SKL
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2007
- Messages
- 14,632
Yeah, I don't know when it was that I became aware of transsexuality. Fairly late, even though I was raised around a lot of gay and lesbian people. I had only the vaguest ideas of what trans issues entailed even then. And in fact it was not really all that long ago that I learned that not all transsexuals were hypereffeminate and androphilic, having started out as especially flamboyant gay men. (I even knew some HSTS like this socially. New York club scene and all that. I have a funny story about that I'll share at some point.) But it came as a surprise to me, and I did not consider myself particularly naïve on these matters, that there were a substantial number of trans-identified males who are attracted to females. Furthermore, I had been aware, vaguely, of clinical transvestism (having been familiar with the DSM and the case study companion-there's a lot of fucked up stuff in the latter), but not really of autogynephilia as such: as I mentioned quite a while back in this thread, it was not long ago a pretty esoteric subject. I also knew very little (as I think did most people) about trans-identified females, let alone that there was anything resembling ROGD (which in fairness to me hadn't been described yet.)I feel like when I was a kid nobody EVER discussed gender identity. If it was ever brought up it was some bad joke about a guy not knowing the hooker was a man.
Learning that there were (quite a lot of, and more recently) gynephilic MtFs running around might change a lot of people's perspectives on stuff like bathrooms, while learning that there are a lot of TiFs, who until recently have usually escaped notice almost entirely, raises it's own questions too. We all have learned a lot recently. Society just didn't used to be aware, or very much care, about this stuff.
Some people have much more complicated identities. In fact, some people want much more complicated identities because today it is somehow glamorized. You're right the youth of today is fascinated with sexual and gender identity questions. They are really the first generation of ours raised in a society where homosexuality carries very little stigma. Even gay marriage has been allowed for a significant portion of their lives. And the media is absolutely saturated with gay and trans stuff. There a line to be drawn here somewhere between fair and positive "representation" and what you might call "glamorization" of alternative sexualities/identities. We as a society crossed it a while ago but certainly in the post-"Call Me Caitlyn" media world.These days teens seem obsessed with gender identity. My cousin is a trans man. I saw him grow up and he lived in a broken home. His only friend was this gay kid, who even at 11 or 12 was already identifying as gay. That always confused me how you could know that young. Anyways I always question in he questioned his identity because of his friends influence.
Now I remember being about 13 and questioning if I was gay or not. It took a day or two to confirm that I was not and never thought about it again. Being a teen is confusing with so much coming at you.
We shouldn't unnecessarily stigmatize people's identities and lifestyles, certainly, but the way that they are presented sometimes seems to convey the message that having an "alternative" sexual identity or practices in some way makes one more interesting, or validates one as a person in a way that vanilla, straight individuals can't be validated. And it does afford one access to a readymade community that can be very welcoming and supportive especially to the alienated, outcast, and simply "different." With all this there, why wouldn't a troubled young person want a piece of that, honestly? That may be why you see a lot of embracing of vague and rather low-maintenance "queer" identities. Almost certainly a factor in ROGD as well.
Yeah, as I mentioned above, it's not something that I think we can identify with or have anything to compare it to, other than imagining some kind of permanent and all-encompassing dread or alienation towards oneself and one's body. I can only imagine it to be extremely distressing and as I have repeatedly stressed knowing that this is so should lead us to be very sympathetic towards trans-identified persons and to treat the with care. I'm speaking here people experiencing "gender dysphoria." As for having a different "gender identity," some inherent feeling that you are the opposite sex, no clue what that could possibly be like. My own sex is not something I think about, I merely inhabit it and live in it and through it and experience the consequences of it and the socialization that comes along with it. Contrasting to this, the subjective experience of internal trans-identity is hard to imagine, not having experienced it myself. But people report it with some consistency, so there is certainly a particular psychological phenomenon there. To some extent we must accept that at it's own value but also must seek to understand the context and consequences, and understand that a psychological phenomenon does not necessarily correlate with some inherent ontological "gender identity" the way TRAs tend to describe it.I understand homosexuality but I may never understand trans or other identifiers. I try to imagine myself if I felt like I was a woman in a man's body. I'd just say fuck it and try to make the best of it. HRT and surgery and all the other hardships trans people go through doesn't seem worth it. I just don't understand.
It is a symptom of a society oversaturated with sex that "asexuality" is an identity. Even more wild is "demisexual," which evidently means that you only want to sleep with people you are emotionally connected to. I don't know if I am a prude but that sounds pretty normal to me, and not in need of a label. Part of it is, I guess, that everyone wants a label, but the "asexual" stuff seems to have a lot to do with the perception that everyone around you is having a lot of sex and you aren't feeling the same. Which is more or less the same feeling that produces the "incel," only instead of a preoccupation with wanting sex the preoccupation is with not wanting sex. I also suspect some "asexual"-identified people have body issues and/or sexual trauma (probably mostly females, but also males.)I think what baffles me the most is asexuality. I hear about asexuals with high libidos and I just don't understand how that works.
Yes. And it is indeed "shoved down kids' throats." I am reminded of the 1968-era Sexual Revolution in France and Germany (especially) where in radical "intentional communities," pedophilia was normalized or even institutionalized under the notion of aiding "natural" child sexual development, aided and abetted by some of the most notable radicals of the day. The same kind of thing went on in some religious cults like "The Family"/"Children of God" (no relation to the Grateful Dead "Family.") New information about what went on is still emerging but a lot of it was actually quite out in the open. Quite a few articles have come out on the subject recently, including about the pedophilic escapades of some very prominent intellectuals, particularly in France. But anyway, in various situations related to these, a pattern repeats itself: children were deliberately made to interact with each other and with adults sexually because it fit the radical ideology of the group.Anyways. I do believe the large emphasis on the lgbtq+ movement may be somewhat confusing to an already confused child. With that said I fully support lgbt rights and normalcy - just don't shove it down kids throats.
I'm not making this comparison to accuse people of pedophilia, generally speaking, and know this is a sensitive subject. Pedophilia is not necessarily the motivation for involving kids in trans stuff, in fact it probably usually isn't, although some situations definitely suggest it: for instance, a preteen boy "drag queen" dances for adult men and has money thrown at him, while the whole thing is published on social media. Online "affirmation" of trans-questioning youth (sometimes called "hatching eggs" in the community) also sometimes has seriously pedophilic (or rather, usually ephebophilic) undertones. Again for the sake of decency I will not link publicly.
Most people, though, I think, are trying on some level and from their perspective, to do what they think is right by the kids. Unfortunately, they are coming from a place that has very questionable ideas, and their actions have the potential to be very damaging. I make the connection to the radical pedophilia of the communities I mentioned because both feature intervening with the psychosexual development of children motivated by radical ideology as part of an agenda towards "remaking" things, here, gender; there, society in general. This sort of radical agenda is certainly present with many people who advocated childhood "transition."
That's a hard situation. Our society is saturated with messages about trans-identification and in a child's mind GNC easily translates into identification with the opposite sex which I would imagine can lead to dysphoric feelings even if they are not there originally as well as, and this is perhaps the most important part, the interpretation of other distress or a general sense of alienation as gender dysphoria. Of course, it's very hard to tell from the outside looking in. I am glad your friend is taking a conservative approach and although I know nothing about the situation other than the bare facts you present, if his intuition is that she may be just a GNC lesbian, there is probably a very good chance this is the case. That is also probably the population that is at some of the very highest risk for sort of absorbing ideas about identity via a kind of cultural osmosis. Little kids pick up a lot but also play around in their heads with concepts they don't fully understand. "Not being girly/like other girls" and possibly "developing feelings for other girls" could easily translate into "being a boy," especially if her mind has been primed for it. I hope your friend's situation and his daughter's work out OK.A friend has a pre-teen GNC daughter who started saying she is a boy. He is not putting her on hormones and he thinks she might eventually come out as lesbian, but if she/he is trans it is not an issue.
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