waitasec
Veteran Member
It doesn't bother me.
And by the way, I CAN shoot!![]()
why do i believe you?
but if it did, would you consider it?
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It doesn't bother me.
And by the way, I CAN shoot!![]()
why do i believe you?
but if it did, would you consider it?
Wait - are you saying IF my hobbies and interests bothered other people, would it bother ME, and if it did would I change my hobbies?
Too many IFs there.
But - I'm not generally offended by people disagreeing with me. I'm too self confident for that to bother me.
I think many people, heterosexual or homosexual, just wear what they feel comfortable in and what they feel expresses who they are.Today at work I happen to observe a lesbian couple come to my work. From first appearance one of the lesbians appeared to look like a guy. Upon approaching the secretary, the secretary addressed the boy-ish looking lesbian as "sir." The person took offense and walked out. The secretary looked at me like "what did I do?" Of course it was an honest mistake bit my question is "why do gays in particular lesbians, create these gender roles?" This isn't just about behavior but in partixular dress, mannerisms, etc
I know the most common answer would be inherent socialization based on the patriarchal model, but I feel there is more to it. I mean if a person doesn't desire the opposite sex why would they model themselves after the opposite sex?
i understand that you are a very confident person...confident enough to put yourself in someone else's shoes who happens to not be confident for any particular reason, from constantly being mistaken to being a man or that they just came out...
why would anyone who is confident in their person conform to what other people say is "normal".
it's as if you walk on to a shooting range with your husband and they automatically make your target easier to shoot than his...
wouldn't that offend you in some way or another, even though you yourself know your a bad a** at the shooting range?
i choose to be empathetic i suppose.Give me a break - I'm not putting myself in their shoes. I'm giving my opinion. That's not necessarily the same thing.
true. but i think this far deeper than what you implied here.What I am saying is this - if I were constantly mistaken for being a man, I would have several options:
1. Be mad everytime it happened
2. Be bemused when it happened
3. Accept it as part of the price I pay for expressing myself (because clothing, hairstyle, etc - the parts of our appearance which we have control over - are voluntary expressions of ourselves)
4. Change something about my appearance so that people didn't routinely mistake me for a man
At least two of the four options would result in less angst and bitterness. Personally I prefer less angst and bitterness in my own life, but I realize that for some people, bitterness is their modus operandum.
maybe it's because they are constantly being judged and labeled about something that goes to the core of a person?Why would anyone who is confident be BOTHERED by what other people think is "normal?"
Nope. In fact, on the shooting range, full of testosterone, men REGULARLY assume I don't know what I'm doing. Personally, I think it's hilarious, and my husband and I both get a big kick out of me surprising the hell out of them.
In fact, one of our first dates was to the shooting range, and we framed the target I shot - bulls eye - from 100 yards. What's funny about it is the memory associated with it. The guys standing around thought i had missed the target, and then one of those redneck boys whistled and said, "Well, I'll be damned - she hit it dead center." And I turned around to them and said, "Right. And I can do it again. Watch this."
They got real quiet after that, and left a few minutes later - without shooting anymore.
Confidence. Get some.
you yourself said that you were not going to put yourself in their shoes, did you not? i was responding to that statement not to your person.It's not that I'm not empathetic. Believe me, I know what it's like to be harshly judged. I am the mother of four biracial children. You think I haven't been the target of prejudice or harsh judgment, or stares in restaurants or snide comments from strangers?
you yourself said that you were not going to put yourself in their shoes, did you not? i was responding to that statement not to your person.
so why would you be offended by that? are you insecure in your ability to empathize? i would say no because that is who you are just as this girl is a woman...
see what i mean?
pay attention i didn't say you werePay attention. I didn't say I was unable to put myself in their shoes, ie empathize.
you said opinion...a judgmentI said in that particular post, I wasn't putting myself in their shoes. I was simply giving advice.
And I'm not offended. I'm simply clarifying. May I suggest that you don't twist what I say? Ooops, I forgot - that's how you roll.
pay attention i didn't say you were
you are putting words in my mouth...
you yourself said that you were not going to put yourself in their shoes, did you not? i was responding to that statement not to your person.
It's simply the wonders of how nature prefers diversity. And you are correct that one is about gender identity and the other sexual orientation. There is also a degree of biology, and some studies are starting to show that certain areas of the brain in homosexuals (men at least in the study I read) develop more like that of the opposite sex than their birth sex. But there brain still identifies as their birth sex. Transsexuals OTOH have brains that do look very similar, practically identical, to that of the opposite of their birth sex. This causes a reaction to not only be drawn to gender roles, behaviors, etc., of the opposite sex, but also identify as such.I get curious regarding the difference between them and a transgender person. Because apparently, although they associate significantly with behaviors of what is normally expected of the opposite gender, they still identify as their current gender and don't wish to alter their body.
To address the OP, it's actually society that makes gender roles. But it's quite a meaningless, boring, and repressive if you adhere to them just because of your physical sex. There are plenty of men who act hyper-masculine to try and prove there manliness, plenty of women who cave to social pressures to be feminine, and alot of people who transcend such expectations and will do things that are for the opposite sex without worry.
As for the woman in question in the OP, she likely has faced heavy discrimination or has serious self-image issues if she got worked up over a very simply and honest mistake. And there are also plenty of people who are androgynous enough to make the call difficult, or they intentionally blur the lines to the point of making it difficult to tell.
It's simply the wonders of how nature prefers diversity. And you are correct that one is about gender identity and the other sexual orientation. There is also a degree of biology, and some studies are starting to show that certain areas of the brain in homosexuals (men at least in the study I read) develop more like that of the opposite sex than their birth sex. But there brain still identifies as their birth sex. Transsexuals OTOH have brains that do look very similar, practically identical, to that of the opposite of their birth sex. This causes a reaction to not only be drawn to gender roles, behaviors, etc., of the opposite sex, but also identify as such.
There are also many different varieties of transsexuals. Some just acknowledge it and occasionally act as the opposite sex, some are content in occasionally presenting as the opposite sex, some find solace in only have hormone replacement therapy, and others go through with a full transition, and anything else in between. Again it's simply because nature prefers diversity, and our own culture is very shallow and black and white when it comes to sex, gender, and gender expression and identity. While our culture only has two terms for sex and gender, some have up to seven and possibly more.
Oh, I'm sorry, I must have misread this convuluted statement of yours:
To clarify, so that you won't again twist my words - I did not say that I was not going to put myself in their shoes. Are we clear now?
And I guess you didn't really SAY I wasn't going to do so - I guess what you really said was "You yourself said you were not going to put yourself in their shoes."
And you don't think this is another fine example of your habit of twisting others' words to fit your own agenda?
Wow.![]()
Give me a break - I'm not putting myself in their shoes. I'm giving my opinion. That's not necessarily the same thing.
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yup wow..just wow.
how far are you willing to go?
show me where i said you were unable to....
that is putting words in my mouth
Anyone who pretends not to notice that a good proportion of gay men act effeminate, or that a good proportion of lesbian women act masculine is simply being obtuse.
These stereotypes are grounded in reality. That doesn't excuse bias, or rudeness, but come on. When groups deny a reality, it undermines their integrity.
The only gay men you see acting effeminate are the gay men acting effeminate. There are more gay men around you than you can possibly imagine, who are as masculine as a lumberjack.
Sources?