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11 votes
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How do you feel about it/its pronouns?
Is it just another set of pronouns to you? Does it trigger you, or bother you in any way? Do you use it/its (or know someone who does), and if so how have people responded? I can see arguments for...
Is it just another set of pronouns to you? Does it trigger you, or bother you in any way? Do you use it/its (or know someone who does), and if so how have people responded?
I can see arguments for all sides of this, but haven't seen much discussion about it. So, what are your thoughts?
29 votes -
The food that makes you gay
27 votes -
Detransition is gender liberation, too - Here's to never being satisfied and forever changing
34 votes -
Swedish parliament passed a law Wednesday lowering the age required for people to legally change their gender from 18 to 16
34 votes -
'I was born intersex and doctors tried to erase me. It's important to speak out' - an interview with Raven van Dorst of the Dutch rock-metal band Dool
40 votes -
German parliament votes to make it easier for transgender people to change their name and gender
39 votes -
Black LGBTQ+ youth need spaces that embrace them fully, researchers say
7 votes -
Trans identity and the gender binary
Hi! I would like to take a moment to expand my understanding of an aspect of queer culture that I have some trouble with. I'd like to preface this by saying that, while I consider myself to be...
Hi! I would like to take a moment to expand my understanding of an aspect of queer culture that I have some trouble with. I'd like to preface this by saying that, while I consider myself to be queer in the broader sense, I also pass as a cishet male. That being said, I'm going to express myself honestly in the hopes that someone will be able to give me an honest to what might read as bigoted. Putting everything else in a detail box:
Questions on the 'validity' of trans identity
Basically - I understand gender to be social construct based on expected roles for biological males and females undertake in a traditional society. While there is some validity to the stereotypes on a biological level, I figure that most people should be able to understand that they exist in many places on the spectrum of masculine to feminine traits. People who are queer generally do not fit into these stereotypes and experience ostracization from those who cannot escape the mental paradigm of the gender binary.Is trans identity more than a product of societal gender roles? I don't understand where the root of the dysphoria could be other than not fitting into the stereotypes of your assigned gender. How could someone come to understand that their body feels "wrong" to them without learning that from something outside of their internal experience (i.e. perceiving gender roles and feeling like oneself is more aligned to the opposite pole than the one they're assigned to?) What is the benefit in choosing to identify as transgender (which reinforces gender roles through buying into them) versus choosing to eschew the gender binary entirely and identifying with / presenting as genderfluid or non-binary?
39 votes -
Elliot Page: Embracing my trans identity saved me
30 votes -
Finland has passed a new, progressive rights law which makes it substantially easier for trans people to change their legal gender
9 votes -
UK government to block Scottish gender bill
8 votes -
New LGBTQ+ plan presented by the Danish government includes a proposal to expand access to legal gender change to all children regardless of age
4 votes -
Bill 2 is "the most transphobic bill ever proposed in Quebec," activist says
5 votes -
How Star Wars' biggest fan wiki found itself in a fight over trans identity
14 votes -
Spain's new gender bill will allow self-id, without a requirement for medical treatment
20 votes -
How rigid/fluid is your gender and/or sexuality?
The following questions are aimed at gender identity, gender expression, romantic orientation, and/or sexual orientation. To cut down on wordiness, all the questions below will just say...
The following questions are aimed at gender identity, gender expression, romantic orientation, and/or sexual orientation. To cut down on wordiness, all the questions below will just say "identity", but know that I'm asking about any and all of the different parts that make up our gendered, romantic, and sexual selves.
You don't necessarily need to answer regarding all axes or focuses: choose the ones most salient or meaningful to you and your experiences. Furthermore, these questions are open to all, including people who don't identify as LGBT.
- How would you describe the rigidity/fluidity of your identity or its different parts?
- Do you experience short-term changes in your identity?
- Have you experienced long-term changes in your identity?
- Does your identity have any elements that are unchanging long-term?
- How does the fluidity/rigidity of your identity affect you? Are there advantages? Disadvantages?
- Are you certain in your identity right now, or is it unclear to you at the moment?
- If you are certain, do you think that certainty will persist, or might things change in the future?
- If you are uncertain, do you think a more definite identity will coalesce for you at some point?
As always, the questions are just jumping off points and don't need to be treated like a quiz. Also, just to be clear, I am asking this purely out of curiosity and am in no way trying to assert that a more rigid/fluid identity is better/worse. Likewise, I'm not trying to cast judgment on anyone still questioning or engaging in self-discovery. Your process and your identity are valid wherever you're at and however you feel. I'm simply interested to hear what your experiences are, whoever you are.
27 votes -
Samoa's 'third gender' delicately balances sex and religion
9 votes -
Will non-binary gender options on state IDs reduce discrimination?
8 votes -
Categorically Gay: For queer people who grew up in an era when rigid identities were essential, today’s fluidity can feel like their history is washing out with the tide.
12 votes -
Five trans Catholics on the Vatican’s rejection of their gender identity
7 votes -
Living agender, when the world doesn’t want you
18 votes -
Queerbaiting - exploitation or a sign of progress?
11 votes -
What it's like to be illegally gay in Myanmar
11 votes -
More than porn: Tumblr affirmed trans youths' identities
12 votes