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The Small Things That Can Make a Big Difference
to Gender Confidence

When people talk about gender confidence, they often focus on major milestones.

Things like coming out, starting hormones, surgery, changing your name, or transitioning socially are all incredibly significant experiences. But in reality, gender confidence is often built through much smaller everyday moments too. Sometimes it’s the little things that quietly help someone feel more like themselves.

As a transgender man, I’ve learned that confidence doesn’t usually appear overnight. It’s something that develops gradually through comfort, self-expression, experimentation, and self-acceptance. And importantly, what helps one person feel confident might look completely different for someone else.

For some people, gender confidence might come from:

• Finding a haircut that feels right
• Wearing clothes that feel affirming
• Using a different name or pronouns
• Changing how they present themselves
• Feeling physically comfortable in their body
• Finding community and support
• Simply allowing themselves to exist authentically

There’s no universal formula for gender expression, and I think that’s important to remember.

For me personally, clothing played a big role. Feeling comfortable in what I wore helped me stop overthinking myself constantly. That experience eventually inspired me to create Casual Reign, a brand focused on comfort, confidence, and gender euphoria for trans men, transmasculine people, AFAB non-binary folk and anyone else who experiences gender euphoria from packing.

One thing I’ve noticed within the trans community, is how often people minimise the importance of these smaller affirming experiences.

But they matter.

Something as simple as:

• A safe and comfortable binder
• A hoodie that fits well
• Packing underwear
• Finding your personal style
• Hearing someone use the correct pronouns
• Seeing someone like yourself represented online

Can genuinely change the way someone moves through the world and sees themselves.

When you spend years feeling disconnected from yourself, those moments of alignment can feel huge.

I also think gender confidence and self-acceptance are deeply connected. There’s often pressure within society, and sometimes even within the LGBTQ+ community, to fit certain expectations or stereotypes. But there is no “correct” way to be trans, non-binary, masculine, feminine, or androgynous. You do not need to earn authenticity.

Confidence also doesn’t always look loud. Sometimes confidence simply looks like feeling calm enough to leave the house without overanalysing yourself all day. And I think more conversations around gender expression should include that nuance.

Not every trans person wants to look hyper-masculine or hyper-feminine, and not every trans person experiences dysphoria in the same way. Some people find confidence through fashion, some through fitness, some through creativity, and others through community. All of those experiences are valid.

That’s why creating supportive spaces matters so much.

Whether it’s through online communities, brands, friendships, creators, or organisations like TransLiving, having spaces where people feel seen and understood can make an enormous difference.

The reality is that confidence is rarely built through one massive transformation. More often, it’s built slowly through small moments of comfort, self-discovery, and self-kindness.

And sometimes, the smallest changes can end up meaning the most.

Remy

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