Quote from: androgynouspainter26 on June 16, 2014, 10:45:10 PM
Can someone be transsexual and also nonbinary?
Yes.
If your body, your presentation as it is, happens to be male and you are non-binary, how does changing your presentation, your body to female change that?
It could be the other way around, how would that change it?
Are non-binaries supposed to look androgynous of a sort? Or can we just go with what feels right...
I've defined transsexual as binary and having a desire to go through a full transition,.. in general.
I've been feeling guilty for using that as an example at times, because it isn't completely true.
There are plenty of people who thought of themselves as binary transsexual and have landed somewhere in the non-binary. Why not?
There are people who thought of themselves as non-binary and then discover that they are transsexual and binary. Again, why not?
I should be defining transsexual as someone who wishes to go through a full transition and leave the binary/non-binary up to them.
Times have changed and so have definitions. *I need to be more careful in how I define things, I shouldn't define anyways, it's not my call.
These are not binding rules of absolutes, there really aren't any that I can think of...
Terms and descriptions are always changing and are generalizations at their best, totally wrong for some at their worst.
Who has the right to tell anyone what their presentation should be or not be based on their gender, whether binary or non-binary?
Who has the right to tell you what your gender is? Is it based on presentation, whether non-binary or binary?
Do I now have the right to tell them what I think they should present as? I don't think that whole idea works very well, for anyone.
There does seem to be little changes in definitions going on.
Which is just fine, it shows more awareness of just what it is to be trans... Regardless of who you are.
Something that as a community, (binary, and non-binary, and others), we need to be able to explain if we are to have equal rights.
A little fine tuning here and there is good, but there isn't a way of keeping presentation and gender in a single rule, they are two different things.
Trying to force presentation and gender together as an explanation of self is complicated in itself as it is.
If someone needs to ask about it, you have to go through all the explanation of what each is and why...
Just like using labels in the first place, it boxes you into something you will probably need to find a way out of sooner or later.
I go with 'be descriptive, not a description'. You are who you are and nobody can tell you that you aren't.
Nobody has that right, unless they want to give it up for themselves as well...
Full transitions don't belong to anyone, anyone can do that if they want to. Nobody owns that.
To say something along the lines that only certain people can do that is pretty narrow minded and it's boxing people up into neat little packages.
Individualism is probably one of the most distinguishing characteristic of the trans community as a whole.
Ativan