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This topic has been weighing on me, and I’m willing to listen because I believe I can still learn fr
I believe that women are adult human females, and that womanhood is rooted in biological sex and the shared experiences that come with being female. These include growing up as a girl, living in a female body, and navigating the social and physical realities that women uniquely face. These experiences create a form of understanding and relatability among women that cannot be fully shared by people who were not born female. I respect transgender women as people and acknowledge that they can empathize with women’s struggles. However, empathy is not the same as lived experience. Trans women did not grow up as female, and therefore cannot fully relate to womanhood in the same way women relate to each other.
I do not see being a transgender woman as something negative or shameful. “Trans woman” is a real and valid identity, with its own experiences and community. Recognizing this difference does not mean exclusion or disrespect, it simply acknowledges reality. Different identities can coexist without one erasing the other.
My discomfort comes not from hatred, but from the feeling that women’s sex-based identity and experiences are being redefined or overridden. I believe it is possible to support the dignity and safety of transgender people while still maintaining clear, sex-based definitions of womanhood.
Respect does not require denying biological reality, and inclusion should not require women to give up the language that describes their own lived experiences.
Ur viewpoint is very limited. Biology isn't black and white, and the shared experiences women have growing up aren't as universal as you seem to think. Race, sexuality, body type, attractiveness, whether or not you're able bodied, and more can all change a woman's experience of "womanhood." If a cisgender woman doesn't relate to every, or even any,...... 3 reply
As a biological woman, I don't believe in such a thing as womanhood. Sure, there are universal experiences that most women share, but that doesn't mean those who don't experience them cannot fathom what it means to be a woman. I believe womanhood is different for everyone. I don't experience what most women experience due to my sexuality and my upb...... 3 reply
Bold of you to assume that female identity is always (and should be) biologically sex based (bioesseniatlism basically). The fact my pussy bleeds once a month and I have tits doesn't contribute in any way to my sense of identity. In fact, I rarely think of myself as the biological sex I am, I just exist and society gives me gendered feedback based ...... 2 reply
just gonna say one small thing: you will have a stroke when you realize that intersex people exist. You think womanhood is just about biological sex? I implore you to understand that EVEN biological sex is complex and NOT black and white. If you think placing biological sex above all is what separates us, then you don't understand what it means to ...... 1 reply
Ykw I think? Lets go back to the times when gender didn't mean shit and everyone performed to the same roles because we as homosapiens realised the luxury of "gender" was useless when dinosaurs were running around.Like what the fuck is womanhood anymore, what the fuck is manhood. I think we should focus on our damn livelihoods 1 reply
"“Trans woman” is a real and valid identity, with its own experiences and community" if you thought that you wouldn't be writing this transphobic rant. Don't try to make a woke spin on it, just say "they're not real women" and move on, who is this for 1 reply