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  • Amorphous [any]
    ·
    4 years ago

    literally what is gender supposed to be?

    ive never really found a good way to ask this question. as i understand it, being trans is more or less "feeling like" a different gender than others perceive you "should" be, possibly with or possibly without the condition of dysphoria which is something i do fully understand.

    but i dont quite get what it means to feel like a gender. i dont feel like a man. i look like a man, im told i am a man, im perfectly comfortable being considered a man. but i couldnt describe to you what that means. i feel like id be just as comfortable being considered a woman. sometimes people assume I'm a woman from the back and the only reaction that elicits from me is mild amusement. i dont really think of women as being any measurably different from me as far as mindset. how would i know what it feels like to be a woman? how would i define myself as trans?

    am i unusual for not feeling attached to a specific gender? I've always kind of thought that attachment to gender is something taught to children, not something innate, and that's why I've never particularly felt it. I don't understand it at all.

    • kristina [she/her]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      thats a fairly common cis thing tbh. some say its one of the biggest definitions of being cis.

      for me, a binary trans woman, i felt very off during puberty. it just didnt feel right. i got suicidal as hell and i couldnt really grok that the reason why was because i was trans. i knew before puberty that id rather be a girl but that was a very abstract concept that didnt matter much to me at the time, kids honestly didnt look that different. but when puberty hit, i hated everything happening to my body. none of it felt right. looking more and more like a guy disgusted me and all the adults in sex ed were just saying things like 'its normal to be weirded out by puberty or feel uncomfortable with it' and i internalized that maybe what i was feeling was normal and typical of guys. like of course, all guys hate getting hairier and more muscular and stuff! so i kept with the puberty for a while and all it did was push me further and further into depression until i snapped, attempted suicide, and got on hrt shortly after when i became an adult.

      i think there is definitely some sort of chemical component to hrt and being (binary) trans, even when i was just 3 months on hrt i felt immensely better despite only looking a bit different.

      anyways, back to your question: well, i dont really know what its like to 'feel' like a woman. that feels very abstract to me. i just know i love estrogen and how it makes me feel and how it affects my body and mood. i feel weird looking in a mirror and seeing masculine things that arent typical on women, because i know that my first puberty fucked that up. idk, its a bit like being a cis woman that grew a beard or something. its normal in our society to get that sort of thing treated. and no one second guesses that it is disconcerting.

      i sometimes would think to myself before transition 'would i get on hrt if i had been on an island by myself and never knew what a man or woman was?' and i had such a hard time answering that question. now, id definitely say yes, even if i had never known about women or men, the mental effects of estrogen are just better suited for me.

      for me, the reasoning behind wanting to be treated like a woman and being named like a woman is relatively simple. i look like one now and its just far easier to deal with. i dont like being referred to as a man because that implies someone sees something masculine about me, which is a personal pet peeve of mine, i feel like its like pointing at a woman and saying 'look, she has a beard!' its just rude.

      • Amorphous [any]
        ·
        4 years ago

        i felt very off during puberty. it just didnt feel right.

        All of this sounds to me like you're describing one way gender dysphoria manifests, surely? But as far as I understand, considering that to be the way trans people are defined is supposed to be bad.

        • kristina [she/her]
          ·
          edit-2
          4 years ago

          im not saying thats how all trans people feel, just how i feel. other trans people feel things in different ways, and there are different ways it manifests for different people.