Friday, February 13, 2026

Would I Be a Femboy If I Were Young Today?


I’ve been thinking about this while re-capping a Heathkit power supply and waiting for the soldering iron to come back up to temperature.

Back when I was young, if you were a boy who liked skirts, soft fabrics or anything vaguely feminine, there wasn’t a subreddit for it. There certainly wasn’t a TikTok trend with pastel lighting and thigh-highs. There was just you, your secret interests and a very strong cultural suggestion that you keep those interests to yourself.

I grew up identifying first as a ham radio nerd, then a computer nerd. I was the kid who preferred manuals to footballs, oscilloscopes to engines. I liked precision, systems, patterns. In hindsight, it probably shouldn’t surprise anyone (including me) that I also liked the ritual of femininity: the careful coordination of clothes, the technical challenge of makeup, the quiet satisfaction of “getting it right.”

At the time, though, crossdressing wasn’t framed as identity or expression. It was framed as something you did despite yourself, not because of yourself. You either hid it, joked about it or treated it as a guilty pleasure best compartmentalized like a forbidden frequency you never logged.

Fast-forward a few decades.

Now I look around and see young men who openly call themselves femboys, often unapologetically, sometimes joyfully. They’re tech-savvy, online, ironic, self-aware. Many of them are exactly the sort of kids who, in my day, would have been building PCs from spare parts or memorizing band plans.

And that’s where the uncomfortable question sneaks in:

If I were 19 today instead of… well, decidedly not 19, would I be one of them?

Honestly? Probably.

The aesthetic experimentation, the blending of masculinity and femininity, the playful refusal to take traditional gender rules seriously—it all feels very familiar. The difference is that today there’s language, community and visibility. What I experienced as isolation and confusion, they experience as a label and a feed.

I don’t feel envy, exactly. I’ve earned my wrinkles, my call signs, my hard-won confidence. But I do feel a strange kind of recognition. Watching these young men feels like seeing an alternate timeline version of myself... one who didn’t have to wait to stop worrying so much about what the civilians might think.

Am I a femboy now? No. I’m a senior crossdresser with bifocals, a well-organized radio shack and a closet that finally reflects who I’ve always been.

But if I were young today?

I suspect I’d still be a nerd. I suspect I’d still love systems, signals and aesthetics.

And yes, I suspect I’d be posting outfit pics between firmware updates, wondering why anyone ever thought these things were incompatible.

Funny how some signals take decades to propagate.



Source: ShopBop
Wearing ShopBop



Paweł Góral
Paweł Góral femulating Céline Dion on Polish television‘s Twoja Twarz Brzmi Znajomo.
Click here to view this femulation on YouTube.

3 comments:

  1. Your article also has me wondering the same about myself. Growing up in the 70s and 80s, you never would have wanted to have been outed as a femboy. The GenX ridicule machine would have been in full force. As a result, my CD joy remained securely hidden. But I wonder if the peers of a femboy today would act so rudely. Are they a more enlightened bunch who celebrate someone who is expressing their true self? I can only see this subject through my own 50-something year old lens, so I'm curious how the younger generation views CD. Are our young people leading us to a more open and welcoming society?

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  2. I was reading a ham radio magazine and came across a photo and it struck me that she was in femulation mode. Puttering around the workbench enfemme has always been enjoyable. I realized that there are many hams who are readers of this blog and are hungry for presentation tips, heel size and shape wear. Recapping radios, adjusting bra straps for comfort and sorting out silk blouses by colour in a closet is therapy for our soul. I love being a dah dit Dah dit dah dit dit

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  3. Stana, your post is interesting and as me thinking. I'm not sure my own motivations to be feminine align with those of today's femboys. While I love female fashions and styles I possess a feminine component to my personality that can only be expressed by dressing as a woman out in the world. I wonder if a femboy is expressing a sense of fashion, which could explain wearing only parts of a feminine wardrobe. But I also wonder if their outward expression is manifested by some deeper feeling. It would be fun to chat with some of them to learn more about why they express the way they do. Of course, like so many of us wondered, maybe they don't actually know with certainty. Clearly though, today's youth don't cling to the fears that kept us in the closet for so many years.

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