This is a very interesting question of gender definition, and gender identity. I was asked 3 days ago by my fellow salespersons to wait on a lady in a sundress, and her.....boyfriend? Right away, I could understand their discomfort in dealing with this woman. She didn't have facial hair, but did have more chest hair than I ever did before it all fell out (thank you God, and spiro). I mean she had a dense curly mat from the neck down, clearly exposed in a lowcut sundress. Also, though, she had a very female-looking frame.
I don't know if she had breasts, because to know this would have me apparently stare at her chest hair as well.
This was my instant decision: She was presenting as a woman, and so I treated her as one, and it was only then, that she began calling me Beverly, and referring to me as she, and her, to her accompanying male friend, even though I clearly presented as female, and am not often read by most customers.
I felt I had been involved in some cosmic test!
So, women who have hair may not be attractive, they may not be appealing, and they might make me feel icky, but.......they're saying to the world they are female says to me they are female. I know....they could be ->-bleeped-<-s instead, but I have never seen a ->-bleeped-<- that did not do all in their power to pass, including shaving their chest.
She's female. But it was a tough test!
Bev