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Ally in training...

Hey all,

So I'm looking to take an active step here to understand better some things that my straight/white/cis/middle-aged male brain has had a tough time wrapping itself around, particularly in the gender identity front.

I'm working from the understanding of physical sex as the bio-bits and the expressed identity as being separate things, so that part is easy enough.

What's confusing to me though is like this. If we take gender as being an expression of your persona, a set of traits that define one as male, female, or some combination of both then what function does a title/pronoun serve? To assume that some things are masculine or feminine traits seems to put unneeded rigidity to things.

We've had men or women who enjoy things traditionally associated with the other gender for as long as there have been people I expect. If that's the case then what purpose does the need for a gender title serve?

I'll admit personally questioning some things like fairness in cis/trans integrated sports, but that's outside what I'm asking here. Some things like bathroom laws are just society needing to get over itself in thinking our personal parts are all that special.

Certainly not trying to stir up any fights, just trying to get some input from people that have a different life experience than myself. Is it really as simple as a preferred title?

Edit: Just wanted to take a second to thank all the people here who took the time to write some truly extensive thoughts and explanations, even getting into some full on citation-laden studies into neurology that'll give me plenty to digest. You all have shown a great deal of patience with me updating some thinking from the bio/social teachings of 20+ years back. 🙂

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94 comments
  • I’m working from the understanding of physical sex as the bio-bits

    In a purely physical perspective, sexual characteristics don't always fit in a neat binary though, and they can also change.

    It's not that simple though, because there's a whole social structure attached to it. The social structure insists that sex is binary, and enforces roles and rules based on perceived sex. Another part of the social structure is the importance placed on sex. Left and right handedness is also a physical characteristic, but it's not something you use to categorise people in your mental rolodex. If I ask you about your friend Alex, without thinking about it, you'll be able to tell me Alex's sex, because it's something you are taught matters, but it's a flip of a coin as to whether you can tell me whether Alex is left or right handed. And that reason for that is all down to the social importance placed on sex.

    So yeah, sex is "bio bits" but probably not in way you're thinking, and it comes with a whole bunch of social stuff too.

    If we take gender as being an expression of your persona

    It's not.

    then what function does a title/pronoun serve?

    The pronouns people use to talk about you, are indicators of the social aspects I was talking about before, and a direct line in to how people perceive and "categorise" you.

    We’ve had men or women who enjoy things traditionally associated with the other gender for as long as there have been people I expect. If that’s the case then what purpose does the need for a gender title serve?

    I'm a trans woman. I don't particularly enjoy things associated with women. I'm don't understand femininity, and most of my interests are masculine coded.

    Which is to say, this stuff has nothing to do with my gender.

    It does relate to the social expectations of sex and gender, which means that they're important to many folk, but they aren't gender.

    I’ll admit personally questioning some things like fairness in cis/trans integrated sports

    Don't. The whole conversation is driven by transphobes trying to use overly simplistic and misleading representations to normalise the exclusion of trans folk as a wedge tactic, before they move on to exclusion in other areas. If you don't know much about it, it's impossible for you to have an informed opinion on the subject, and that can lead to a lot of very real harm and exclusion to trans folk.

    • So yeah, sex is “bio bits” but probably not in way you’re thinking, and it comes with a whole bunch of social stuff too.

      So this starts into my lack of understanding of terms then. From what I've gone with sex being the XX or XY and the sexual organs that go with that. I recall that all start with XX and then develop different traits based on that chromosome pair. Persona and gender expression of the self and societies expectations being entirely separate. Are those not as distinct as I was thinking, or maybe I have them reversed?

      I’m a trans woman. I don’t particularly enjoy things associated with women. I’m don’t understand femininity, and most of my interests are masculine coded.

      Terminology again, so you ID as woman (MTF) but don't prefer traditionally feminine things? It goes to one of my other replies then of what differentiates a 'boyish woman/tomboy' from a MTF transgender?

      Don’t. The whole conversation is driven by transphobes...

      That part has a more specific distinction for me. It really has nothing to do with identity but more for things like someone who grew up male, with all the associated hormonal traits to that, most specifically testosterone and the typically associated muscle difference transitioning and then competing with cis women in something like weight lifting or other mass-centric sports before any HRT has put them more on par with their cis counterparts. Much the same as how steroid use is not allowed in sports rather than it being anything to do with what they where born, it's a fairness concern rather than 'trans bad'. I'm all for people in the early parts of HRT competing, but in which division and for how long that takes to be more on more 'equal' terms I'm not versed enough in the bio matters to say.

      • XX and XY don't come in to it. You almost certainly don't know yours, just like most people don't. They assume them based on sexual characteristics. Which is to say, when "evaluating" someone's sex, it's just sexual characteristics that come in to it.

        And they change. If you looked at my sexual characteristics, you'd assume I'm XX, but I'm almost certainly not.

        And again, the fact that you are placing so much relevance on what sex is and how it's determined so that you can categorise people according to the rules of that classification? That's purely social...

        It goes to one of my other replies then of what differentiates a ‘boyish woman/tomboy’ from a MTF transgender?

        One is cis, one is trans...

        It really has nothing to do with identity but more for things like someone who grew up male, with all the associated hormonal traits to that, most specifically testosterone and the typically associated muscle difference transitioning

        As I said, if you don't understand it, don't get involved, because you end up spouting stuff like this. Content that "makes sense", but is misleading and used to harm

        You don't understand it, so exactly why do you need to have an opinion on it? The harm done by people who don't understand a topic, but push for exclusion because it "makes sense" can't easily be undone. It's going to take us decades to undo the hurt caused by people driving this conversation. Until you can speak from experience on the topic, just stay out of it, rather than being part of the harm machine

      • I agree with Ada. The competitive sports issue is fraught and often used in bad faith as a rhetorical wedge in discourse. Also, given its vanishingly small practical relevance to the vast majority of trans people, in nearly every case it is legitimately “in the weeds.” But to avoid leaving you hanging, and since I’m rather partial to weeds, I’ll bite.

        First, can we say the prohibition of anabolics in competitive athletics has succeeded in eliminating them?

        The answer is relevant because popular arguments against trans athletics tend to hinge on athletes’ hormonal advantage in womens’ athletics being unfair on account of prohibition, which can only be true if the prohibition itself is fair, which can only be true if the correct answer to the question above is unequivocally “yes” (because unenforceable restrictions are effectively a handicap to rule-followers alone, which is demonstrably unfair and unjust).

        I suspect most with even passing familiarity would admit that prohibition in sports has, at best, only made the use of anabolics and other PEDs a more complicated and expensive logistic of elite programs, and that their use persists to a certain degree in virtually every competitive tier. There are of course numerous potential topical implications here (and of course the complication of intersex athletes like Edinanci Silva or Caster Semenya) but since the popularly established rhetorical crux is fairness based on hormones, we must attend to the reason hormones introduce unfairness to a sport.

        My opinion is that arguments against trans athletics are disingenuously filling a grievance against what is, in reality, a preexisting unfairness in most sports that fans often prefer not to talk about.

      • a MTF transgender

        Just a little quibble here: Trangender is an adjective, not a noun.

  • A few thoughts on subjects that haven't been touched on a ton or framing which might help you understand some of the points you've brought up:

    • I think it's important to note up at the top that all words are made up and definitions are merely attempts at society to agree on what a word means so that we can communicate with each other. The presence of slang, the creation of new words, and the shift of the definitions of words over time are all important factors when we talk about the deep specifics of a particular topic or idea.
    • Nearly everything in this thread is about a topic which broadly falls into the category of "loosely defined social concepts" more formally known as social constructs. Examples of loosely defined social concepts include: gender, romance, beauty, family, race, wealth, trendiness, class, art, and status.
    • Social constructs exist on a spectrum, with some having stricter definitions. For example, dictionaries exist in languages because additional structure is useful. Currency is often defined by governments to help more directly understand wealth or money so that individuals can exchange on equal terms and so that individuals can be taxed.
    • Sex and gender used to be interchangeable words in western society, back before we understood any "modern" science which delineated the two.
    • Over time sex became a legal and medical term, to describe people who were assigned female at birth generally by genital inspection of the doctor or whatever was recorded on the birth certificate
    • Gender theory, or at least the modern roots of it, emerged during women's suffrage in the united states as a way to separate the social factors from the biological ones - to provide framing to examine social pressures, social norms, social ideas as a construct and not innately biological
    • Modern gender theory importantly separates gender identity from gender expression. Much of the discussion in this thread about gender nonconforming individuals such as tomboys being different from trans masc individuals comes down to this framing and their assigned sex at birth. Strictly speaking, having a gender identity which does not match the assigned sex at birth can be considered trans. I say "can be" because labels should never be forced on someone else
    • Labels are personal, and therefore messy, and do not always neatly match with definitions for words that are in dictionaries or generally accepted in whatever social circles. For example, a person who has a gender identity of non-binary, who presents very feminine, could still identify as a transmasc individual as an explicit recognition of their internal sense of gender or the steps of transitioning they may have taken.
    • Titles and pronouns and honorifics are individual preference and are not strictly gendered. Take, for example, the historical use of words such as lord, king, grace, duke, doctor, baron, viscount, jester, chief, lieutenant, esquire, the honorable, elder, sensei, the wise, acolyte, apprentice, etc. - these are used to signify a specific role in society or someone's personal preference. Unsurprisingly, people can often have feelings about the use of these words
    • If you or someone you know happens to have a nickname or another name they go by in certain contexts or overall, it might help to reflect upon these names and the reason they are used. In some cases, they are forced upon people and undesirable, such as nicknames that come from hazing or bullying. In other cases they are adopted for any number of reasons, including that the person just doesn't like their name or prefers this one. Think about how the person who uses or has these names used on them feels about their usage - this same framing can be used when it comes to pronouns or just general perception by others in a society.
    • A lot of the framing in this thread is on the gender binary, or genders created out of the sex binary (importantly, not a true binary in any science... nature is messy). Attempts to understand non-binary individuals through a binary lens will necessarily fall flat as these individuals do not see themselves as existing within the binary.
    • Gender identities which are non-binary are often based on one's gender identity - which is also a loosely defined word. A sense of self ultimately likely comes from feelings, and just like some people feel strongly that being a mechanic is a masculine trait, people might feel that literally anything is gendered and their gender identity is composed of those feelings. Thus even things which binary folks don't generally consider to be gendered may be an important part of one's sense of their non-binaryness.
    • A lot of that does help, at least as a reminder in some cases of the mutability of things between different people. For myself (and plenty of others I'd guess) the fixation on binary association helps serve as a reference point if nothing else. Trying to describe something without some kind of anchor to relate it to, kind of has the feel of untethered ambiguity.

  • You know this meme?

    1000041960

    This is essentially true because (we) trans people have to spend a ton of time into thinking about what gender and sex are. What may be helpful is thinking not about how trans or even queer people deviate from the norm but how sex, gender and sexuality work in general.

    You may want to look into Judith Butler's revelatory "Gender Trouble" (or at least summaries of it) that was kind of the birth of Queer Studies and where they discuss how gender/sex are "performative" (not in the sense of literally performing but rather how it is repeated and maintained). Butler explains how the category of sex is not descriptive but instead a constructed one. Even a newly born baby is put into a constructed (made-up) category that doesn't necessarily reflect physical reality.

    Sex as a physical reality actually crumbles the moment you have a closer look at it. Medicine has been trying to correct it by mutilating intersex people for ages now, trying to put them into neat categories. Like someone already said here in the comments, you probably don't know your karyotype, right? You just assume it. There are various factors playing into sex, like chromosomal, hormonal, genital sex (plus some more!). All of them can show variations.

    How sex is constructed can be made even more clearly when looking at animals. Biologists have always been very eager to put animals into sexual binaries because they tried to replicate their own view of the 'natural' man vs woman binary. But this is far from true. There are some animals with two genders, but also some with three or more and there are some with only one. Intersex, "trans" and queer animals are very common among animals as well. E.g. there are female deer with antlers etc. Science has just been too busy with projecting their own 'truth' to realize this. In recent years we have been catching up though. There is this great book called "Evolution's Rainbow" where the author Joan Roughgarden goes into much more detail.

    Another interesting point is that while it feels "natural" to us that there is a gender binary, this is actually a pretty modern view. Gender and sex as we know it have only been around for a few hundred years. Just like homosexuality and in response heterosexuality are very recent phenomena. Likewise, our concept of "love" is also a very recent invention and probably a product of the emergence of capitalism.

    But you can see how the performative nature of sex and gender leads to scientists and generally people trying to impose/project sex and gender onto very arbitrary traits or phenomena. And by doing so, the perceive differences between sexes/genders is even stronger which leads to repetition of the imposition/projection. We probably cannot know how our species would express itself without these social constructs interfering.

    So, that is why some people here in the comments gave you the wise hint not to try to rationalize gender/sex. Those are social constructs all the way and won't really ever make sense. Where does the feeling to be any gender come from? No idea! But it definitely is there (or not haha).

  • Lets see if I can explain this clearly enough on the first try.

    So your question is, "If we take gender as being an expression of your persona, a set of traits that define one as male, female, or some combination of both then what function does a title/pronoun serve?"

    Well, this is both weirdly complicated and absurdly simple. Gender isn't just a set of personal traits, but also a social concept. In that framing, titles and pronouns are a signal that one gets from other people in society that tells them how their visible presentation is being perceived and interpreted.

    One can relate this to the social distinction between the nobles and commoners of yore. Even though the only visible differences between the two groups are their attire, for a person that sees themselves as a member of the aristocracy to be spoken to as if they were a commoner can be a grave insult.

    Likewise, most people find it discomforting when their innate sense of their own gender is contradicted by the people around them. Specifying our pronouns/titles when we introduce ourselves can provide context for folks who might have otherwise assumed someone's gender incorrectly.

    • Elder millennial trying his best to improve. I had issue with a friend, who identified as queer, who recently married a trans man and wanted me to use the pronoun "thier" for this person. I mean, I'm supportive, but I don't want to butcher the English language. I mean it's even uncomfortable for me to type that out as I feel like walking on eggshells to accommodate, and someone seems to be pissed off.

      • I don’t want to butcher the English language

        Singular they/them/their is a concept brought to English in the 14th century. It's not butchering the English language to use they/them/theirs to refer to one person. You probably do it automatically without realizing it when referring to people wholly unknown to you when nothing can cue you in about their gender, like when referring to somebody that somebody else is talking to on the phone: "Who was that? What did they want?"

      • That'd be a "neopronoun", typically used by folks who feel like none of the standard pronouns fit them.

        They're rather uncommon for the reasons you've described, even I have trouble remembering to always use xie/xir or fae/faer for my queer friends that identify as such.

        Fortunately, the folks that do use neopronouns are aware of this and most are quite patient about it. So long as you show your friend and their husband that you're making an effort to recognize thier unusual gender, such as by quickly correcting yourself and moving on if you catch yourself using the wrong pronoun, then they won't think any less of you for it. 😄

      • Admitting a lack of knowledge is a first step. Queer has been another aspect confusing to me. Aside from the old use as a slur (kids around my area back in the 80s used to play something of a reverse tag game they called 'smear the queer' where they tried to tackle the one who was it) it always seemed like a catch-all for not fitting into the base mold.

    • I suppose my followup to that would be what gives someone a specific sense of gender? To say 'I am a woman' is taking societies interpretation of woman as being right. What differentiates that from 'I am a man who likes womanly things'?

      What separates the 'tomboy' woman from a trans-masc?

      (Please excuse any terminology missteps if I use things wrong too)

      • We're not sure about the neurological mechanism behind the innate sense of gender as of yet, but we have been able to confirm that there are structural differences between masculine and feminine brains that are more consistent with people's reported gender identity than their genitalia.

        And that's the fundamental difference between tomboys and trans men, the former are gender-nonconforming women and the latter are men's brains in female bodies.

        It's difficult to explain what gender dysphoria feels like to someone whose gender identity is consistent with their sex. There's a sense of "wrongness" that can suffuse through everything from one's interactions with other people in society to one's own thought processes under the influence of the wrong set of sex hormones.

      • I suppose my followup to that would be what gives someone a specific sense of gender?

        I'm 7 years transitioned and I can't answer that question for you.

        It's not something I rationalised myself in to. It makes no sense. It just is. It's important to remember that you don't need to understand to accept.

      • What separates the 'tomboy' woman from a trans-masc?

        One identifies as a woman; the other does not. It's really that simple.

        I find that the less you try to intellectualize gender, the better because it's something that's deeply personal to each person. What I view as being a man is undoubtedly different from what you do, yet we both identify as men.

        I've found that the easiest way to deal with gender is to simply respect other people's identities because it's frankly none of my business why anyone identifies the way they do.

      • I suppose my followup to that would be what gives someone a specific sense of gender?

        As a binary trans woman my very being in and for myself imparts upon me a capacity for directly revealed self-knowledge regarding my gender, which is to say how I wish to be as a presence and present myself to others within the world.

        To say ‘I am a woman’ is taking societies interpretation of woman as being right.

        Perish the thought! In general however I might reveal my gender it is as an invitation to others for them to interact with me and understand me as a woman. Try to think of this as less a matter of being right or wrong and more one of how you and another might best both enjoy your interactions together.

        What differentiates that from ‘I am a man who likes womanly things’?

        Gender does! It is literally that simple.

        What separates the ‘tomboy’ woman from a trans-masc?

        They would through their understanding of their own genders which grants truth or grants falsehood to statements regarding their gender.

  • To me it seems like the important question is:

    Why wouldn’t one do something that makes others feel valid/happy/comfortable for so little effort?

    It’s easy to respect name and pronoun preferences and admit when mistakes are made. One needn’t to dive into the full nuance and complexity of trans experience to understand that.

    • I fully agree with this sentiment. People should be able to put forth what makes them feel comfortable in a social situation and it's polite for the other parties to adhere to it.

      However I'd like to point out that there is a relevant spectrum here: how much a person stresses out about social queues like these. On one side we have folks who don't sweat it, they know if they make a faux pas they'll just ask for forgiveness. On the other side we have socially anxious people who are constantly in a panic in social situations. These more and more complex social rules put a lot of stress on people on that side of the social spectrum.

      This is exacerbated for people that don't pickup and adapt quickly to social queues naturally, like old people or autistic people.

      My friends and I used to play a drinking game where you'd have to drink if a certain designated person asked you a question and you answered. It was surprisingly difficult to remember in conversation to adapt your behavior from the norm for a particular person. I think about this when I see someone like my mom trying her best to be polite to someone with a pronoun preference that is different from what she's used to. She's stressing out because to her this isn't a fun drinking game, it's whether someone will like her or potentially consider her a bigot.

      None of this is to say that someone doesn't have the right to a pronoun preference, or really any social boundary they wish to ask for. But just that it might not be "so little effort" for some. It can be stressful and people express stress in weird ways, like frustration. I think it's good to be compassionate and patient around that.

      • Hm, I don't know how I feel about that. It's obviously an ambiguous social situation where we could think of all parties involved feeling and behaving in all kinds of ways.

        It kind of feels obvious to me that if people make a mistake and misgender me and feel genuinely sorry for it, that I won't rub it in.

        And I get your point that it might be harder for some folk to get new pronouns and not everyone has even heard of what that means. I wonder why you focus so much on the person not getting the pronouns right and not so much on the trans person themselves. Many trans people, especially people with non-binary pronouns, feel anxious about their pronouns being disrespected already. I don't think your comment has much to add to the conversation. It's not like trans people had a lot of power in society and could will people to respect their pronouns. So why caution against being too harsh on the other person?

        What I feel uncomfortable about in your comment is that you tell trans people, who are oppressed, get discriminated against and made feel shit about themselves by society, to be more patient and compassionate. Now way! We are supposed to go through this transphobic world, try to survive it and also empathize with people who disrespect our pronouns? I strongly disagree with that. Yeah sure, if a person is generally nice to me I give them the benefit of the doubt. But they are not the ones who have to go through a dysphoric day afterwards.

        I think this position of being "compassionate and patient" with people who are dominant in society is rather apologetic of oppression. Oppression doesn't need to educate itself but lets oppressed people do the job for it. We shouldn't fall for this fallacy of "neutrality". There is a huge power imbalance in society that you miss if you want oppressed people to behave to society's norms. Trans people already do so much to accommodate society's backwards rules every day they live. It is already a great burden on most trans people to try to get along with society, telling them to also be "compassionate and patient" about their identity not being seen is not as understanding as you think it is.

        I know you probably meant well with your comment, but I think it is important to caution against such apologetic behavior.

        Oh, and btw in my experience autistic people are the ones who get pronouns much easier/faster because social norms feel more arbitrary to us anyways and because a much larger proportion of autistic people is also trans.

  • I'm non-binary, meaning I am neither a woman nor a man. I find it deeply uncomfortable when people call me a man because it assigns a bunch of expectations onto me that I know I don't fulfill and that I don't want to be associated with.

    To assume that some things are masculine or feminine traits seems to put unneeded rigidity to things.

    I completely agree, which is why I have broken free of the shackles of gender. (being hyperbolic here, but it's kinda how I feel). If the world were perfect, everyone could do what they want and you could meet a new person on their terms instead of assigning a gender and expected behaviour onto them based on their length of hair and style of clothing. But, we live in the world we live in, and so there are certain things that are deemed to be masculine or feminine.

    EDIT: I've been thinking of how to explain this to someone who doesn't feel the same way I do. Hopefully you are a car driver, because it's the best analogy I can come up with. Imagine you're watching dashcam footage and the car you're riding in is speeding when a young child runs out from a parked car. For me, my right leg would immediately jerk to try and hit the (non-existant) brake pedal. My gut tenses. I grunt mentally and can see everything ending in disaster. All of this happens instantly before I can process or think and realise I'm just watching a recording. This is kinda how it feels when someone calls me a man. It's just a visceral immediate dislike and feeling of deep uncomfort in a very similar way

  • rather than talk about my experience, i tend to think it's more helpful to have cisgender people imagine themselves in similar hypothetical situations:

    1. imagine everyone in your life started using she/her pronouns for you. how would this make you feel? how does this affect how you react to them? how does this affect how they react to you?

    2. imagine you woke up in a female body. how would you feel? imagine you had to adjust to it for a week. then a month. then a year. then ten years. what adjustments to your life would you have to make? how does this affect how people treat you? how does this affect your behavior? how would you feel about this situation? what would you miss about your previous body?

    the second experience is essentially what it's like to be a transgender man, except it's from birth and you don't (necessarily) get to start with the knowledge you're a guy (some people more intuitively figure it out than others)

    these questions hopefully help you develop a sense of what gender means to you, which should help you understand what gender means to us (obv it's not the same for everyone, and it's pretty binary, but it's a decent starting point)

  • My favorite part about the Dunning-Kruger is that so many people get it wrong.

    This graph isn't even close.

    • Meh, it demanded a picture so it seemed to somewhat fit.

      • Oh yeah, no worries. If it was actually a big deal I might have into-dumped about what DK actually is, but it's not important. Especially next to the gender identity question, for which I cannot meaningfully contribute.

  • I'm sure other people in this thread have done a great job talking about the mainstream stuff, so I'm gonna get weird.

    Nonbinary identities aren't all combinations of male and female gender traits. There are also nonbinary genders. They're called xenogenders. And nonbinary identities can be any combination of male, and/or female, and/or any number of xenogenders. Xenogenders have traits that you may not typically believe are gendered, or that take the stuff you know in unexpected directions. But what are you expecting from a gender that isn't like anything you know? It's gonna seem weird.

    Xenogenders are common among otherkin and alterhumans. Otherkin are people who don't identify as human. They may identify as a real animal, or a mythical or fictional creature, which may be sapient or nonsapient, though nearly all otherkin are themselves sapient. Alterhuman is a broader category that also includes people who only identify partially as human or nonhuman. Perhaps someone who remembers a past life as a wolf, for example.

    Sometimes a brain contains more than one person. The brain contains a mechanism for creating a person, an identity, a consciousness, and usually it uses that mechanism once. Sometimes it's used more than once. It's called plurality. Plurality can be the result of traumatic mental disorder, but it can also be healthy.

  • Among other social constructs such as gender, as useful as they can perhaps be when looking for a generalisation of "what are the terms for you to be understood in?" I have recently been questioning sex. Sex is often referred to as the biological bits, but is that true? No, because it's an incomplete picture.

    Biologists seem to currently accept sex is a mosaic of sexual characteristics. This includes but is not limited to genitalia and chromosome—the two most thought about elements I'd wager—and your chest, your hormone balance, but also measurements like around the hips, waist, shoulders... And of course, your role in reproduction, especially if you can reproduce.

    Many of these characteristics are mutable, especially in today's society with hormones and surgeries. Functionally speaking, they don't matter, we as a species are not at risk of extinction and simply do not need to care about it. Sex was fraught even as a measure of reproductive capabilities anyway. We should care for each other's happiness first and foremost.

    But even mutability aside, sex isn't consistent between men and women, with different hormone balances and even some variations in chromosomes or the capacity for sexual reproduction. Also, see the existence of intersex people, who, by their existence alone, shatter the binary.

    I don't believe sex is a useful categorisation. Sex and gender and expression and the things you enjoy are different, but they're also both still constructions with your presumed gender being extrapolated from the most visible elements of your sex and huge variability for each person therein, but the correlation is starting to feel weak.

    Sex and genders, as structures, are the product of cisheteropatriarchy, ie sexism. Even in sports. Social constructs generally arise as a necessary division for societies to make given their material conditions, and it was used to increase populations. I would say it is time to leave such vestigial logic behind.

  • We’ve had men or women who enjoy things traditionally associated with the other gender for as long as there have been people I expect. If that’s the case then what purpose does the need for a gender title serve?

    Boys don't a{sk} that way

    (This is not a co-sign of Emma's views on the subject)

  • I personally don't think it makes sense. That's not to say it isn't real (its just as real as sex is). But it would be good to at least know that gender isn't generally about following social expectations. OTOH, conforming to social expectations can be a way to signal one's gender if its not as clear, so some overemphasize those traits for that reason. And others have felt the need to suppress their own self-expression when they were eggs and have lost time to make up for. For some, the social aspect of gender is very important and for others, its not. For others, its much more focused about making their body match their brain's expectations.

    • For some, the social aspect of gender is very important and for others, its not. For others, its much more focused about making their body match their brain’s expectations.

      So with that would it be fair to say that there are different 'types' of trans then? IE: some that are fine with the hardware they where given but not with the expectations on their persona that go along with it?

      • I would say that's the case. As Emma pointed out, trans is an umbrella term. It includes everything from binary trans men to binary trans women to agender to multigender and gender fluid and more. If for any reason your gender doesn't match the one assigned by society, you can consider yourself trans.

        And I don't mean that to imply some people are only "technically" trans but not really trans, but rather there are also people who don't consider themselves cis or trans. Seems pretty common among some people in the agender (which is also a bit of an umbrella term with lots of diversity within it) communities. Granted, some of that seems to be internalize transphobia or a fear of being seen as trying to take attention away from "real" (their words, not mine) trans people. But another reason is the trans label comes with some expectations that many agender people want to avoid. Either way, I think its good to recognize people's self-determination of whether they are trans or not. A lot of agender people express confusion at gender and lots wish to be freed of gender in society. Of course there are binary trans people who are also gender abolitionists, but the sentiment seems to be expressed with less frequency. Even without gender, many trans people would still need services currently labeled "gender-affirming care".

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