Quote from: Mrs. Oliphant on April 12, 2025, 11:01:49 AMMy daughter is the most beautiful woman in the world and she has strong masc tendencies (she never wears a dress and often has a hammer or a rifle in her hands).
That phrase would describe half the women I grew up with and perfectly encapsulates something women can do which men can't because men are so more strongly gender policed than they.
I just looked up the word tomboy and found it emerged with its current meaning in English during the sixteenth century, so women with a mix of masculine and feminine gender identification have been identified for a long time. I guess they've existed even longer than the 500 year history of the word tomboy suggests, given the human race doesn't change very much.
Until the 1914 European war, standards for women's dress were highly gendered, but with every available man in the armed forces, women had to work in factories and you can't work in a dress. They were allowed to wear trousers, boots, work shirts and jackets because they were more appropriate, but it was such a big change government declarations had to be involved and it became policy. So many women enjoyed the freedom that by 1945 the swing of the pendulum was unstoppable and by the 1960s women whose natural gender identity wasn't highly feminine had carved out a slice of fashion for themselves and could walk down any street without fear of discrimination.
In the process, women changed the bounds of femininity as society accepted it. The change they wrought is a good example of why social scientists and the whole GAMC system see gender (WHO sense) as a social construct and not as an innate property of the human race. How we think of gender changes across societies and over time.
Reframing this (I find reframing irresistible because of the way it changes everything you see by altering the angle of the mirror) I could be compared to the assigned male at birth equivalent of a tomboy.
I can't think of a word for it. Janegirl? That sounds crazy, but only because it hasn't been around half a millennium. There was a time when I thought seriously about transitioning. I had laser twenty years ago, or whenever I first judged it was safe. But then I reframed and thought about what my gender identity would be if I didn't have to live with society's definitions and pressures.
It was extremely hard to do, despite being steeped in psychology and life sciences and having an analyst on tap who I didn't have to pay for, but I finally realised I'd spent decades failing to see what our Romeo and Juliet had been telling me. That was a long time ago now.
Quote from: Mrs. Oliphant on April 12, 2025, 11:01:49 AMMaybe that's the answer to your rhetorical question: parents should raise their children, cis or variant, to be just like Ginny.
For some of us, me included, it would work just fine. Tomboys have carved out a much loved exception that crosses the gender divide, but society's construct of gender isn't forgiving enough to allow the same to happen for people who are assigned male at birth.
I'm beginning to think I should get back in touch with Ginny, if only to find out what she thinks of all this. It's a shame the dog is dead now because he saw at least half our play before he dozed off and he has to have had an opinion of his own