jane russo: two years ago, olivia was diagnosed with gender dysphoria and has now been assessed as notoes not identify as either boy or girl. jane: just watch your fingers. jane: it's hard to know when olivia started changing in the sense of--or not changing, but questioning identity, which i remember us having a conversation when you were five or six, olivia. i think it was five or six. you were saying to me, "mommy, i don't think i'm a girl." and i said, "what do you mean?" and you said--that won't cut through that, olivia. i'll give you a small bit. there you go. swap, do that. i said, "what do you mean?" and you said, "i don't fit in this body." and then you said to me, "i therefore must be a boy because i don't feel like i'm a girl." so olivia, you didn't wanna be a boy, did you? olivia: no. jane: well, at first you did, i thought? olivia: yeah, but i don't wanna be one. jane: i know now but when you were that age, why did i think you thought you might wanna be a boy? olivia: probably because i only knew two genders. jane: it's not sometng you take lightly. if i had a choice, mayb