Anonymous wrote:A woman can be anywhere from frilly dress and lipstick to steel toe boots and power tools.
So can a man.
Literally the only thing that defines a man or woman is biology. Everything else is a construct.
I believe there are some biological aspects of being a man or woman that translate into roles like “mother” and “father”. But there is no one correct way to be a mother or a father. I do think mothers and fathers tend to provide different things and kids need both.
Anonymous wrote:Follow up to a above - it is financially convenient that he became a woman after his career was over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it doesn't matter. Meet people where they are.
This is how I feel and what I teach my kids. I tell them how it usually goes and I tell them that we take other people at their word. If you feel like you do t fit the mold, it’s not our business to argue the point.
Anonymous wrote:Being a woman is knowing what it means to be oppressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a woman but I’m super into lifting weights, sweating during a workout, and couldn’t care less about getting my nails done or fancy clothes or anything typically “feminine”. But I’m a woman.
I have a cousin who is a butch lesbian, but she’s solidly a woman.
Lifting weights is very feminine 🙂↔️
Anonymous wrote:I think it doesn't matter. Meet people where they are.
Anonymous wrote:I think people have lost their ever-loving minds because they keep confusing gender with sex. Which I find to be so weird because in theory people are paying more attention and are more educated about it... but not really.
CIS men don't just have a male gender and CIS female don't just have female gender. We all present in a myriad of ways. Feminine women may express predominantly in feminine gendered ways, but they also have masculine traits and vice versa. I am a woman who has long hair, wears makeup, and likes to make my home look nice. But I also play contact sports, spit when I run, express anger openly, am super competitive, into fast cars, and I like to build things with my hands.
This confusing of gender and sex has fluid people thinking they must mutilate their bodies. It also has people thinking that because they want to express their gender as feminine (dresses, makeup, mannerisms etc) that it must mean they are in the wrong body. Uh no. How many women do you know wear dresses on a daily basis? the VAST majority do not. It's so unimportant. But I have never seen a trans woman present herself as anything other than being feminine in every single freaking aspect. It's exhausting. Just be who you want to be, look how you want to look, gender yourself out the wazoo, but leave your sex alone.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a cis straight woman and I agree that a lot of gender is a social construct. Silly stuff like "manly" or "girly" drinks, clothes, liking sports, liking certain TV shows, it's all just artifice and peer pressure.
I have a little boy who loves boy things but will happily go along and play princesses with little girls his age. He cares more about making them happy than he does gender expression.
Anonymous wrote:I am a woman but I’m super into lifting weights, sweating during a workout, and couldn’t care less about getting my nails done or fancy clothes or anything typically “feminine”. But I’m a woman.
I have a cousin who is a butch lesbian, but she’s solidly a woman.