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"I'm not particularly tied to any of my characteristics as being female or feminine. I am unquestionably a cis woman, I feel that into my bones, but apart from the mundane realities of bras, periods etc, nothing about me is exclusively female. And I'm ok with that." Damn misspoke. Nothing about me is exclusively cis female (obviously trans men still menstruate to a point) | |||
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"I self identify as a woman on Saturday nights when bouncers charge me to get in clubs. " I self identify as a guide dog | |||
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"It's such a good question actually. I'm trans female, not cis woman, so won't experience periods and child birth, but from my perspective it's about empowerment. Up until, say, the late 60s, and the development of the "pill" and at the same time the growth of women's independence (liberation?) women had one function in life, to reproduce and to be a good obedient wife and mother. Thankfully those days have gone, and despite the "power" that women hold on here this still isn't reflected in real life. Hope that makes sense? " But is it still OK to want to reproduce and be a good, obedient wife and mother. If I'm intelligent and self aware and know what makes me happy and functional is it OK to choose that for myself? | |||
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"It's such a good question actually. I'm trans female, not cis woman, so won't experience periods and child birth, but from my perspective it's about empowerment. Up until, say, the late 60s, and the development of the "pill" and at the same time the growth of women's independence (liberation?) women had one function in life, to reproduce and to be a good obedient wife and mother. Thankfully those days have gone, and despite the "power" that women hold on here this still isn't reflected in real life. Hope that makes sense? But is it still OK to want to reproduce and be a good, obedient wife and mother. If I'm intelligent and self aware and know what makes me happy and functional is it OK to choose that for myself? " Absolutely. But it never used to be that way for cis women sadly. | |||
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"It's such a good question actually. I'm trans female, not cis woman, so won't experience periods and child birth, but from my perspective it's about empowerment. Up until, say, the late 60s, and the development of the "pill" and at the same time the growth of women's independence (liberation?) women had one function in life, to reproduce and to be a good obedient wife and mother. Thankfully those days have gone, and despite the "power" that women hold on here this still isn't reflected in real life. Hope that makes sense? But is it still OK to want to reproduce and be a good, obedient wife and mother. If I'm intelligent and self aware and know what makes me happy and functional is it OK to choose that for myself? " Yes!!! And thrice yes. I was going to write that being a woman also means accepting all those things traditionally associated with the feminine if that is your nature. | |||
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"It's such a good question actually. I'm trans female, not cis woman, so won't experience periods and child birth, but from my perspective it's about empowerment. Up until, say, the late 60s, and the development of the "pill" and at the same time the growth of women's independence (liberation?) women had one function in life, to reproduce and to be a good obedient wife and mother. Thankfully those days have gone, and despite the "power" that women hold on here this still isn't reflected in real life. Hope that makes sense? But is it still OK to want to reproduce and be a good, obedient wife and mother. If I'm intelligent and self aware and know what makes me happy and functional is it OK to choose that for myself? Absolutely. But it never used to be that way for cis women sadly. " No and I wouldn't go back to that for anything. I love the fact that women have so much more scope for success and fulfilment. Kweens supporting kweens | |||
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"It's such a good question actually. I'm trans female, not cis woman, so won't experience periods and child birth, but from my perspective it's about empowerment. Up until, say, the late 60s, and the development of the "pill" and at the same time the growth of women's independence (liberation?) women had one function in life, to reproduce and to be a good obedient wife and mother. Thankfully those days have gone, and despite the "power" that women hold on here this still isn't reflected in real life. Hope that makes sense? " well said .. | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male " But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? | |||
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"It's a fascinating topic to me, because I think it means both everything and nothing to me. I am a woman, cis female. It's true, one of the truest things about me. And yet when I try to consider what it means to be a woman... I can't think of a single characteristic that matters to me that is inherently and exclusively feminine. So does it matter at all? Yes. But I don't know why" I would say this too, I know Im a woman but there is nothing I could say particulary makes me feel that way that compared to what a man could feel or do too. Only apart from the different biology obvs, but in terms of thought or actions , none. I'll have another cuppa and think about it | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men?" My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. | |||
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"I was built to last and to care for those closest to me. And I'm allowed to be scared of spiders. " In this modern age of equality, if women weren't scared of spiders men would be completely redundant. Or are we allowed to be scared of them too? | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. " Don’t you think that’s typical of many fab women though? I’ve found that I’ve had more in common with my female fab friends than most - if not all - of the women I know in the ‘real’ world! I know I may get lambasted for this - but I think the very fact that we can separate love/relationships and sex - a traditionally male trait - may mean that we are more masculine in our thought processes generally - and rarely concentrate on traditionally feminine things. I’m probably generalising a lot though - and perhaps just considering the women I tend to get on well with - which are similar to me! X | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. " But plenty of men like those things, and plenty of women think like you do. Some of us do both. | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. But plenty of men like those things, and plenty of women think like you do. Some of us do both." Ok. If you were to see me in a pub, I’m likely to be stood at the bar talking nonsense and laughing with the guys, than say at the table with the women who are discussing as above or having the same woo is me conversation over and over. It’s rare I get emotional or indeed emotionally attached. Example, I can be with someone socially & sexually and at that moment they are all that matters, but the minute I walk away it’s done until the next time, if there is a next time. | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. But plenty of men like those things, and plenty of women think like you do. Some of us do both. Ok. If you were to see me in a pub, I’m likely to be stood at the bar talking nonsense and laughing with the guys, than say at the table with the women who are discussing as above or having the same woo is me conversation over and over. It’s rare I get emotional or indeed emotionally attached. Example, I can be with someone socially & sexually and at that moment they are all that matters, but the minute I walk away it’s done until the next time, if there is a next time. " I know. I've seen you in action! But those roles are constructed. There's nothing about the Y chromosome that makes someone more likely to be blokey or allergic to gossip. I'm more likely to be sitting with the women because it's easier, because I've been trained that that's how it goes, because I get taken more seriously even when I know nothing about the topic at hand. | |||
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"I might have boobs, the gypsies, the ability to have children and a nurturing motherly nature, that is about as far as I think as a woman. My thought process and the things I enjoy are definitely more male But I suppose this is it. Plenty of men can be nurturing. And your thought processes being male... Why? What makes them the domain of men? My thoughts are male dominated as they determine how I live my life and the things I enjoy doing. I despise girlie things and the topics they discuss, dolls, pink, make up, clothes, celebrities, latest trend etc. But plenty of men like those things, and plenty of women think like you do. Some of us do both. Ok. If you were to see me in a pub, I’m likely to be stood at the bar talking nonsense and laughing with the guys, than say at the table with the women who are discussing as above or having the same woo is me conversation over and over. It’s rare I get emotional or indeed emotionally attached. Example, I can be with someone socially & sexually and at that moment they are all that matters, but the minute I walk away it’s done until the next time, if there is a next time. I know. I've seen you in action! But those roles are constructed. There's nothing about the Y chromosome that makes someone more likely to be blokey or allergic to gossip. I'm more likely to be sitting with the women because it's easier, because I've been trained that that's how it goes, because I get taken more seriously even when I know nothing about the topic at hand." Nothing constructed or taught about my behaviour at all. Even as a child, my folks always commented you don’t play with other girls. No because they are boring and just want to play tea. I want to be outside building dens, climbing trees etc. Female ways weren’t forced on me, I was allowed to be me and I embraced my full tomboy side. We joke my grave will say ‘should have been born a boy’ | |||
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"I don’t like being a woman. You have to behave all the time. Total penis envy here " | |||
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"But many girls have these kinds of things forced on them. I mean, I decapitated most of my dolls, but I was told that this was what it meant to be a girl and was punished for years for not playing along (I perform femininity now in my way and on my terms. I was a tomboy for a very long time). You weren't, you had freedom to choose, you rejected it, your womanhood is intact. I don't think what you describe is intrinsically male or female. It's taught." Yes I taught myself to be me ! | |||
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"But many girls have these kinds of things forced on them. I mean, I decapitated most of my dolls, but I was told that this was what it meant to be a girl and was punished for years for not playing along (I perform femininity now in my way and on my terms. I was a tomboy for a very long time). You weren't, you had freedom to choose, you rejected it, your womanhood is intact. I don't think what you describe is intrinsically male or female. It's taught. Yes I taught myself to be me ! " But probably there were external factors. Building identity is challenging. I saw, as a girl, an image of what I was meant to be, and both hated it and felt resigned to my destiny. I initially taught myself about makeup as a way to be taken more seriously (because it's arbitrary but unfortunately there are femme appearance expectations to navigate). Obviously I developed a love for it as a form of art from there. But we're all influenced by certain norms around us and choose how to navigate those. | |||
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"I proper love being a woman. Not so much being a lady at times though. One of my bugbears however is that I can't walk in the prettiest shoes " God high heels. Beauty is pain etc. Ugh | |||
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"I think it's more about self examination. I'm not looking for answers per se. I just can't think of anything outside biological facts (for cis people) that is tied to gender or biological sex. Men keep houses together, raise children, are emotionally nurturing. Women are strong and can be rational. Men can certainly be irrational! My personal puzzle is how something so deeply true to me seems to lack deeper meaning." I don’t think a gender has anything to do with what people can be. As you said men can raise children and cook and run a household. Women are capable of doing what use to be deemed a mans job. I think it’s just that cis people don’t need to match a gender stereotype of behaviours and appearances, so long as they identify as their birth sex. Therefore being a woman or a man doesn’t really need a meaning or characteristic. It is just what you identify as. (That all made sense in my head no idea if it did typed out) | |||
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"It's how I was born. I get on with it, there are inconveniences and benefits. " I chose, choose, to examine what it means. I've had points where I wanted to be male, or wanted to want it. But deep down I'm a woman. Despite the fact that my identity isn't tied to anything other than that knowledge. | |||
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"But many girls have these kinds of things forced on them. I mean, I decapitated most of my dolls, but I was told that this was what it meant to be a girl and was punished for years for not playing along (I perform femininity now in my way and on my terms. I was a tomboy for a very long time). You weren't, you had freedom to choose, you rejected it, your womanhood is intact. I don't think what you describe is intrinsically male or female. It's taught. Yes I taught myself to be me ! But probably there were external factors. Building identity is challenging. I saw, as a girl, an image of what I was meant to be, and both hated it and felt resigned to my destiny. I initially taught myself about makeup as a way to be taken more seriously (because it's arbitrary but unfortunately there are femme appearance expectations to navigate). Obviously I developed a love for it as a form of art from there. But we're all influenced by certain norms around us and choose how to navigate those." The only external factors was my parents occasionally putting me in a skirt / dress and every photo I was sulking in. Other than that I was just myself... jeans, t shirt. I didn’t wear make up until 17 and no different than I do now. | |||
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"But many girls have these kinds of things forced on them. I mean, I decapitated most of my dolls, but I was told that this was what it meant to be a girl and was punished for years for not playing along (I perform femininity now in my way and on my terms. I was a tomboy for a very long time). You weren't, you had freedom to choose, you rejected it, your womanhood is intact. I don't think what you describe is intrinsically male or female. It's taught. Yes I taught myself to be me ! But probably there were external factors. Building identity is challenging. I saw, as a girl, an image of what I was meant to be, and both hated it and felt resigned to my destiny. I initially taught myself about makeup as a way to be taken more seriously (because it's arbitrary but unfortunately there are femme appearance expectations to navigate). Obviously I developed a love for it as a form of art from there. But we're all influenced by certain norms around us and choose how to navigate those. The only external factors was my parents occasionally putting me in a skirt / dress and every photo I was sulking in. Other than that I was just myself... jeans, t shirt. I didn’t wear make up until 17 and no different than I do now. " Other girls at school, teachers, this is how young ladies behave (in some instances they've done studies on children and shown boys and girls are treated differently for identical behaviour), etc. I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure no one is immune to gendered assumptions, particularly in their impressionable youth. We find ourselves. But it all has background and context we can't entirely escape. | |||
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"It means... Absolutely nothing to me. This is the body I was born with. I don't feel like it's the wrong body, it's just mine. This is what I got. I don't think there's any characteristics or traits that make anyone female or male. Women come in all shapes, sizes, sexualities, personalitits and have different fertility levels. None of those things make us female. I think my lack of understanding my own gender identity simply comes from being happy and comfortable in the sex I was given. I don't understand why people put these traits with one gender because I've never struggled with my own. " That's where I think I'm coming to. I'm a woman because I'm a woman. That means I'm not a man. Does it mean anything else? Not really. Just how I'm treated. | |||
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"Or. I get told semi regularly that I'm masculine because I lift weights or not a real woman because I'm child free by choice. I think those people who are threatened by my gym work should examine how comfortable they are with their identity rather than criticise mine. And the idea that you can't be a woman without motherhood is offensive to those who can't, and reduces gender identity to a form of parenthood. Gender identity and parenthood are not intrinsically linked." I couldn't agree more with this. Lifting weights doesn't make anyone masculine ffs, that's ridiculous. And anyone who chooses not to have children should have that choice respected, judging them for it is just wrong. Motherhood and womanhood aren't the same thing at all. | |||
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"But many girls have these kinds of things forced on them. I mean, I decapitated most of my dolls, but I was told that this was what it meant to be a girl and was punished for years for not playing along (I perform femininity now in my way and on my terms. I was a tomboy for a very long time). You weren't, you had freedom to choose, you rejected it, your womanhood is intact. I don't think what you describe is intrinsically male or female. It's taught. Yes I taught myself to be me ! But probably there were external factors. Building identity is challenging. I saw, as a girl, an image of what I was meant to be, and both hated it and felt resigned to my destiny. I initially taught myself about makeup as a way to be taken more seriously (because it's arbitrary but unfortunately there are femme appearance expectations to navigate). Obviously I developed a love for it as a form of art from there. But we're all influenced by certain norms around us and choose how to navigate those. The only external factors was my parents occasionally putting me in a skirt / dress and every photo I was sulking in. Other than that I was just myself... jeans, t shirt. I didn’t wear make up until 17 and no different than I do now. Other girls at school, teachers, this is how young ladies behave (in some instances they've done studies on children and shown boys and girls are treated differently for identical behaviour), etc. I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure no one is immune to gendered assumptions, particularly in their impressionable youth. We find ourselves. But it all has background and context we can't entirely escape." I get where you are coming from. However in my school, a forced boarding school, the only thing that defines us as girls is we had to wear a skirt and of course separate dorms, other than that we played rugby, the boys played hockey, and we all did full on cadet force etc. | |||
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"I self identify as a woman on Saturday nights when bouncers charge me to get in clubs. " lol | |||
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