Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Why Exactly Am I So Sensitive Toward Gender?


Guest Samurai_Kid

Recommended Posts

Guest Samurai_Kid

I'm one of those people who wouldn't bat an eye at a guy wearing a dress. Someone who would give a boy a doll or pretty pink dress if I wanted.

Someone who just don't care about gender; people should do what they want and people should accept that. I think that gender roles shouldn't exist.

Yet I have a very.. Odd reaction toward gender related topics.

Like, for example, I had to donate something to charity for my school. The thing said for either boy or girl; I picked for men. Some conversations and stuff happened, and my parents ended up subtly talking about gender for like five minutes.

Enter an awkward feeling here. I don't know why but I basically panicked, or at least stiffened up.

My dad asked if I made sure I labeled it for a boy, because I may have put feminine stuff in it. I said "Boys and girls can have anything", or something to that affect, and he mentioned "I can just imagine a boy in a dress". I just grumbled a "Thats fine", but I doubt he noticed or cared.

When people call me a girl.. I don't like that, but I'm unsure. What's the difference between a boy and a girl? It's the social reaction that gets to me, I suppose. Gender is social; it doesn't exist in nature.

Link to comment

Very wise. I think you are right on all points. I personally think that gender (gender distortion & gender amplification) are responsible for many, many problems in this world, including war. Moreover, who teaches boys to play with guns? it's a social thing, too. :D

Link to comment

i don't flinch at boys playing with dolls and girls playing with tonka trucks but, gender in and of its self. i think is innate . and driven by evolution . both in humans and in nature . there have been many examples . of this . threw the 70s 80s and early 90s . common practice with child born with ambigouse genitalia . was to "fix" them. like boys born with a penis considered to small to be applicably considered to be a normal male penis . it was often decided . that for that childs benefit he should be made into a girl. and same for girls. but the failure of this became extreamly apparent as these children began to grow and become socialized in there assigned gender roles. most fought it instead prefering to play with toys more common of their original gender role . and wear clothing appropreate with their original gender role.

i know one such person personally , my boy friends cousin , at his birth his penis was dubbed to small to ever pleasure a woman. or for him to function as a man so he was . made into christina . while i didn't know him as a little kid. i have heard most of the stories . soon as he was old enough to make the difference . and even though his mom and dad .fallowed the dr orders and heavily socialized him. as a girl . he demanded toy guns and trucks for bdays and xmas . jeans appose to skirts . very atypical boy stuff . around 12-13 his parents finally came clean with him. about what was done to him........ he spent the next few years in a mental hospital . and when he came out he was . chris and filed a law suit against the hospital that did this too him. and they paid for him to have srs to correct it . and now doctors . are not allowed to "fix" but leave it up to the child when he/she is old enough. simply because in virtually every one of them they always wanted to be the original gender they were changed from. even transsexuals. we are raised . being told we are male or female . socialized as much as possible as or precived gender. and sooner or later become the men or women we always beleived our selves to be.

gender roles and recognition are also just as prevalent in nature as human society. male lion cubs are not taught to fight . or go out and seek a pride. its born into them . same goes for gender recognition. when a male lion fights for a pride and loses . a strange thing happens to his mane. it falls out. and looks like a large female females lions wont mate with him . and male lions no longer see him as a threat . and usually ignored as a challenger . the mane . is sexually dimorphic . and enables other liones to quickly tell if he is male or female and his status . a dominate male lion as a golden mane. a less dominate has a dark or black mane.

gender roles are a evolutionary construct more than. a social one. though. i believe they are far more amplified. now than they have ever been in the past. but with out life would come to a crashing hault. i suppose life might find a way. but life i imagine would be far more different. than we know it now with out gender .

Sakura

P.S not attempting to start a fight or debate. i just love these types of convos :)

Link to comment

I know exactly what you mean. It is true that gender is a social construct, but for some reason thinking about it makes me extremely emotional, too. Those ideas make me feel panicky and nervous, and I think to a great extent it comes from internal strife at being brought up in a certain way which disagrees with what you have figured out is true about yourself and the way the world works.

I think the best way I've found to deal with it is a "change of variables", basically.

Since the words male and female are so emotional for me I basically came up with different words which made sure were defined as precisely as I could make them.

And, sure enough, thinking about the same ideas in the new terminology makes me a lot less emotional, and I have an easier time thinking about it.

Granted, it still makes me emotional just not uncontrollably so, which is quite helpful and clarifying.

Link to comment

Interesting ideas, Sakura.

However, while we still have some of those instincts, I can imagine they will become (or partly became) rudimentary with the evolution of our brains. If I really wanna step on the crazy train: Maybe we are evolving right now into androgyne creatures? evolution is slow, but signs are here all around us. In any event, it could also be a psychological evolution. ;)

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 98 Guests (See full list)

    • Susie
    • KymmieL
    • Nicola_Atherton
    • Avra
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.4k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,112
    • Most Online
      8,356

    SimplyMadeloeine
    Newest Member
    SimplyMadeloeine
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. austin_4
      austin_4
      (17 years old)
    2. Britany_Relia
      Britany_Relia
      (39 years old)
    3. Emily S
      Emily S
      (67 years old)
    4. Hoof Arted
      Hoof Arted
      (22 years old)
    5. n3eeko
      n3eeko
  • Posts

    • MaeBe
      Wow! Hopefully that encounter is amicable! I can only imagine what might be going through your mind right now!   I was a bit of a prude, I don't even need a whole hand of fingers to count my sexual partners on. Good old fear-based Catholic "sex ed" did its number on me.   I get nervous walking into men's rooms. I don't look the part for the either restroom these days, I guess. I did use the women's at the convention I volunteered at (the restrooms were temporarily made gender free though), it was nice having a stall to use without waiting.   The whole bathroom debate is so stupid. Genital-based restroom assignments aren't going to stop people intending abuse and there are laws for handling them already. It's the fear the laws strike and the conditions they creates is the problem, fomenting distrust and hate. Who cares who is in the stall next to you? Let them pee in peace!
    • Timi
      Good morning! Just finishing my delayed coffee after fasting for routine bloodwork.   Just had my annual physical and I came out to my Dr. He was so kind and said if/when I want to start HRT they have a couple endocrinologists who specialize in transition and he could give me a referral. So nice! Not quite ready to jump into that yet, but he was so understanding. Another small step in my social transition. I feel so happy! 😊
    • Ivy
      They seem to think that if they pretend we don't exist, we won't.
    • Carolyn Marie
      Not a quote, but a poem; "Invictus," by William Henley.  I had it hanging on the wall of my office for many years.   "I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul."
    • MAN8791
      Your children are of you, but they are not you for the dwell in the house of tomorrow where you cannot go, not even in your dreams. ~~ Khalil Gibran
    • Timi
      What? Yay!! I step away for a few days and this happens! I’m so happy for you.    That’s going to be my birthday present to myself this July.   I. Can’t. Wait!!   -Timi
    • Davie
      And, I Spent more time today on unscrambling my health insurance mess AND it looks like after signing papers, I should be all enrolled again  Yay! Thanks for all your support! —Davie
    • Davie
      "Breaking news! Good news! The United States Supreme Court has declined to hear a case against Montgomery County Public Schools LGBTQ+ inclusive curriculum. Students CANNOT be shielded from learning about LGBTQ+ people that inhabit the world around them!" —Erin Reed
    • Lorelei
      I am ambidextrous. I learned to write righty in school so I usually write with my right hand but my handwriting is better if I use my left hand. I use a lefty mouse. I am physically stronger in my left side. 
    • MaeBe
      Easy, I have felt the same way, not quite to the point of wanting to quit but sitting there one dosing morning and thinking "what am I doing?". I am in a crazy place right now; family is moving across the country, I am being laid off for the first time in my career and have to find a new job, and I'm in the middle of this gender journey that seems like it makes everything harder than it could be. I'd always been a "man with boobs", even when I was in my 20s and really skinny I had breast tissue, and now I'm accepting of that and want more but in a different way--I don't want to be a man with boobs, I want something different. I am something different, but it's hard because of nearly a half-century of social programing. So I empathize with your struggle, very directly.   I haven't dressed "male" for nearly six months and I just volunteered at a conference with my femme nickname and she/her pronouns on my name lanyard. The whole experience was great, I didn't feel a minute of anxiety or worry. That stuff comes at home, when left to my thoughts. Which is more telling? The comfort being Mae in public or the doubts and worry in private?   When I look in the mirror and see this more feminine me, it calms down the doubts and worry, so I'm starting to allow myself to trust in the former.
    • Lydia_R
      Totally!  I started HRT 21 months ago.  I'm 53yo now.  I mostly did not want the feminine genes of my family to take me over.  I told my doctor I wanted athletic breasts.  She has kept me on fairly low doses and I'm avoiding progesterone so far.   It's mostly mental for me.  Taking the pressure off from not having erections is soothing and changes my thinking.  I just want that stuff gone.  I had fun with it, but I'm over it.   I'm extremely happy with what has happened with my breasts.  Perhaps it took more than a year, but they have a feminine, athletic appearance now.  I don't notice changes in the rest of my body.  I've always enjoyed being thin and straight and have no desire for curves.  I can dig that butch with a feminine touch look.  I was upset at cutting my hair, but I'm liking it now.   It's fun to see all these young transwomen in my environment.  Everyone has their own style and the younger generation has a style of their own compared to us older people.   OK, back to baking a pie and doing some knitting....
    • Jani
      Quite the pairings!
    • Ivy
      I have one daughter who is left handed.  But she is fairly ambidextrous.  Apparently you have to be.
    • Ivy
      The time I spent "on the street" was mostly in the woods.  I dislike cities.  Even now my "bathroom" is out in the back yard, and has been for years.  When you're used to it, it's not so bad.  Helps one keep up with the seasons. I have no desire to live on the street in a city. Most of my adult kids live in cities.  It's nice enough for a visit, but I still prefer the country.
    • Jet McCartney
      ambidextrous in all areas haha
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...