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Started by Constance, March 04, 2008, 03:14:47 PM
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Quote from: NickSister on March 05, 2008, 01:29:58 PMMy take on Pica picas comments is that I think it is possible for us to not know and accept our own internal identity and this manifests itself as gender confusion. Unless you are aware of the possibility of there being something other than male or female it is not exactly easy to spontaneously realise you are not male or female in terms of gender identity. I assumed I was male for a long time and what I was feeling was the same as what all males felt. I guess it took a 'gender crisis' to realise otherwise.
Quote from: Nero on March 05, 2008, 02:45:03 PMBut was this 'gender crisis' prompted by some outside non-gender related source - a crappy childhood or some other trauma? Or was the crisis purely gender-related in nature? See, I'm just not buying that 'an unusual upbringing or tragedy' is required for realization of one's gender identity. Sounds rather absurd. It screams Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome rather than elightment of one's gender identity.
Quote from: Pica Pica on March 05, 2008, 05:44:55 PMWhat I meant was that the androgyne can wander around confused and needs some form of reflection or some push to make them pinpoint or discover their androgyny. That it is possible for androgynes to never discover themselves and to always feel lost and what is needed is an event or a set of circumstances to start the process of self realisation and actualisation.
Quote from: lady amarant on March 05, 2008, 03:49:13 AMQuote from: Rowan_Danielle on March 05, 2008, 03:14:13 AMGender would be more of a construct than sex because you start life as a blank tablet, socially and mentally, and your personality is built up through interaction with people and yourself.We don't start out with a blank slate though. Gender is seated in physical structures within the brain, just as sex is seated in physical structures within the body. And because those two components differentiate at different times during foetal development, the chance for a disconnect between the two slips in.
Quote from: Rowan_Danielle on March 05, 2008, 03:14:13 AMGender would be more of a construct than sex because you start life as a blank tablet, socially and mentally, and your personality is built up through interaction with people and yourself.
Quote from: Kir on March 06, 2008, 06:11:09 PMMuch of the brain is based on chemicals, and electric impulses. So I think much of our personality is hard wired into our chemistry and electronics. But I think much of it is what we learn as being acceptable, and our personal experiences.
Quote from: Jaimey on March 08, 2008, 06:06:53 PMI think our gender identities could be either hard wired or constructed based on our experiences or a combination of the two. I think it's probably different for each person. I didn't have any sort of crisis that led me to know that I was different...it was more a collection of subtle things that I'd noticed which made me realize that I was not binary. And then I had to go on a little gender journey to figure out I was androgyne. Social constructs are like chains or handcuffs. They make me feel suffocated and trapped. The sooner we do away with them, the better.
Quote from: Jaimey on March 08, 2008, 06:06:53 PMSocial constructs are like chains or handcuffs. They make me feel suffocated and trapped. The sooner we do away with them, the better.
Quote from: Pica Pica on March 08, 2008, 08:51:09 PMQuote from: Jaimey on March 08, 2008, 06:06:53 PMSocial constructs are like chains or handcuffs. They make me feel suffocated and trapped. The sooner we do away with them, the better.I can't agree with you there.Nearly everything decent about life is a social construct (although often a social construct stemming from a biological imperative).Love is a social construct, family, entertainment, stories, religion and belief, politeness, breakfast, art, respect...don't get rid of those.
Quote from: Simone Louise on March 09, 2008, 06:32:12 PMJaimey, be free!
Quote from: Pica Pica on March 08, 2008, 08:51:09 PMLove is a social construct, family, entertainment, stories, religion and belief, politeness, breakfast, art, respect...don't get rid of those.
Quote from: Jaimey on March 09, 2008, 08:38:34 PMWe should be allowed to be free and be ourselves without worrying about what everyone else will think or do to us.
Quote from: Shades O'Grey on March 10, 2008, 09:33:58 AMReligion is more complicated matter. If by the word "religion" you mean organized and codified religious pracitices (Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Wicca, Buddhism, etc), then I'd agree with you: these things are constructed. But if by the word "religion" one means the sense that there is Something Else out there, that, to me, is similar to Love and is not a construct.
Quote from: NickSister on March 10, 2008, 02:28:23 PMQuote from: Shades O'Grey on March 10, 2008, 09:33:58 AMReligion is more complicated matter. If by the word "religion" you mean organized and codified religious pracitices (Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Wicca, Buddhism, etc), then I'd agree with you: these things are constructed. But if by the word "religion" one means the sense that there is Something Else out there, that, to me, is similar to Love and is not a construct.I see this as the difference between spirituality and religion.