My Gender Today Is The Man In The Closet I Yelled At For A Full 15 Minutes In My Sleep Once

My gender today is the man in the closet I yelled at for a full 15 minutes in my sleep once

More Posts from Mygendertodayis and Others

3 years ago

My gender today is this picture of my cat, Wednesday.

My Gender Today Is This Picture Of My Cat, Wednesday.
3 years ago
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince
I Did A Very Quick, Sketchy Comic Because I Was Extremely Inspired By This Post. (Credit To @pinkdiamondprince

I did a very quick, sketchy comic because I was extremely inspired by this post. (Credit to @pinkdiamondprince for the original post.)

The entire analogy was just fantastic and so, so accurate, and I wanted to make a comic for it, even if it’s very sketchy because my attention span is nil.


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3 years ago

Trans history: whatever happened to the other T?

I don’t know how universally relevant this is (I guess no part of queer history ever is) but I wonder how many trans people know the history of T&T groups.

Like, in the 90′s and 00′s in the Netherlands almost every trans related groups was a T&T ‘Transsexual and Transvestites’ group and that seemed to also be a quite common thing in other north-west European countries for as far as I can see. Maybe beyond Europe too? I’m not sure.

People who called themselves transsexual and transvestites at the time felt that they had many experiences in common that made organising together valuable and many agreed that there was a large grey area of overlapping identities. With very little information available, a lot of trans women identified as transvestites first, before identifying at trans women (in that period often using the term Male-to-Female transsexual and transwoman without the space between the words).

Then, in about 2007-2012, things changed. Transgender became more popular than transsexual and crossdresser largely replaced transvestite. In those early days, the term transgender was often understood to include crossdressers. The transgender umbrella is from that time:

image

Back then, the word transgender was seen by many as the umbrella term that would unite all the struggles against gender roles. But that grouping together was far from uncontroversial and a lot of heated debates took place over how broad or narrow the transgender umbrella term should be. Some feared too wide an umbrella would take attention away from transsexuals, others feared it would be confusing, some groups that had previously only had transwomen and transvestites did not appreciate the new presence of transmen and transmasculine people in their transgender community, some felt that it was very important to distinguish binary-identified transsexuals from all sorts of weird non-binary identities.

Those who took part in the debates probably remember the specific standpoints in more detail. For me, I just remember how in 2008-2012 all the T&T groups started changing their names to ‘transgender groups’ and then slowly but surely focussing more on only those transgender people that wanted some kind of transition, physical or social. Eventually, transvestites (or crossdressers, as the common term was by then) disappeared entirely from the transgender groups and a lot of transgender people forgot about the earlier wider meaning of transgender as an umbrella term.

Within that same period, there started to be a LOT of new and fairly positive media attention for transgender issues, specifically transition related atttention. The media was no participant at all in the ‘what does transgender mean’ question but the questions they did ask were ‘are you on hormones yet?’ and ‘did you have the surgery’? Since that was a lot better than ‘so are you mentally ill because you want to be a woman?’ a lot of people who fitted the hormones + surgery narrative eagerly accepted this ‘positive visibility’ and did not question the narrow focus. This further cemented the view that transgender meant transition.

And the transgender activists? Well, let’s just say many of them, knee deep in a struggle against terrible health care and cruel human rights violations, leaped at the opportunity to seize the momentum and finally make some changes and many didn’t really give much thought to the slow disappearance of transvestites from the newly named ‘transgender’ community.

So where are we now, in 2018?

The transgender community seems to have largely forgotten about their T&T history. The terms transvestite and crossdresser both seem to be in decline, as are the communities that meet around those identities. Younger people who don’t fit the gender binary but also do not desire social or physical transition, are now more likely to identify themselves as some kind of genderqueer and nonbinary or just ‘not into labels’ or just to wear whatever they want and rock it. Some of them find their way back under the transgender umbrella after all. Which I guess is some kind of a happy ending.

But then theres the question of recognizing our legacy. I don’t think a lot of these young people realise that, had they been born 20 years earlier, many of them would probably have found a home in the transvestite community. I don’t think a lot of young transgender people recognize older transvestites as their elders, who paved the way for them. I often get the impression that they view the dwindling groups of 50+, 60+, 70+ transvestites with an element of disdain, as people who held on to a regressive binary identity, instead of as like - their badass grandfather-mothers who build parts of trans history.


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3 years ago

My gender today is a young adult cowering from a sizzling bacon pan behind an open fridge door


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3 years ago

My gender today is an American possum shaped venom creature


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4 years ago

Thus is the defining characteristic of gay millennials: we straddle the pre-Glee and post-Glee worlds. We went to high school when faggot wasn't even considered an F-word, when being a lesbian meant boys just didn't want you, when being nonbinary wasn't even a remote option. We grew up without queer characters in our cartoons or Nickelodeon or Disney or TGIF sitcoms. We were raised in homophobia, came of age as the world changed around us, and are raising children in an age where it's never been easier to be same-sex parents. We're both lucky and jealous. As the state of gay evolved culturally and politically, we were old enough to see it and process it and not take it for granted--old enough to know what the world was like without it. Despite the success of Drag Race, the existence of lesbian Christmas rom-coms, and openly transgender Oscar nominees, we haven't moved on from the trauma of growing up in a culture that hates us. We don't move on from trauma, really. We can't really leave it in the past. It becomes a part of us, and we move forward with it.

For LGBTQ+ milennials, our pride is couched in painful memories of a culture repulsed and frightened by queerness. That makes us skittish. It makes us loud. It makes us fear that all this progress, all this tolerance [...] can vanish as quickly as it all appeared.

The 2000s Made Me Gay, Grace Perry


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3 years ago

My gender today is this image of my dog macho (I think he's yawning)

My Gender Today Is This Image Of My Dog Macho (I Think He's Yawning)

[Imade ID: a chihuahua terrier with tan fur and grey markings curled up on a blue blanket. His mouth is open in a yawn and he's side-eying the camera. End ID]

3 years ago

gays reblog this and put in the tags what your unironic Dad Trait is


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3 years ago

My gender today is a sad clown with a crown


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mygendertodayis - Daily Gender Updates
Daily Gender Updates

if you came for the gender updates then the tag is #mygendertodayis, if you don't like my reblogs the tag is #gender reblog

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