#:)gender
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
I'm 100% not disputing Maddy Thorson's claim that she didn't figure out she was trans until after she'd finished working on Celeste (DLC excluded), and the greater part of the game works at least as well as an allegory for living with mental illness as it does an allegory for gender transition. However, that specific repeated motif where Badeline keeps insisting – condescendingly at first, then with increasing desperation – that Madeline is "not a mountain climber", as though "being a mountain climber" is some sort of fundamental identity... well, I'd love to know where Thorson thought she was going with that part at the time that she wrote it, if it wasn't intended to be a gender thing.
3K notes
·
View notes
Text
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
#polls#incognito polls#anonymous#tumblr polls#tumblr users#questions#polls about lgbtq stuff#submitted jan 15#pronouns#nonbinary#gender#trans
416 notes
·
View notes
Text
THIS IS ME IF U EVEN CARE ‼️ 🗡️
I've been seeing a lot of knight posts recently. pretty great
66K notes
·
View notes
Text
One of my coworkers is experiencing The Gender Feels. They slowly started coming in wearing tighter girlier clothes; they pierced their ears, painted their nails. It’s giving them a lot of euphoria.
At one point offhandedly said they don’t really care about politics.
I’m like, baby, you are on the Caring A Lot About Politics pipeline now. It’s too late.
#ramblies#funny#gender#trans#currently using they them but if this person isn’t she her’ing by this time next year I’ll eat my hat#I’ve seen the cute wigs#I’ve been down this road before#as a note it’s fine if they stay a they/them but their incandescent joy of being femme leads me to conclude it’s not their end stop
335 notes
·
View notes
Text
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/4d990a77baaa59dcc80a89ba995c9054/a09f520a4be375a9-16/s540x810/552f0d849b9e9ea4623f02b0fd9f906a48cfd650.jpg)
#CDC#Center for Disease Control#Nazi#Nazis#Berlin#Sexology#human sexuality#gender#identity#LGBT#LGBTQ#LGBTQIA#SAGA#gay#lesbian#transgender#Trans#asexual#bisexual#pansexual#human#civil#rights#afriad#equity#equality#public health#health
84 notes
·
View notes
Text
Hi :) I'm a queer researcher doing some queer research for my dissertation and would be so grateful if some of y'all could help me out by taking part
It's a short questionnaire asking you to rate different aspects of your memories before and after coming out (as trans) as well as questions about gender dysphoria (dw if you don't experience gender dysphoria around being trans, your participation is still useful :)
for more info have a look at the poster below and/or my pinned post :3
thank you so much if you take part!!
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9eafacaba7f54efcaad504781bf2c685/06e04c81539eac92-19/s540x810/78e722b01d0665e65cd0974cf3f4b0292c18c4b6.jpg)
#queer research#trans#transgender#trans pride#nonbinary#transmasc#transfem#endy#genderfluid#genderfuck#genderqueer#voidpunk#mtf#ftm#mtx#ftx#mutual aid#(ish haha)#science#mogai#mogai gender#genderflux#gender identity#gender#gender dysphoria#queer#lgbt
88 notes
·
View notes
Text
Biology is a bit more complex than you were told in primary school!
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/772371e3c172d973e5963c3b8454ddb9/18ada7bf19335aa7-47/s540x810/4af5e9da60c73c02d39c0fced6a6ebb4a9488eba.jpg)
54K notes
·
View notes
Note
Can you pls explain to me the proper way to raise a child gender neutrally, especially in a world that loves to push gender? It’s something I always wanted to do when I have my own kid but I’m scared the world is just not ready for that kind of thing and my child will get bullied by other kids/adults.
Unfortunately the feasibility of this does depend on where you live. I’m lucky to live in a fairly liberal college town — the state as a whole is awful, but in this town we have drag shows and a huge pride parade and rainbow stickers in shop fronts. There are still transphobic people here of course, but they generally know that being too overt about it will have social repercussions.
However! It doesn’t necessarily have to be an all-or-nothing thing! When your kid's a baby it’s up to you how you refer to them while in different situations, so you’re free to adjust your language as seems necessary. And then when they’re old enough to care, well, at that point it’s not up to you anyway! (My kid has decided she’s a nonbinary girl, hence the she/hers in this post.)
So here’s a list of things my partners and I did, and you can decide which things seem safe / worth it to you.
We gave her a name that doesn’t have strong gender connotations.
We shopped in the boys and girls sections equally, aiming for a roughly equal number of fancy little button ups vs fancy little dresses, pink diapers vs blue diapers, etc.
We told friends and family that we were planning to raise her gender neutrally and use they/them pronouns, until/unless she expressed a preference otherwise.
Our explanation to adults was along the lines of “We don't want to assign a gender to our child, because we think gender should be a freely-made choice rather than something that is assumed based on body type. So, we're raising them gender neutrally until they decide what they want to be. We’re not assigning them 'nonbinary', either; we’re using they/them to help avoid gendered bias, so they’ll get to experience feminine, masculine, and ungendered options equally. That way every option will be open to them as they learn their own preferences and decide who they want to be.”
Our explanation to kids was along the lines of “I don’t know yet if they’re a boy or a girl or something else! When babies are born, the doctor guesses what gender they’ll be. But sometimes the doctor guesses wrong, and the kid grows up to be a different gender. We decided not to guess what gender our baby will be, because we want to let them choose.” This usually makes perfect sense to 4-5 year olds! (Younger kids might not entirely understand or care, and older kids might have more questions.) However, you gotta be careful with this, bc even some people who are okay with you explaining your own adult transed gender won’t like you implying to their children that everyone should have that option and the whole system is bs. The less objectionable explanation is “I’m going to wait until they’re older to ask them whether they’re a boy or a girl.” Or even answering "What gender is your baby?" with "What do you think?" and then "Maybe!"
We didn’t announce her agab. When people asked, we refused to answer, more or less politely depending on the vibes. If you really want to make them feel bad you can give them a weird look and say “My child’s body is none of your business??” but there’s also the gentler “I don’t think it really matters!” We did fill out her assigned sex for official paperwork, like doctor's forms and legal government stuff, but for more casual forms we sometimes skipped the question or wrote in "we are raising them gender-neutrally" or "they/them".
We generally didn’t correct strangers or explain it to them unless they asked. Nothing wrong with some people assuming “she” and some people assuming “he”, as long as it’s not always just one or the other. If a stranger asked about their gender, I'd go for a quick "We're raising them gender-neutrally." I did also have to clarify fairly often that I only have one kid, when I talked about them and people assumed the "they" was plural, but that was never a big deal it was just kinda funny.
We did correct friends and family, since if they used gendered pronouns it was an active choice or mistake rather than a clueless assumption. Most of our circles are queer so most people were chill about it, but some family members changed one diaper and immediately assigned a pronoun set. We didn't think it was worth fighting over or limiting access, since it's not like they were disrespecting the baby's preference. But we did keep correcting them / emphasizing the neutral pronoun in our replies.
When she started preschool, we preemptively explained to her teachers that we're raising her gender-neutrally, and to please refer to her using "they/them" unless she said otherwise, and to avoid splitting the class into boys vs girls teams or anything like that. Again, fairly liberal town, and the preschool even has a teacher who uses they/them, so the teachers agreed without issue. iirc, they messed up occasionally but they were making an effort, and again I wasn't too bothered as long as my kid wasn't.
When she started using she/her sometimes, I let her teachers know, and told them to follow her lead. When we talked with friends and family we just used the right pronouns ourselves, and explained if they asked or it came up. And then once she was consistently using just she/her, we made a facebook post about it and started correcting people with a quick "She actually decided to use she/her, now."
And then here's how we talked about gender with her, specifically.
When she was old enough to start wondering who's a boy and who's a girl and what that even means, we explained, "Some people are girls, some people are boys, some people are neither or both or something else. I decided I don't want to be a boy or a girl, I'm nonbinary instead. You can decide if you want to be a boy or a girl or nonbinary or something else, too." and "Well, maybe that person's a boy, but they could be something else; I don't know because I don't know them. I don't know their name or anything either." We decided not to explain how differently most of society treats gender, the stereotypes of gender presentation, etc, until she started noticing that stuff herself. Explaining that it's wrong still involves putting those ideas into her head, which was going to happen pretty soon anyway regardless. Might as well start with a foundation of pure gender anarchy while we can.
When she noticed that every other kid she's met already had a gender, we explained "A lot of parents guess what gender their kid will be, and sometimes they guess right or sometimes they guess wrong. [Friend]'s mom guessed that she was a girl, and [friend] agrees! But when Mama was a kid people guessed she was a boy, and then she grew up and decided she's actually a girl. We didn't want to guess for you and maybe get it wrong, so we decided to wait until you were old enough to decide for yourself what gender you want to be."
Occasionally when the topic came up, we would ask if she felt like she wanted to be a girl or boy or something else, or specifically ask if she liked "they/them" or wanted to use "she/her" or "he/him". When she was ~2, she didn't entirely understand and didn't care. When she was ~3, she occasionally said she wanted to be a girl or use she/her, but immediately changed her mind as soon as we actually referred to her as such. (This is quite in-character for her, because she's generally averse to big changes and doesn't like to do anything she doesn't feel totally confident about.) When she was ~4 she finally stuck with it, and now she's a nonbinary girl who uses she/her, and her feelings about gendered terms like "daughter" still go back and forth a bit.
When she started expressing preferences in clothing, colors, etc, we just got things she liked, which ended up being dresses and sparkles.
As she started noticing gender differences, picking up stereotypes from school and media, etc, we'd address them as they came up. "Yes, a lot of people think dresses are just for girls. But I think that isn't very fair. Some boys love to wear dresses, and some girls don't, and that's just fine! It's not very nice to tell someone else what they're allowed to wear. (Unless they need certain clothes to say safe, like a jacket in the winter.)"
We also had to tell her to stop being sexist, lol. "It's fine that you think girls are awesome, they are! But boys are awesome too. It's not very nice to say you won't play with someone just because of their gender. If someone said they wouldn't play with me because I'm nonbinary, I would be so sad! If you don't want to play with [these three classmates] because they're usually too loud and rough, that's fine, but that's not because they're boys; that's because of what games they like to play. Some girls like to play loud and rough, and some boys like to be more careful and quiet like you. Can you think of any boys in your class who you like to play with sometimes? ... See, boys can like all sorts of different games, just like girls can."
We ended up getting the easiest resolution (at least for now): by the time she reached the age where kids start caring about these things, she'd started caring, and settled into being a classic girly girl (with the occasional splash of nonbinary flavor). If she'd stuck to they/them, she'd probably be starting to have a harder time in school -- definitely not full bullying, given her 12-kid 2-teacher private kindergarten class, but probably some frustration with constantly correcting people.
However... if she was more gnc, she woulda ended up that way sooner or later, anyway. If I was choosing between "she's out and proud trans and gets some shit for it" or "she's unhappy with being cis but doesn't realize she has other options," I'd always choose the former, because in that case she gets a choice. By the time kids are old enough to bully each other over gender, they're old enough to decide whether they want to be out at school, y'know? And I've always been ready to pull her from school if it ever became necessary due to peer bullying or unsupportive teachers, especially since she shares a lot of the traits that my wife got bullied for as a child.
It is possible to go 100% gender-neutral, and cut anyone out of your life who opposes it, including moving schools or even moving house if necessary. There are people who will support this choice, even cishet people who don't really get the trans thing but know that unconscious sexism can have a big effect on babies' development. Maybe more people than you think! But it depends on your local culture. And sometimes it takes a certain amount of privilege to be able to prioritize finding those people, and it's simply not worth, say, paying more to switch daycares to find a teacher who won't gender your baby. Sometimes you do have to balance your priorities, and you can't know how much balancing it will actually take until you get there.
So, overall, my advice is just to do whatever you feel comfortable with! What sounds worse to you: gendering your baby, or fighting against society's attempts to gender them? Obviously when you have a trans child you fight for them, but it's a muddier question when the child doesn't care yet. Most of our queer friends aren't going full they/them gender neutral with their kids like we did, because they don't want to have to constantly explain that on top of all the shit they deal with for being queer. Instead they're just being extra firm about shopping in both sections of the store, not falling to stereotypes, and explaining to their child that they can decide to be something else if they want.
And there's a lot of options in between -- maybe you use they/them at home, but he/him at school, or maybe even she/her at home to balance out the school. Maybe you name and dress them gender-neutrally (or both fem and masc) and don't correct any assumptions. Maybe you tell one side of the family that you're going gender anarchy neutral so they should avoid gendered terms, but you only tell the other side that you're going feminist equality so they should make sure to gift both pretend kitchen toys and pretend power tools. It's the same as deciding in what situations you want to be out vs stay stealth/closeted.
When they're a baby it doesn't matter much either way (as long as you're not being sexist in your reactions to their behavior) because they're a baby, they could not care less. And then when they're old enough to pick their gender, you're hopefully giving them that choice regardless of what you did when they're a baby. It's true that the starting point you gave them may affect their gender journey, but that's true of gender neutrality as well.
So if you think it'll be too risky in the time and place in which you're raising your child, you really don't have to feel bad about not doing it. It's okay to save your energy for when your child really needs it. But if it's something you're committed to, it is possible! I'm so glad that my family was able to make this choice. I actually loved the conversations that it opened up with all sorts of people about gendering children! Even though I got in trouble one time for explaining gender too well to the children at the daycare I worked at, lol. And I know that gendering my kid as a baby would've made me more uncomfortable than any number of awkward conversations. I love knowing that her pink purple flower unicorn heart dresses are something she freely chose!!
83 notes
·
View notes
Text
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/f2c7ec7d9c30c315a0d0eceaa5a0aa06/8ae92db479bcf29f-ec/s540x810/1f76e98abf2afc605d3eb6b6ba713843bf99370d.jpg)
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/3224b47e695cfaff8da90f02215f6928/8ae92db479bcf29f-a1/s540x810/dd768a1d2d550bd60628bb74acaeaf0f73f036dd.jpg)
Suck them?
#gender#lesbian#nonbinary#aesthetic#trans goddess#trans rights#transgender community#transsexual#trans gender#trans boy#sexy chick#sexy and beautiful#girl butts#business#trans#transgender#trans beauty#trans community#trans content#trans is beautiful#trans is sexy#trans is so hot#transisbeautiful#sex with strangers#sexy pose#sex worker#trans sex worker#trans sexuality#trans model#igbtq pride
44 notes
·
View notes
Text
Creachurlexic ⸻ a lexegender related to the word "creachur"!
for day 6 of @chronicallyqueercoining2's coining event, for the prompt "creature"!
coined by us. if this already exists, please tell us!
@radiomogai
#creachurlexic#mogai#liom#qai#terms#term coining#liom coining#mogai coining#mogai coiner#liom coiner#flags#mogai flag#flag making#gender#genders#neogender#lexic#lexegender#described#cqc1.2k#cqcevent#queue
34 notes
·
View notes
Text
*trying to explain my gender* have you heard of cube rule
27 notes
·
View notes
Text
I'm a man AND a woman AND a secret third thing AND none of the above.
You cannot exclude me from gendered spaces in a way that matters.
24 notes
·
View notes
Text
the statements "clothes don't have gender" and "clothes can and do invoke gender dysphoria and euphoria for many people" can and should coexist.
68K notes
·
View notes
Text
That's like saying I don't think the brownshirts (aka National Socialist German Workers' Party) hated the jews.
Antisemitism wasn't just racism, bigotry, and discrimination. The propaganda and cultural movements that surround facism create a cult-like experience where if you want to be "in" you have to agree on literally every single thing that the party believes or you're out. So they slowly ramp up the bigotry to feel out the people's anger and currently the people think that trans people are making it hard for them to have an easy, comfortable, boring life where nothing changes ever and I get to keep my routine (TM) So I don't think that it's so simply put, existing or whatever. "The trans agenda" is an idea that has been instilled in their brains that means terrifying unknown changes to our society, and they've been taught to fear people in their bathrooms because of "perverts" when the irony is that they are being perverts for caring about the naughty bits of fully clothed people using the same bathroom.
Propaganda prays on fears and ignorance. Pity those who fall prey to such idiotic rhetoric for they are no more free or intelligent than the monkeys we've trapped in the cages of zoos.
gotta be honest with you, i'm not too sure about this thing ppl say of "conservatives" being irrationally opposed to "trans people just existing" or whatever. i guess controversial take but no they actually have very concrete reasons to oppose bodily autonomy and the destabilization of sexual roles we represent considering their views on sex/gender and social reproduction overall actually. obviously we must oppose those views as they are 1. wrong and 2. oppressive but like. it's not like they just chose a random minority to hate. i mean otherwise why do you think it's specifically us.
#america is dead#fuck maga#trans bathroom#leftist#racism#transgender#gender stuff#trans stuff#queer stuff#gender#gender identity#propaganda#republicans#conservatives#rnc#antisemitism#germany#1930s#nazi party#anti nazi#brown coat#brown shirt#National Socialist German Workers' Party#NSGWP#antifascist#anti fascism#antifascismo#satanic antifascism#satanic#america is a hellscape
12K notes
·
View notes
Text
Gendered parenting is so weird. As a little kid I was a total daddy's girl, I was told I would always try to sneak into the garage, I was always very interested in everything he was doing and would follow him around while he was working, but while my family was never the type to outright say "you can't do that because you're a girl", they simply didn't entertain the idea that I could possibly be interested in cars. Then when my little brother was born, it was just assumed he would become a mechanic like our dad because he was a boy. Even though he, unlike me, didn't like being in the garage much and wasn't all that interested in what dad was doing. Once he got to a certain age, dad started making him help and would drag him away from his actual interests for it, which lead to a lot of arguing and not much actual learning.
Gendered expectations sort of create doubles of children. There's the real child with their actual personality, interests and behaviors, and then there's the Gender Child.
My real brother hated soccer and team sports. The Gender Child that existed only the minds of the adults in his life needed to play soccer because that's what a Boy Child does.
Growing up, I always felt like adults didn't actually know me as a person and they weren't interested in getting to know me. Because they felt they'd already learned everything there was to know about me when they were told "it's a girl".
When I talk about how I never got gifts I actually liked from my relatives (to this day I still don't like getting gifts that aren't something I picked out myself), it isn't actually about the gifts themselves. I don't even remember them. What I do remember is the feeling of being given gifts that were seemingly not bought with the real me in mind. They were for the Girl Child™️ version of me. The me that adults wanted me to be, not who I actually was.
30K notes
·
View notes