Overcompensation or hypergenderingHave you ever found yourself at a party, or in a bar, or a gym, or maybe in the military, and some topic of discussion has come up which quickly spirals away into a group agreement you don't share? Perhaps you know the others well and perhaps you don't, but comes a moment when they all look at you and you find yourself saying something you don't agree with.
Why did you do that??? To avoid being the odd one out.
We've all been there because it's basic survival to go with the pack's decision. Packs are protective, they look after their own and it takes a courageous or foolhardy individual to stand alone against the majority. Especially when the pack might literally kick you out.
That's the risk. If a pack feels its values are threatened, it may go into attack mode, up to and including bullying and assault, so there's every encouragement from the earliest age not to stand out. Equally, there's so much pressure to conform, or, to 'be normal'.
Gender as a team eventWhich raises immediate issues, because we all have different preferences in different areas. Sport teams and their fans are a great example, there are hundreds if not thousands of teams, all with a group of passionate supporters. Walk into the wrong bar wearing your team's shirt and sparks may fly as pack mentality engages.
Imagine growing up in a town which has a single team, with a long history and complicated lore, which everyone passionately supports, including your own family, but when you are ten years old you move to another town, which also has a single team, also with a long history and complicated lore, which everyone there supports, equally passionately.
You can do the math as well as I, just how long are you going to last at school if you don't swap allegiance? So you do that, but end up realising must learn the lore of your adopted team too, adding to the task. In doing so, you feel you're betraying your 'old' team and if any friends from the past come to visit, it'll be awkward. On top of which, your parents, who don't have to live in the feral world of childhood, may still support the team you've abandoned.
Perhaps you'll compromise and support the old team when you're home and the new team at school? But what if someone finds out, like your parents, who don't get how difficult it is finding friends when you support a team they don't.
Experiences of pack dynamics like that are one of the many ways growing up teaches us to conform to values society sees as normative. Over time, some of these values have evolved into complex sets of expectations, one of the most complex of all these groups being the norms around gender.
I've been through gender several times in this blog, but it's worth repeating that in this context, gender is
a purely social construct. Society as a whole (clearly, I don't support this, but it is the way) regards gender as a two team choice between masculine and feminine, with the masculine team's stadium in a town called Amab (assigned male at birth) and the feminine team in a town called Afab (assigned female at birth).
Enough already with the team analogy, except to say the masculine and feminine teams have evolved their own lore too. Some of this lore made sense back in the day when might was right and the word of whoever wielded the biggest club was law, but in most 21st century societies, the lore is anachronistic because for most of us, it no longer serves a purpose.
Gender as a social construct is a key concept and if you want to hear it expressed in a single short sentence, think how often you've heard the phrase, 'Behave like a man!' or, the even pithier, 'Man up!'.
By contrast, have you ever heard someone say, 'Behave like a woman!'?
Absolutely no way, because in context, those words would have to be said when a woman didn't burst into tears in the face of a challenge. Even writing them feels ridiculous and if I do a spot of self analysis, I'm catching echoes of a cascade of gendered scripts all of which are spitting out, 'Does not compute.' In other words, my masculine scripts, such as are left, do not include ones written for when a woman needs to be told to be more feminine, in a situation where she's folded in the face of a challenge.
Both the masculine and the feminine scripts expect her to fold. Which is irrational, because there's no reason why she shouldn't be as agentic and decisive as any man, as an increasing number of women are.
The masculine/feminine gender binary society builtThe masculine/feminine gender binary and all the complexity of its associated traits endures long past it's sell by date because normativity is a powerful force. It is also a conservative one, in the sense normative gender works against change and in favour of hierarchy, even if that hierarchy no longer has any rational base.
MasculinityMasculinity is a cultural/social model defined by agentic traits and behaviours including independence, assertiveness, courage, ambition, leadership, rationality, dominance, emotional control and willingness to take risks. Masculine dress style is heavily influenced by these traits and often emphasises control, power, and readiness for action.
FemininityFemininity is a cultural/social model defined by communal traits and behavior including dependence, docility, empathy, sensitivity, modesty, humility, unselfishness, supportiveness, cheerfulness, emotional lability and a nurturing, yielding nature. Feminine dress style is influenced by these traits and emphasises softness, yieldingness and sometimes so impractical that quite normal actions like walking are a challenge.
One cue that masculine and feminine values (again, gender in the context we're using here) run deep is you probably smiled at the idea of anyone saying, 'Woman up!'. But even if you are a naturally effeminate man or a naturally masculine woman, or any combination in between, there's a close to 100% chance you've been brought up to subconsciously absorb all the traits and behaviours above.
It's becoming more permissible for AMAB people to be more sensitive and emotional, but there's no lack of pressure to be the opposite. It's become very acceptable for women to wear men's clothes, but even that took close on a century to stick. Except within very controlled conditions (as in performances) it's not acceptable for men to wear women's clothes and the only way someone AMAB can get away with it on a street is to try to 'pass'. Even then, members of the gender police will be hair triggered on other gendered cues like voice or facial hair, so there's no predicting what reactions you're likely to encounter.
Why is this so? It's because people aren't very flexible and feel unsafe if everything isn't predictable. Put another way, if they know you were born in Afab, they know you'll enjoy talking about the last feminine team game etc. It sounds trite, but one reason gendering became a powerful social construct was because it stops folk having to think too much.
What gender makes us do because of how it makes us thinkLet's go back to the party where the conversation went feral. If the participants are gendered masculine, enough beer and A might dare B. Even if that dare is stupidly risky for B, someone who's strongly gendered masculine may feel unable to back out, despite knowing if anything goes wrong they could suffer life changing consequences. B's gendering makes them feel they should be courageous and willing to take risks and also if they chicken, it tells them they aren't a 'proper' man.
If we swap in a group of women instead of a group of guys, different gendered values come into play, but while challenges will be less common and ones involving physical risk even less so, failure to pass normative judgement will usually have social fallout with equally dire effects.
The only reason these situations don't happen more often is most of us are able to spot the early warning signs and also because once a functional pack is sure of our allegiance, it won't waste time testing it repeatedly. A dysfunctional pack with unstable leadership might test it over and over, though, as will the gendering we've been brought up with should our gender identity be different.
How learned gender punishes us for non-complianceOne way those words in italics play out in real life is when someone's first glimmering they are trans dawns on them.
If you've read earlier posts in this blog, the growing realisation pulls up all kinds of scripted responses we can't do much about to begin with, assuming we even recognise them for what they are.
This is part of gender dysphoria and comes out in feelings of disgust at our own trans thoughts and behaviours, all of which, I stress, would have been normative had we been raised in the gender with which we identify. In other words, all the lore we've absorbed about our home team (as in the gender we were brought up in) tells us the pack is going to eat us alive if we support the other team.
I'm leaving out non-binary people for this round, because, clearly, this situation is different for them. But for the rest of us, the instinctive solution is to prove to ourselves we deserve to belong to the gender we were brought up in to avoid being cast out.
If the gendering we were raised with was masculine, the moment we start getting thoughts to the contrary, we'll do everything we can to prove to ourselves we're stereotypically masculine, and if we're feminine, we'll opt for being stereotypically feminine.
That's a problem, because basic masculinity and femininity are already stereotypes which leave little room for manoeuvre, so when someone goes hyper, it's noticeable.
What is 'hyper' gendering and why does it happen?Hyperfeminine women often tend to view themselves as sexual objects, rather than actors. Typically, they see success as being determined by developing and maintaining a relationship with a man and their primary value in a romantic relationship as their sexuality.
Hypermasculinity is called machismo. Mosher et al came up with a long list of characteristics macho men adopt, which are worth quoting here:
...spends a good deal of time participating in games, sports, social activities, and other amusements; does not want to understand many areas of knowledge and does not value synthesizing ideas or logical thought; tends to act on the "spur of the moment," without deliberation, giving vent readily to feelings, wishes, and volatile emotions; wants to be the center of attention and engages in behavior which wins the notice of others; enjoys exciting activity, especially if danger is involved, and does not avoid risk of bodily harm; does not want the uncertainty of decisions removed by definite knowledge since he prefers to rely on guesses or probabilities; enjoys combat and argument and is sometimes willing to hurt people to get his way or to "get even"; attempts to control or influence his environment and to influence or direct other people; does not give sympathy and comfort or offer others a "helping hand"; is not concerned with keeping personal effects and surroundings neat and organized; and does not describe himself in terms judged as desirable.
Most of the qualities Mosher lists are the opposite of being feminine and it's a long list. The length of the list and its polar nature explains the reactions AMAB trans people experience when they first discover their trans nature. Fear often lies at the core - fear of the pack turning against you.
Fear and self-loathingSelf-loathing is more complex, but can be intense in AMAB people who find they feel better wearing women's clothes to express their gender identity. The gender they were brought up in triggers scripts which spit out a 'failed man' output, with disgust the result because you aren't behaving like a man.
The 'failed man' output computes because masculine men don't like soft flowing clothes, so it's not surprising this kind of self-loathing is much less common in AFAB people, because the feminine scripts they were brought up with allow wearing masculine clothes.
Both AMAB and AFAB people who have fully accepted their trans gender identity often also experience intense self-loathing directed at their own bodies, particularly sexual characteristics, such as breasts (or lack of) and whatever nature gifted us below the waist.
They say it isn't the emotions, it's what you do with them, but fear, disgust and self-loathing is a tough combo to deal with. What many do do with them is become depressed, angry, or both... but there's a tempting escape route.
Why not double down on our home team values?This route is tempting because we all know how we get caught up in the enthusiasm of crowd on its feet shouting the team on, so it's got to work with gender too, right? Maybe if we're more feminine than feminine, or more masculine than masculine, the cheers of approval will drown out the dysphoria caused by our trans gender identity?
This is where the gender being a social construct becomes really clear. When trans people go through a 'hyper' phase, we do it by turning up the volume on the gender we were brought up in (which is the gender we can't live with) and we do it for two reasons. The first is to send the clearest possible signal to
others that we belong to the gender we are amping up and the second is to send the clearest possible signal to
ourselves that we do, in the hope the noise drowns out that worrying signals we do not. It's the equivalient of buying the home team strip and and making it luminous.
We can do this because as we grow up, we subsconciously learn, through a process of trial and error, how to send gendered signals. It's a powerful form of non-verbal communication we use to send messages ranging from 'don't mess with me!' to 'I think you're cute, but I'm too shy to say it!' Even if the signals we learn belong to a gender that makes part of us dysphoric, we understand at least some of them. People in a hypermasculine or hyperfeminine phase are acting out the strongest, most commonly understood signals core to masculinity or femininity, so what better way for someone who fears they are trans than to send out a deluge of signals to the contrary?
It would be a 'better way', if it worked, but the end result is to lock us into the same loop of denial and disgust we get into when we throw out wardrobes. Sooner or later, the gender identity hyper is struggling to suppress will reassert itself. Although some people go through repeated cycles of hyper, they only repeat because at the end of each cycle they experience a flip back to the gender identity they are trying to escape. If you've been through one complete cycle, it's a hint you need therapy, if you've experienced two, you should book an appointment and if you've experienced three you needed to do it yesterday.
You'll know if you've been to either 'hyper' destination, but within the trans population, my impression is it's more commonly people assigned male at birth who end up 'going hyper', if you want to call it that. I'm writing this because I'm not reading about AFAB trans people going hyper, but that's not to say it doesn't happen.
There's a logical reason why people assigned female at birth won't, because often the last thing they want is to become pregnant. Also, because people assigned female at birth are less strongly subject to gender policing, it's may be easier for them to accept they are trans at an earlier age, and finally, trans people who are AFAB are much more likely to be non-binary. That still leaves all the issues with body related gender dysphoria, but those would be made worse by an excursion into hyperfemininity. I'd stress how little is known about AFAB trans people, which is shocking, because they are common.
Blogs and intros here often mention phases where members have gone through hypermasculine phases. I can't write about hyper from personal experience, but at a guess, the reason it didn't happen to me was because of my friendship with Ginny. That rewrote some of my gendered expectations at a crucial age, so I believe I have her to thank for that as well as so many other things. For me, it was maybe an accident I never went hyper.
Does it matter if you went through a hyper phase?Not unless it's left you dealing with the fallout today and in some cultures, machismo is almost normative, which isn't to say it's healthy. Where it can be extremely unhealthy is when you form a lasting sexual relationship during a hyper phase, because if you subsequently flip a 180 on gender identity, chances are the relationship won't survive. That's too much change for a partner to digest.
Are all hypermasculine or hyperfeminine people trans? Definitely not. Many are either what is called anxiously attached or avoidantly attached (or both), which is something else entirely, but of the rest, a few will be trans, just not yet ready to accept it.
In the context of trans, periods of hyper-gendering are understandable, so if it's happened to you, don't kick yourself over it. Within the path of your self-discovery, there may have been no viable option but to go there, allowing for what you knew then. What you can do is unpick what motivated you to 'go hyper', which could be a useful sub task for therapy, because in completing that task, you'll likely gain an insight you might never have got otherwise.