I remember my mom telling me that my name was going to be "Scout" after the To Kill A Mockingbird character.
I don't look or feel like a Scout.
I couldn't imagine too many people would. seems more like an old timey nickname for an adventuresome kid (which I think thats what the context was in the book)
Thats really the interesting point to the whole thing imo. I have investment into my name since its what all my documents are filled out in and what I'm used to responding to, but its not something I have any particular emotional attachment to. I don't feel like it defines me.Well, on my end there's also something of a philosophical stance Iguess in that I am still me and wouldn't want a different name JUST because I choose to transition or whatever (and admittedly there seem to be rare isolated incidents of my name being used by women), but I can see people who want to make a symbolic restart too, or that just as they couldn't choose their birth sex and want to fix that, so too they will take control of their names. Which probably ends up saying more about me than anything else really, and admittedly makes me sort of wish I had a more androgynous name in the first place even if I like my name. I hate the feminine versions out there for the most part, and the that's OK (Greer) has trans related baggage and is a kind of odd sounding name anyway.
I'm sorta curious if I could gain that from a name I choose. Ideally it would be able to describe who I always was. At the very least it would help with what gender people would expect from hearing my name.