My Deepest Trans Lesson
I recognized I was trans at the age of 15. But I spent a decade after that being "not 100% certain". I tried in that time to think my way to certainty. I had a psychologist who I thought was helping me to find certainty (but she was actually treating me for a personality disorder). Around and around I went, and I got nowhere.
Then I read a book called In Search of Eve. It was 1990, and I don't know how a copy of that book ended up in my university library in South Africa. It changed my life because it destroyed the certainty delusion. The book presented transition as a ritual that didn't simply express an identity--instead, the ritual shaped and reinforced the identity. I could think till my brains dripped out my ears and it wouldn't help. I had to DO.
It's like a seed can only find out it's a daisy by growing and flowering. Or it can sit in the seed packet forever, wondering.
And this is why I am so angry with the transphobes and their "reasonable people" enablers, throwing obstacles in the way of trans kids to grow and learn and reinforce their identities. Transition is a positive feedback loop that saves people's lives.
Disclaimer: I am autistic and struggle to interpret my internal state. Other trans people have different experiences.
The first my parents heard about it was when my bottom surgery was paid for and scheduled! My mom was mentally unstable and I just kept putting the big conversation off. But mom was brilliant, distressed but totally supportive.