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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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ninalanyon · 61-69, T
How can there be this 'social trend' you mention and at the same time ' doubt whether most people have any string sense of gender'. If it's a 'social trend' the surely by definition there are lots of people involved.

But regardless of that please just be supportive of him, or her, or they. Just because you can't find a gender identity doesn't mean that they cannot. It also doesn't mean that they are necessarily making a positive statement of identifying with a specific label. They are questioning the label that society has applied to them and that they probably for most of their lives have accepted.

You don't need to worry. Just be supportive.