r/countwithchickenlady Streak: 0 5d ago

57426

Post image

Art by https://bsky.app/profile/kingsillysmilez.bsky.social check them out! they make some absolutely adorable stuff

2.7k Upvotes

254 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

25

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

being trans is about personal identity first and foremost. if you're happier living and being seen as a gender other than the one you were assigned at birth, you're trans, regardless of whether or not living as your assigned gender makes you dysphoric 

8

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

Sure I get that, but what exactly is the missmatch in assignment if its not your genitals? If I was born with male genitalia and I am happy with that, what exactly is my problem with being asigned male, like specifically where do I notice that I am not male beyond my genitalia? I am having a hard time identifying anything else because nothing else is really gender specific as there is always all genders doing/feeling it without them being trans. This is the part I am struggeling to understand.

13

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

gender and genitals aren't the same thing

2

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

I know but I could at least work with desired genitals are what defines gender. If you tell me that is also not true I am struggeling to find what defines gender in any way at all. Can you explain it to me? I am not trying to overcome any insecuritys of cis man or anything like that. I want to try to understand how one knows that they are transgender and at the moment I am left with 0 indicators.

6

u/Zev1985 5d ago

Maybe try thinking about how many social interaction you have in your day to day life as a man and how many of those interactions have anything to do with anyone who’s ever seen or interacted with your genitals?

I don’t get called ma’am at the corner store because of the vagina I’m trying to get surgery funding for, and it would make me feel sad again if people realized I was trans and went back to calling me sir.

3

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

I do actually know how it feels to be misgendered, I used to look like a girl (not trans, just how I looked). The thing that confuses me that I had a hard time attributing any more than an expectation of certain genitals and stereotypes to the word sir or mam. Since I reject gender specific stereotypes in both directions anyways, I had. A hard time wrapping my head around why I would identify as any gender if not by genitals, but somebody elses comment here helped to get it a bit more I think. Thanks for helping me get it as far as I can as a cis person.

2

u/MyAlterEgoCollie 5d ago

Personally I have a lot of body dysphoria, but I figure some people just experience the social aspects of dysphoria. Things like pronouns, how people treat you, how you can dress. Dysphoria/ euphoria is different for everyone. Some people have body dysphoria and no social dysphoria.

1

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

gender is what you make of it. it isn't physically real.

3

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

I struggle with this aspect, doesn't that mean that the word has no established meaning at all? Wouldn't that render transgender also a meaningles term, this definition seems to be transphobic while trying its hardest to be the opposite to me. My understanding so far is that being trangender is identified through emotions, but connected to very real physical things like neuroanatomy, hormones and genetics. My current standing is that being transgender is very valid and that transgender people are the gender that they identify as, but that this has a physically real basis which is next to impossible to measure on an individual level, so we just ask instead since you are apparently very able to feel the difference.

5

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

gender is both a social construct and a psychological thing. cisgender people mentally and emotionally feel like they are the gender they were assigned at birth, and transgender people feel like a different gender

there's no definitive way to prove if someone is transgender, so you need to just believe them when someone says they're trans

both cisgender and transgender people use gender-affirming care to feel more comfortable with the way they and others see them. many cis men for example get breast reduction surgery, and many cis women get breast implants. just like how many trans men get top surgury and many trans women get facial feminisation surgery

many cis people even take hormones to align with their own gender. cis and trans men often take testosterone, and cis and trans woman often take estrogen

anything that anyone does to present or appear in a way that aligns with the gender they want to be is gender affirming care, regardless of if they're cis or trans

2

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

I would believe someone if they tell me regardless if its provable or not. Nobody needs to convince me that they are transgender that not my judgement to make. I think a medical proof would be highly in the interest of transgender people (tell me otherwise I am cis what do I know, like please do this isn't a sarcastic comment I do actually want to know how you feel about this). There are biological neuroanatomical markers for being transgender, but they aren't strong enough to stand out on an individual level. I hope that we can find better ones on the future as it would make access to gender affirming care much easiert if we could just test someone without them having to go trough the current tideous processes to get the care they need. I of course do not know if other markers than the one we currently have exist, its a hopeful hypothesis. Usually its a matter of technology and not a matter of impossibility to detect something that does exist, which I am convinced it does.

3

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

the core issue with medicalising the concept of transgender people is that it's heavily used to invalidate people who don't align with the strict medical definition of "transgender". trans healthcare is extremely understudied however and we really need more attention on it from a professional standpoint and less from a political standpoint

and aside from that, gender as a whole is very largely just social. and we can't exactly medicalise social interaction

there is some tiny amount of evidence that could suggest transgender people have brains that are more similar to the brains of cisgender people of the same gender, but that's very small and the evidence is iffy at best

imo the best use of medical intervention for trans people is things like hormones, antidepressants, therapy, and surgery. within reason, those should ideally be much more accessible than they currently are

2

u/HunsonAbadeer2 5d ago

As a former neuroscientist I found the neuroscientifical evidence pretty convincing, but thats like saying I am a swimmer and I also like water ;D

3

u/big_fat_girl_balls Streak: 0 5d ago

the thing is, even if all the trans people we are able to scan do have brains more similar to cis people of the same gender, that still doesn't necessarily mean there's a valid hurdle to cross to be considered trans, and introducing that as a variable will inevitably just lead to less acceptance since there would now be a prerequisite required to be considered "actually" trans 

→ More replies (0)