Anonymous wrote:Becoming a mom made me feel differently about the difference between men and women. I used to have more progressive attitudes about it, and in many ways I still do -- I think people should be allowed to express gender however they want, I don't care how people dress or present themselves. But I feel more connected to womanhood having gone through pregnancy, childbirth, and breastfeeding. I know it's unpopular to say that. I don't think women have to become moms and I'm not anti-trans. But I can only speak for myself here. Going through that made me feel like my womanhood is an essential part of who I am in a way I didn't before. And it also made me feel connected to other women due to our shared biology in a way I didn't used to. Not just other mothers but anyone who shares my reproductive anatomy. So yes, that would mean I feel more connected to trans men than trans women.
Only sharing this here because it's anonymous. I feel like if I say this anywhere else, I'll get labeled anti-trans or MAGA (very much not). But it's how I really feel.
Anonymous wrote:Becoming a mom made me feel differently about the difference between men and women. I used to have more progressive attitudes about it, and in many ways I still do -- I think people should be allowed to express gender however they want, I don't care how people dress or present themselves. But I feel more connected to womanhood having gone through pregnancy, childbirth, and breastfeeding. I know it's unpopular to say that. I don't think women have to become moms and I'm not anti-trans. But I can only speak for myself here. Going through that made me feel like my womanhood is an essential part of who I am in a way I didn't before. And it also made me feel connected to other women due to our shared biology in a way I didn't used to. Not just other mothers but anyone who shares my reproductive anatomy. So yes, that would mean I feel more connected to trans men than trans women.
Only sharing this here because it's anonymous. I feel like if I say this anywhere else, I'll get labeled anti-trans or MAGA (very much not). But it's how I really feel.
Anonymous wrote: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.
This. It doesn't cost you to be kind.
I have a friend who is trans and honestly the most important thing that happened around my friend transitioning was that he went from being suicidal to being not suicidal. More than anything I just want my friend to be happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It means on a genetic level, whether you are x or xy, which practically determines your hormones and brain. There are exceptions such as xxy but not in a statistically significant way.
There are more intersex people than redheads, so I'm not sure where you're drawing the line foe "statistically significant," which is a strange basis for deciding how to treat people in any case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No idea. I'm 58, female, and have never felt girly. If I were a teen today, with all the open discussion and the variety of genders, I might feel agender. I have no strong gender identification at all. I'm just me.
But I have female friends who feel girly to their cores. There is no question for them. My son feels super masculine. No question for him either. I marvel at how people feel this so deeply.
And for that reason, whatever gender you identify with is cool with me.
57 yo female here.
Ditto!
Sometime the expectation to dress “girly” bothers me, it definitely bothered me as a young person.
There are more choices now. I’m guessing I’m a “they” but there was no knowledge of that growing up.
Anonymous wrote:No idea. I'm 58, female, and have never felt girly. If I were a teen today, with all the open discussion and the variety of genders, I might feel agender. I have no strong gender identification at all. I'm just me.
But I have female friends who feel girly to their cores. There is no question for them. My son feels super masculine. No question for him either. I marvel at how people feel this so deeply.
And for that reason, whatever gender you identify with is cool with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It means on a genetic level, whether you are x or xy, which practically determines your hormones and brain. There are exceptions such as xxy but not in a statistically significant way.
There are more intersex people than redheads, so I'm not sure where you're drawing the line foe "statistically significant," which is a strange basis for deciding how to treat people in any case.
Anonymous wrote:It means on a genetic level, whether you are x or xy, which practically determines your hormones and brain. There are exceptions such as xxy but not in a statistically significant way.
Anonymous wrote:My trans daughter wore her sister’s dresses as soon as she could dress herself. She secretly applied makeup by the time she was 10. She tried hard to conform to biological gender norms in middle and high school, playing football, dating girls, etc. She came out to us in college and began medically transitioning shortly thereafter. She is a smart person and knows she is not a biological woman. She understands chromosomes. But her whole life she’s known that her true desire is to present as a feminine gender. And that is a completely different thing than her sexual preferences.
For my trans daughter, it’s about the outside matching the inside, and she just could not tolerate presenting to the world (and being treated as) a male person. Hope this helps someone.
Anonymous wrote:My trans daughter wore her sister’s dresses as soon as she could dress herself. She secretly applied makeup by the time she was 10. She tried hard to conform to biological gender norms in middle and high school, playing football, dating girls, etc. She came out to us in college and began medically transitioning shortly thereafter. She is a smart person and knows she is not a biological woman. She understands chromosomes. But her whole life she’s known that her true desire is to present as a feminine gender. And that is a completely different thing than her sexual preferences.
For my trans daughter, it’s about the outside matching the inside, and she just could not tolerate presenting to the world (and being treated as) a male person. Hope this helps someone.