Quote from: Berserk on April 04, 2017, 08:23:10 AM
They're able to say "I'm a guy" most likely because they are more comfortable with themselves than you are with yourself.
More comfortable in their delusions, maybe. Or just girls that think it's trendy or somehow empowering to say they're guys when they aren't and aren't even trying to live or look like them. Maleness and femaleness will cease to have meaning at all if ANYONE can say they are either without even looking the part.
There is nothing anyone can say that will convince me that maleness and femaleness are not directly, inextricably connected to physicality. When people say that gender and sex shouldn't be conflated, it's pure nonsense. A trans man wouldn't say he identifies with the male gender unless he was thinking of wanting the body of the male sex, or the characteristics associated with the male sex. Gender and sex may not be the same but they have to be extremely closely linked or else maleness and femaleness lose all their meaning entirely. My current opinion is that "gender" is the "sex" you want to be and "sex" is the "sex" you actually are.
QuoteAt the same time I'm also perfectly happy to acknowledge that I'm not the same as a cis guy, and in that sense I do see trans guys as different than cis guys, a different kind of guy but still a guy. Being different doesn't necessarily mean you're not a guy.
That's good but you're one of the few trans guys I've met that actually acknowledge that we're not the same as cis guys. Many deny that they are female at all, which doesn't make any sense.
QuoteThose folks you're talking about are doing what makes them feel comfortable in their skin, and if that makes them feel validated as male then good on them.
I think these types of people have done more harm than good for the trans community. Many of them are just teenage girls that are playing around with labels to feel different and unique. They think that they can suddenly be men, the holy grail!, as long as they say they are. If society thought we were jokes before, they have much more reason to think it now, with people identifying as demiboys or demigirls or non-binary or insisting on being called he/him even when they present 100% female, etc.
That's why I'm currently in favor of a more honest, logical, realistic, non-delusional approach. I think that I could support other trans men more, as well as myself, if we all just acknowledged the reality of the situation: we're women that want to be men. To deny that we're women, to deny that we're female, to insist that we are 100% male and just as male as any cis guy...to me, it absolutely borders on (if not flat-out characterizes) delusional insanity.
There MUST be a logical basis for our claims. Whether it's the male brain thing, or having a male self-image, whatever. To say we "feel" male doesn't cut it. There is no such thing as feeling male. Feeling stereotypically masculine? Sure. Again, not the same thing as being male. There are many, many women that feel more masculine than feminine. They're still not male.
So let's take an extremely masculine woman and a feminine pre-everything trans man. The woman likes repairing cars, cutting wood, is the strong and silent type, speaks in a flat tone of voice, sees the world logically, hates shopping, etc. The feminine pre-everything trans man likes working with children, hates getting dirty, chats endlessly with friends, loves buying clothes, and is extremely sensitive and emotional.
How can we say that the second one is male? Where's the basis for it? This is a person that operates on E, has a totally female body, female personality, female behaviors, female interests...
And so how can that person say "I'm a guy"?
It must be about the physical body this person wants. What else COULD it be about?
But then it comes back to "wants" vs "HAS". I don't believe it's enough to just want something and claim you already have it when you don't.
Could I say I'm a blond even though I'm a brunette and haven't dyed my hair? Maybe I want to dye it. Maybe after I do, I could say I'm blond. But right now? Can I say I'm a blond even though my hair is clearly brown?
QuoteProbably not. If I'm honest, I tend to think that that "difference between male and female brains" thing is something lots of us try to cling to to feel more validated. Ultimately, even between cis men/women, I don't see there being a definitive difference in the way men and women think beyond what could be attributed to socialisation.
I definitely disagree. Pretty much all the men and women I've ever known act and think in different ways, many of which seem hard-wired. These are men and women from different cultures, backgrounds, upbringings, etc. And if socialization were the only factor, then all of us trans men would think and act more femininely than we naturally do, because that's how we were raised and socialized. Instead, we resist that socialization because our brains are telling us differently.
But if you don't think there are differences in male and female brains, are you saying that you have a female brain and a female body but are a male? If so, if you think you have a female brain, then why do you think you would prefer to have a male body?
QuoteAlright, let's go down that path then. What is the difference between "wanting" to be a guy and "being a guy"? Or maybe look at it this way, do you see trans guys as simply "wanting to be guys" or "actually guys" because that's how we identify?
I see trans guys as women that want to be guys. Biologically speaking, there is no way that trans guys are already actually guys, and to say otherwise is, again, delusional. Now if we were able to transition fully--hypothetically speaking, let's say that we were able to take T and it would magically remove our breasts, close our vaginas, and give us working penises--then hey, I'd be fine with FULLY TRANSITIONED trans guys saying they're guys. But that's not reality and probably never will be.
QuoteWere we born as we are or do we become guys? I suspect the answer is different from person to person. As a young kid I always secretly considered myself a guy,
What does it mean to consider yourself a guy though? You knew you didn't have a penis...
So you considered yourself a "person with a penis" even though you knew you didn't have one?
QuoteI just didn't tell anyone for fear of being humiliated. But that didn't stop me from preferring boy's clothing (and luckily I had a mother who was previously a tom boy herself so she was pretty accommodating), collecting hockey cards, playing sports, and preferring to hang out with other boys.
Again, these are all things that many masculine women can relate to, and even some feminine women.
QuoteI had top surgery around five years ago now and that made an astronomical difference in my ability to feel comfortable in my own skin. I'm still not on hormones though but I haven't allowed that to stop me from living my life as a guy. So there comes that comfort thing again, and perhaps that's what you need to learn for yourself.
And what does it mean to live your life as a guy? It must be about being seen and treated by others as a guy. Otherwise, what does it mean? You go home at night and still know you have a vagina and almost certainly a feminine body besides not having breasts since you're not on T. There are women that have had mastectomies. They're not living their lives as guys though.
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About the activities/clubs thing. The good thing about times changing is that gender segregated spaces are becoming more accepting of trans people. Many male spaces are lagging behind female spaces for that, yes, but short of competing in professional sports/levels leading to professional sports technically trans people now have the right to belong to clubs/activities for the gender they identify as.
I don't think this is a good thing. There should be some benchmarks that trans people have to meet in order to belong to single-sex clubs or sports; for example, one year on hormones. How annoying would it be to be a football team of cis guys, for example, that suddenly have to welcome a girl and act as if she's one of them. Suddenly they'd have to accommodate her weaknesses, they wouldn't be able to participate in guy talk anymore, they'd censor their speech, the whole group dynamic would change. Same for a group of women that have to welcome a guy. I think there is value in sex-separated organizations that will be taken away if everything becomes mixed gender.
QuoteSo if you do feel like a woman living as a man, more power to you.
Well, how can I not? How can any of us not? We -are- women living as men. No, I don't want to identify as a woman, but I kinda HAVE to, seeing as I have breasts, a vagina, a uterus, curves, no penis, etc. Those are the characteristics of a woman. I don't get how any of us can deny that.
Yes, it hurts to think of myself as a woman but at least it's REAL. At least it's honest. It's acknowledging the truth, which is a painful truth, but still the truth: I was born with a female body and am now changing it to become more masculine. I still doubt if I'll ever be able to make it "male" though.
QuoteIf not, do yourself a favour and challenge yourself to start feeling comfortable with who you are instead of being so focused on what others will think or say. We only have one life, better not to waste it giving in to our fears.
It has nothing to do with what others think or say though. If the entire world started reading me as male TOMORROW, it wouldn't change the fact that I know I'm not. I'd still have to be the one to go home, take off my clothes, and acknowledge that I don't have a male body, and that my life as a man is merely a performance.
Quote from: The Flying LemurIf it were others' perceptions that created maleness and femaleness, than a trans man who passes 100% of the time would be more of a "real man" than a feminine cis man who is often mistaken for a woman.
A trans man that passes 100% of the time COULD be more of a "real man" when it comes to how he's treated in society. But the feminine cis man will always know he's more of a "real man" when it comes to biological reality.
QuoteI think of "maleness" as an identity, not a consensus public opinion. Identities start and end from within. I don't think "I" am my body, my clothes, my possessions, or anything else that's destructible. "I" am the sum total of the experience that began in infancy and which will end upon my death.
But what does that identity mean? When you say "I'm male", what on earth are you referring to if NOT your body?
QuoteYour belief that others confer "real maleness" on you seems to be making you unhappy. Why would you do that to yourself?
It's not that I believe that others confer it on me. It's my own perception, my own self-knowledge that I don't have the parts that can make me a "real male".
And why would I make myself unhappy like this? Because I believe so strongly in truth, reality, objectiveness, and logic. I can't be truly happy if I believe how I'm living my life, the things I say about myself, the way people treat me, etc are based in delusion and lie. I WISH I could. Believe me, I wish I could be one of those people that just bases everything off their feelings and looks for no objective justification and lives in a merry land of rainbows, but that's not me.
QuoteMost cis people who swear up and down that anatomy alone determines femaleness and maleness judge their own gender "realness" by existential criteria. "How do I know I'm a real man? I dunno . . . I just . . . am. Always have been, always will be. What a question!"
If they answer like that, that's only because they're not even considering that the biological facts are being questioned. They know they're male because they have penises, testes which produce testosterone and make them grow up as boys, turn into men, etc. That's all taken for granted, so then they start looking for more existential criteria.