Quote from: Sephirah on May 23, 2025, 04:09:38 PMHow do those traits relate to sex and gender? I get that cis people see it that way, and trans people see it that way, but what does masculine and feminine behaviour have to do with it? Obviously they're termed as such because people link them to sex and/or gender. But men can be, and some are feminine... and girls can be, and some are masculine, and literally everything in between. What trait does someone have to have to exhibit for them to see themselves as male, or female, or somewhere along the spectrum? Is it a physical thing or more of a mental... behavioural thing? That's kind of what my brain just doesn't get. And struggles to understand.
When we are born, we're a blank slate with a few pre-programmed instincts, but totally reliant on our parents. We can't even see properly until we're six weeks old. We have a physical sex assigned to us at birth by someone who looks at our genitals and decides boy or girl, but we're not even aware of that.
However, we are gendered from an early age, by virtue of how our parents dress us and teach us how to behave and not to behave. Somewhere around three years old, we become aware of that which is where the uncertainties for trans people begin and where the certainties for cis people also begin.
Gender isn't an on off switch, but instead a balance. So if someone has more masculine traits than feminine ones, they'll be read as male and vice versa. What happens next depends on other factors and much more crucially, on what model you use to understand what being trans means.
In the transsexualism model, which is almost the default here, to be trans you must reach an understanding you're in the wrong body for the gender you identify with. A woman with a preponderance of masculine traits who isn't seeking GAMC doesn't fit and if she's attracted to women will be regarded as a butch lesbian. A man with more feminine traits than masculine ones who doesn't seek GAMC doesn't fit either.
I've worked with 'stones', who are butch lesbians who don't like to be touched and who dislike contact with their genitals and all of them had much in common with trans people.
Non-binary people don't fit in the transsexualism model at all, because many of us aren't seeking to change sex.
The model I use is that gender incongruence is a
characteristic and a desire to change physical sex is a
symptom some people with that characteristic share. Everyone here can be fitted into that model, which opens the door to effeminate men and masculine women, because they share gender incongruence with us. Yet these two groups don't regard themselves as being trans, because the word has such heavy connotations of 'wish to be another physical sex,' for which they have no desire. Using my model of gender incongruence, everyone's welcome and everyone's explained.
Does this make sense and/or answer your question? If not, tell me where it falls down for you and I'll refine it some more!