Quote from: wendy on June 06, 2012, 09:19:41 AM
God and/or nature creates every combination. You are what you are. It is not bad or wrong or immoral to be a combination that is not accepted or typical to society. However society prefers uniformity and unless you have some special gift to offer to society then you may become an outcast.
No less do I not understand myself I get confused with all combinations. I understand blending genders but what does it mean to have no gender? How can society understand trans community when we do not understand ourselves? What does no gender mean?
How do you describe an absence? Okay... imma do my best. Remember this is my own perception and does not represent other people's.
I have a physical sex. A combination of my genetics and biology. For me personally, I had a mismatch between the imprint on my brain and certain other parts of my body. We sometimes call the results of that dysphoria. It's unpleasant and as a result I've altered my flesh with hormones and surgery. I give primacy to my brain as the most important organ in my body, and consider myself female according to my sex.
Gender. I'm not sure I even know what that word is supposed to mean. When people talk about gender identity, usually they define it as a "deeply felt sense of yourself as male, female, androgyne, genderqueer, etc." I don't have any "deeply felt sense" of a gender. It's like when people talk about "souls." I just... can't relate. I'm flesh, nothing else. As far as I can tell, without my dysphoria I would have just been male.
And "no gender" sounds kind of odd to me. I'd rather say I have no gender identity. Everyone is gendered due to the way our world works at present, regardless of their desires.
Quote from: wendy on June 06, 2012, 09:44:57 AM
Usually a simple answer means someone really understands what they have said.
I understand none of them. Does that equate to gender fluid?
No, genderfluid is something entirely different as far as I know.
QuoteHow does someone with no gender express themselves?
Well, I live as and look like a girl. All my gender/sex markers say female, since I just go with my sex regardless (though occasionally I'm tempted to leave it blank on forms out of irritation). Otherwise, I dunno. I'm just me.
I have short androgynous hair, I usually wear a mix of men's and women's clothes in fairly neutral styles and dark colours. I wear makeup rarely. I feel weird and uncomfortable if I go too masculine or too feminine in my presentation. I don't really know why. I guess it feels like buying in to a system I don't really understand or respect. Not so much the clothes themselves, but the context. And in some ways the way I present reduces the quantity of gendered crap I have to deal with, because it cues people that I'm a bit... off.
I really dislike when people gender behaviours and things. It makes me really uncomfortable and embarrassed for the person. I always feel like pointing out that there is extremely limited evidence for gendered anything. And that tendencies and correlation are not the same as certainties and causality. But mostly I keep my mouth shut.
I guess it comes down to: I don't really believe in gender identity. Not that I disbelieve in gender identity. I'm not atheist on the subject, I'm just agnostic. And I accept that other peoples' experiences are different from my own.