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Thread: I was supposed to have been a girl.

  1. #1
    New Member Paula Rogers's Avatar
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    I was supposed to have been a girl.

    Out of the blue one day while I was helping my mother in the kitchen, she said, "We were really hoping for a girl, but instead we got you." This rocked me to a core as a teenager. My mother taught me how to cook, clean, set a table, arrange flowers and do just about everything one would expect a female to be skilled in doing. I started crossdressing early and when I heard this, I wondered if this was the reason. To this day, while I look like a standard issue male on the outside, I'd say my brain is half and half, equal parts death stare/get out of my way and here, I'll put those flowers in water for you. My wife will even admit I am better than her at these things, though I usually let her get the credit. So, how many of you were told you were supposed to have been a girl and how does it impact you now?

  2. #2
    Platinum Member alwayshave's Avatar
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    I have a three older sisters and my mother had twins boys who did not survive prior to my birth. My parents really wanted a boy. I stopped trying to figure out why I dress a while ago, but I know it's not because my parents wanted a girl.
    Please call me Jamie, I always_have crossdressed, I always will, "alwayshave".

  3. #3
    Senior Member JocelynJames's Avatar
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    I have 4 older brothers, one younger and no sisters. Who knows if they really wanted a girl in the mix, but I believe my younger brother and I were ?whoops babies.? My mother did confide in me that when they found out she was pregnant for us last two she was sincerely hoping for girls. She never got one until her first grandchild and then cared for a neighbors 2 daughters from birth until teens.
    ~Joss
    ?To become the queen, I first honored the princess within?curious, delicate, and brave. Every step I take, every thread of silk I wrap around me, is a coronation of my truth.?

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    Miss Conception Karren H's Avatar
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    My mother told me the exact same thing. Even offered to make me a dress for Halloween a few times. Was not until my sister was born that I got the urge to wear womens clothing, I was 7. That urge has not subsided in 7 decades. Thanks mom! lol! Strange but wonder how many other mothers did that to their sons?
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    Aspiring Member Debs's Avatar
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    My dad always told me my mum was desperate for a girl, even started buying girls baby clothes before I was born. Sometimes I think that my mums craving and desires for a girl had a chemical reaction to my dna !!, just my opinion though, theres no scientific proof unfortunatly, or is there ? maybe Im the proof !!, lol

  6. #6
    Hot Geezer Girl docrobbysherry's Avatar
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    Funny, I never asked about that and they never said. Can't ask them now!
    U can't keep doing the same things over and over and expect to enjoy life to the max. When u try new things, even if they r out of your comfort zone, u may experience new excitement and growth that u never expected.

    Challenge yourself and pursue your passions! When your life clock runs out, you'll have few or NO REGRETS!

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    Junior Member LianaT's Avatar
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    My mom had a long relationship with a man who I believed was my godfather until about two years ago when I was told he was my biological dad. I'm 59 now. He passed away back in 2007. He was a crossdresser and identified as female. I didn't know anything about him since he was out of my life when I was about 8. He introduced himself to me at my stepfathers wake when I was 28. I didn't know who he was. Anyway, I feel I am female in my thinking and ways. My wife accepts me and said recently that I am 70% female and 30% male. I still suffer with gender dysphoria. I tried to be more manly but mostly people see through me with just how I present myself even without wearing anything feminine. Men kind of remove themselves from me thinking I'm queer. My mom dressed me as a kid and saw my father in me. I would probably be a good candidate showing gender dysphoria is herediatry. i'm happy now being me even though I tried for years to shed my skin.

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    She never out and out said it and she wasn?t happy when she would catch me in or with femme attire in my room. But she did dress me as a witch in a real skirt blouse and heels. She also ensured I could cook and clean.

  9. #9
    its important mykell's Avatar
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    no one ever told me so ....also cant ask....through conversations with doctors and a person who ghosted me....came to a conclusion i may have been intersexed and accepted that i should have been born a girl when i was in my fifties....now i just accept that i have the spirits of both....
    ....Mykell
    i dressed like a girl and i liked it! crossdressing...theirs an app for that

  10. #10
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    So, I've never seen any scientific evidence that crossdressing is hereditary, as in the DNA.

    The theory I'm fond of is a hormonal imbalance in the mom during gestation.

    In the first trimester, the parts (gonads) develop. Normally, if you're XY, you get male parts. However, the brain develops in the second trimester. If there is too much estrogen in the second trimester, the brain becomes feminized to a greater or lesser extent. This explains the dysphoria. Male parts, female brain. After that, nature and nurture take their course.

    It's also possible that the hormonal imbalance during gestation can be repeated with multiple children. That would account for what what looks like hereditary DNA, when it's just hormonal imbalances during gestation.

  11. #11
    Platinum Member kimdl93's Avatar
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    Common topic. And for every anecdote supporting a cause, there is another supporting another cause. As they say, an N of 1 might explain one case, nothing more.

    Birth order, hormonal exposure, various medications during gestation, and then the various presumed parental and experiential influences?.all fine hypotheses, but nothing more.

    And to further complicate the matter?if you want to discuss causality, causality of what? Fetish dressers? Autogynephilia? Gender Variant, transgender?

    Humans see patterns, often patterns that only exist in their imaginations. It makes us susceptible to jumping to conclusions.
    Last edited by kimdl93; 01-06-2025 at 11:19 AM.
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  12. #12
    Oh to be an English Rose Jane G's Avatar
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    I was supposed to be a Hotel. My mother pointed to a Hotel one day when I was around 12 years and told me, they were planning to by it once, but then I came along and it all changed. Never quite forgave her for that one till her dieing day. Certainly zero encouragement or support from my parents with regard to my gender dysphoria at that age either. Unless you consider a father's belt encouragement.

  13. #13
    Senior Member SaraLin's Avatar
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    I was never told that I was supposed to have been a girl.


    I just knew it.

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    I had a pretty similar experience in my childhood. When my Mom got pregnant with me she was really hoping for a girl. She said that when she found out I was going to be a boy, she was afraid that she wouldn't love me. Once I was born though, she said that she loved me immediately, but from what she has told me it sounds like she still really wanted a girl. When I was a baby my Mom dressed me up like a girl. She made a dress for me, did my makeup and everything. And she says that I absolutely loved it. My Dad was a Marine, when he found out she had dressed me up, he was furious. So it didn't happen again after that as far as I know. But when I was a toddler I used to sneak under the sink and get into my Mom's makeup to try it on. I don't remember any of that. But I do remember when I was about 11, suddenly one day getting the overwhelming urge to try on lipstick, and within a year or two after that I was trying on my Mom's shirts, skirts, dresses, and heels. I've tried to tell my Mom that I'm trans, unfortunately she doesn't want to believe it. Although I've been in denial about it for the last 10 years, so I haven't exactly brought it up. I'm starting to think I need to open up about it more, I'm getting past the point in my life where I'm afraid of being rejected for it. The way I'm starting to look at it is if someone doesn't want me in their life because my gender makes them uncomfortable then that's their loss.

  15. #15
    Member Cassiek's Avatar
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    Hi Paula I have 3 older brothers and a younger sister. My father passed when I was 10 and mother when I was 21. While I did all the boy stuff as expected I often gravitated to wanting to be with the girls. Looking back I was more interested in being friends with them instead of having a typical boy girl relationship. I dabbled in my mothers lingerie drawers when I was very young. I often wonder if I should have been a girl. When I was married I did most of the house decorating and most of the cooking and things most wives did.

  16. #16
    Member Sabine7's Avatar
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    We together with my wife used to share chores including cleaning and cooking. Sabine would take it over completely if only allowed and accepted to do en-femme. My mother told me many years ago that I had been expected to be born as a girl and then I grew up in a mature female dominated environment.
    Last edited by Sabine7; 01-06-2025 at 11:03 AM.
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  17. #17
    Aspiring Member Michaela Jane's Avatar
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    Not me, I was the eldest of 3 boys. I think Mum would have loved a girl and my youngest brother, born 4 years after the other was probably the parentals hoping for a girl.

  18. #18
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    I believe I have mentioned on this site that my mother told me many times I was suppose to be a girl. My older brother is fourteen months older than me. Her idea of the perfect family was husband, wife, older son and younger daughter. My father's sperm did not cooperate. As a really really young boy I remember putting on one of my mother's nightgowns and crying in bed that she did not love me because I was not a girl. She consoled me and to my recollection she never said those words again. However, my brother was her favorite child. He got all the new stuff and I got the hand-me-downs. He got the new tricycle and gave me the push with feet riding fire engine. He got the new bicycle and I got the tricycle. He got the bigger bike and I got his old bike. He got a new larger baseball mitt and I had to suffer making errors with an outgrown mitt. On so it went on and on. When it came to discipline she doled it out with a belt across the back of the thighs to the extent it would now be deemed child abuse. When she passed on at age 92, I sang a chorus of "Ding-dong, the witch is dead!"

    I often wonder if she tried some folk law or pseudo medical treatment to alter the sex of the child in the womb. It wasn't until puberty and the raging hormones that I became interested in women's clothing. Maybe, I should have consulted a shrink?

  19. #19
    Oh to be an English Rose Jane G's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cody0018 View Post
    I had a pretty similar experience in my childhood. When my Mom got pregnant with me she was really hoping for a girl. She said that when she found out I was going to be a boy, she was afraid that she wouldn't love me. Once I was born though, she said that she loved me immediately, but from what she has told me it sounds like she still really wanted a girl. When I was a baby my Mom dressed me up like a girl. She made a dress for me, did my makeup and everything. And she says that I absolutely loved it. My Dad was a Marine, when he found out she had dressed me up, he was furious. So it didn't happen again after that as far as I know. But when I was a toddler I used to sneak under the sink and get into my Mom's makeup to try it on. I don't remember any of that. But I do remember when I was about 11, suddenly one day getting the overwhelming urge to try on lipstick, and within a year or two after that I was trying on my Mom's shirts, skirts, dresses, and heels. I've tried to tell my Mom that I'm trans, unfortunately she doesn't want to believe it. Although I've been in denial about it for the last 10 years, so I haven't exactly brought it up. I'm starting to think I need to open up about it more, I'm getting past the point in my life where I'm afraid of being rejected for it. The way I'm starting to look at it is if someone doesn't want me in their life because my gender makes them uncomfortable then that's their loss.
    Welcome to the forum cody. Getting passed childhood influences from important sources can take a long time. But believe me it is worth the wait and the effort when you finally realise you except who you are.

  20. #20
    New Member Paula Rogers's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cassiek View Post
    Hi Paula I have 3 older brothers and a younger sister. My father passed when I was 10 and mother when I was 21. While I did all the boy stuff as expected I often gravitated to wanting to be with the girls. Looking back I was more interested in being friends with them instead of having a typical boy girl relationship. I dabbled in my mothers lingerie drawers when I was very young. I often wonder if I should have been a girl. When I was married I did most of the house decorating and most of the cooking and things most wives did.
    This is me exactly. I had way more girl friends than guy friends and it continues to this day. I never really related to most guys. I love woman and everything about them - completely heterosexual - we all want to be just like our sports heroes when we are young and often times try to emulate and dress like them - my hero has always been the feminine form and I wanted to know as much as possible about them.

  21. #21
    Exploring NEPA now Cheryl T's Avatar
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    I wasn't told, but by accident when I went to get our marriage license I read my birth certificate.
    It had a line for sex and mine had an F that was crossed out and M written next to it.
    I don't wear women's clothes, I wear MY clothes !

  22. #22
    Platinum Member kimdl93's Avatar
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    By the time I came along, my mother had many sons in a row. She actually received a sympathy card from a neighbor after the announcement of her 7ths male child. It might explain my name, and all those prior male births might?.emphaiss on might? have contributed to my gender identity.
    O wad some Pow'r the giftie gie us
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  23. #23
    Member Robyn n TN's Avatar
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    Steffi, I agree and I am confident my mom took a drug during pregnancy to minimize a miscarriage. This drug was a very high dose synthetic Estrogen....
    " I have to tell you, sweetheart, my breasts are as smooth and beautiful as the day that I bought them " Lola from Kinky Boots

  24. #24
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    Steffi/Robyn; yep, my mom had three miscarriages before me. I've never known if my mother took a drug to minimize the chance of a miscarriage, but it's possible. This was in the 60s.

    Paula; I would have a hard time accepting such words from my mom My mom was very much hoping for a girl. I was her last hope. I don't recall her dressing me up as a girl or anything like that, but while she did say she had always wanted a daughter, she always made it crystal clear to me how much she loved me except for once. That's when she found my pantyhose stash (then the extent of my CDing wardrobe) when I was 14. She came down on me like a ton of bricks, read me the riot act, and read passages from the Bible. It's the only thing in my upbringing that I can look back and wish she had done differently. Her wrath just taught me to hide better until I got out on my own.

    Liana; That is awfully sad about your biological dad

  25. #25
    Member Bluesman's Avatar
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    I was never told I was "supposed to be a girl", but I am the youngest of 3 boys, and I know my mother would have liked to have had a girl. She told me once at a very young age that my name would have been Mary had I been a girl. I also remember older relatives who would remark, "You're so 'purty' (this was the deep south...), you should have been a girl!" One adult cousin in particular always wore bright red lipstick and would kiss me on the lips, leaving my lips red and then tease me that I was wearing lipstick. Did that have any effect on my CDing? Dunno.

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