Personally. I appreciate what this manga is trying to do, I really do, and I enjoy Hime's new butch look, that said, I'd be lying if I said the writing wasn't seriously flawed. Even looking back at previous chapters, knowing what they where leading up to, Im still confused. Like the chapter where Hime talks to her parents, should be one of those chapters that you look back on and go "of course", but I just looked back on it, and I'm still confused what that chapter is trying to say. I'm, not even sure what it is, but there is something about the way this manga is told that I have difficulty following.
Right? Like that whole chapter is a monologue about something and I still am not sure what that something was. My issue is that the stances this manga preaches are often either tedious bullshit or extensive navel gazing with no clear point.
I don't think it's that complicated? She adopted the boys uniform to support Akira rather than because it was her own sense of identity. She isn't -really- comfortable in it, because she adopted it to support someone else rather than to express herself, but she also is afraid to abandon it, because she's still worried about Akira-chan. She was hiding it from her parents because she was afraid of what they'd say, but when they find out they make it clear they support her in what she wants to do, and think if she's not sure about something, she should try it out and see how it feels. (Her parents are actually pretty awesome.) She takes that to heart and decides to go back to the girl's uniform because, hey, if you aren't sure try it out and see how it feels.
Of course, as a result, she got attention she didn't want from a boy she has less than no interest in, and the girl she likes got hurt and pissed at her, so hey, okay, that sucked, time to try something different, which is when she shows up with the butch look. The sweater says "I'm not out to dress like a guy" but the pants and the haircut say "this isn't for you, boys."