CallaFirestormBW -> RE: Defining Gender: No Wrong Answer (8/16/2010 8:55:20 AM)
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I have another question, so please bear with me. Ok, so you have a person who is a post-op trans person. At one point in hir life, that person was of a different gender than the one xhe currently lives as, and xhe's gone through all of the work to have all the pieces and parts resolved so that, for all practical purposes, xhe is fully actualized in the gender to which xhe identifies.... None of the parties involved are planning on having children, so the issue of fertility is off the table... so here's the hypothetical question... WHY does it matter what gender this person once was? I can sort of understand the people who would have problems with a pre-op trans person who, although mentally and emotionally living as the gender to which xhe identifies, and presenting as the gender to which xhe identifies, still has external sexual characteristics of the former gender. I can see how this would be problematic for some folks, and how it might cause worlds to rock a bit if things weren't explained and people given the opportunity to choose whether to continue the involvement... but once the change is complete, and the individual is, in all relevant ways, existing as the gender to which xhe identifies, why should it matter that xhe was once a -different- gender, as there is NO reason that I can think of why it would make any difference whatsoever. I thought about it long and hard last night, and realized that, if I knew someone, and cared about hir, even if I were to find out that xhe was, at one point, a different gender, and even if we were -intimate-, I think that isn't even a question I'd worry about -asking-. If xhe was a pre-op, I might want to know, just because of needing to plan for the dichotomy, and I'd want to know how xhe felt about different practices that might show up the discrepancy during our... recreation... but other than that, why care? Calla
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