Anonymous wrote:Because being a woman is different now than it was in 1950, which is different than it was in 1800.
Gender roles change, which means what aligns with being a woman changes.
It was easier to state what does it mean to be a woman pre-feminism, when gender roles were more black and white.
Now, what it means to be a woman doesn’t have to fit that narrow definition it was previously.
It is gender expression, and even though people don’t want labels and boxes, there are still some norms people embrace because otherwise there would no longer be a need for gender labels.
If someone said make a list or everything that makes you a woman I would say XX chromosomes and certain body parts and functions, but again that makes me female and not a woman.
I’m not a woman because I dress a certain way or I act a certain way. What makes me a woman is that I identify if with group of people who also use the label.
Because I identify different than my grandma did in the 1950s, we are having a different experience of what it means to be a woman.
Anonymous wrote:Wow - "gender bread person"
Sorry about that!
Anonymous wrote:Males have one Y chromosome and one X chromosome, while females have two X chromosomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women are adult female humans. Transgender women are adult human males that feel like they are women and want to live their life as such.
But what does it mean, “to feel like a woman?”
I equate being a woman with my female sex, along with the hormones and such from being female sex. But if you identify with women and don’t have the hormones that come with being female sex, what does it mean to feel like a woman?
It’s not that you like men, because as mentioned earlier, some identify with women but also identify as gay.
Anonymous wrote:Women are adult female humans. Transgender women are adult human males that feel like they are women and want to live their life as such.
Anonymous wrote:I think he’s being awkward on purpose. Like a lot of conservatives or older people. He’s not really trying to understand.
Anonymous wrote:I think he’s being awkward on purpose. Like a lot of conservatives or older people. He’s not really trying to understand.
Anonymous wrote:I think your grandfather is rightfully confused because for years we’ve been fighting against gender stereotypes. It’s ok for men to dislike sports and power tools and to be more into fashion and baking. It’s ok for women to like working on cars and to hate makeup and dresses. But now we have people saying, I’m really into the things stereotypically associated with the opposite sex, so that means I actually am the opposite sex and I need to physically transform myself to make my outside match the interests and behaviors driven by my “opposite sex” brain. It’s stereotype reinforcing.