem is that those are generally linked to anatomical situations.
@NerdyPotato I would think of those expectations as coming from "outside" but a gender identity as coming from "inside".
@ThePatientAnarchist I think it's both. The expectations come from the outside, how you feel about how they apply to you, or which set applies to you, comes from the inside.