Anonymous wrote:My 88 year old grandfather was asking me about sex and gender identity, as he is confused by things he hears on TV and in the news. He understands “sex assigned at birth” but what he gets stuck on is how people define gender. He said, “what is the definition of a woman?” I explained the perspective from me, a cis-gendered person. I tried to explain differing cultural and societal norms, and the importance of not having roles defined by others… but he gets tripped up. He wants to know what it means to “be a woman”.
I don’t know how to explain it in another way that might help him understand. Can someone more eloquent and articulate than I am help me out? I believe he truly wants to understand.
Ask him to consider when he decided to be a boy/man. Then imagine the entire world telling him he is wrong, that he was a girl/woman. Ask him how horrible that would feel.
There is not one definition of "being a woman". The key part is that IT DOES NOT MATTER that we don't have a definition. Your chromosomes make you male or female at birth, but your brain may get programmed differently.
But of course conservatives want you to give a definition of "a woman" so they can point fingers about how you are being compassionate to someone who CLAIMS to be a woman but has male anatomy. Or has XY chromosomes.
In the end, the number of people who this happens to is MINISCULE. TINY. It's like 0.05% of the population. All people are asking for is some compassion for them to live their lives. No one is asking Ted Cruz to be a woman.