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One
sex?
A couple of hundred years ago
there was only one sex - the male
one!
The other one was an "incomplete"
male sex (that's why Queen
Kristina of Sweden (1626-1689)
could be educated (!) to be a
man). But about 150 years ago,
both the church and contemporary
medical science realised that the
"incomplete" sex actually should
be thought of as complete, that
is, a sex of its own - and
suddenly there were two
sexes!
A male and a female sex! And thus
there were also two expressions
of the inherent sex - a masculine
and a feminine gender!
Before the shift you were either
a "man" or "not a man"
Afterwards, you were a "man" or a
"woman". A pivotal discovery!
Especially for the women.
What if there are more sexes?!?
What would they be? A sex that's
both male and female ... or
neither ... or possibly there's a
third sex. The thought is
mesmerizing!
Two genders!
Most people never think of
what gender they belong to, or
what traits are masculine and
feminine. Or indeed, why we even
consider certain behaviours
masculine or feminine. It's just
the way things are! The social
norm has established how we
should act, and through the
expressive medium of clothes and
other attributes we create the
roles of either "the man" or
"the woman".
If we consider the genders in
terms of two "poles", we
inevitably create the picture of
a space in between these genders.
Not unlike the space between the
North Pole and the South Pole.
It's actually quite a good
analogy!
Not very much happens on either
the North or the South Pole. It
ALL happens between the
poles.
This is exactly the case with the
two genders. Nobody inhabits
their poles of extremity! There
is not a single person who is a
100% man, nor a 100% woman. We
all belong somewhere between the
poles. And like the people on the
planet Earth, we usually don't
stay in the same place all our
lives. We constantly move.
Sometimes we feel more masculine
... and sometimes more
feminine!
What should we call ourselves
when we are exactly in between
the poles ... or when we cross
the gender equator?
Can a man cross the median line
and still be a man ... what would
he become otherwise? And what
happens when a woman performs a
similar action?
The Hetero norm (man + woman
4ever!)
In every time period and
every culture there has been a
number of invisible rules for how
each sex is expected to act - or
not act. These rules are called
"norms" and they are the
blueprints for how our lives
should be led. The norm, which
controls the choice of sex and
gender of the person we love, and
make love to is called the
"hetero norm". According to this
norm, a man should look and act
like a man, and furthermore, love
a woman who looks and acts like a
woman.
Everything that fits into this
norm is considered "normal" and
all the things that don't are
discarded as "abnormal".
But how do we know what is normal
and what is abnormal? Nobody has
ever properly described exactly
what this "norm" contains.
The truth is that nobody knows
what the norm contains and nobody
is truly "normal". But out of
fear of being "abnormal", we hide
up to 3/4 of ourselves, so that
we seem more like other people
who are considered "normal".
Where is the sex located?
Silly question! It's located
in the same place on everybody,
isn't it?
When we talk about sex in
everyday situations, we usually
don't specify the type of sex
we're talking about, but you can
divide the concept of sex into
four aspects.
Biological sex - refers to
the procreational functions, that
is "male" or "female".
Social sex (more commonly
referred to as gender) -
marks which gender role a person
enacts in society, or how people
around the person sees him/her.
It is a question of whether you
look, act and are seen as being a
part of one or the other sex.
Mental sex (more commonly
referred to as gender identity)
- the sex experienced and
identified with by the person.
It's a matter of what sex you
think you are, and how you want
the people around you to see you,
that is, the sex you want them to
treat you as.
For most people the social sex
(gender) is the same as the
biological sex. And so is usually
also the mental sex (gender
identity). Because of this, most
of us don't reflect on how we
define ourselves and what
mechanisms control us.
Transpeople, however, for whom
the biological sex is not always
coherent with the social sex,
experience a more complicated
situation. This is where the most
important sex comes in - the
mental sex. A transperson can
thus have a male body and a
feminine social and mental gender
role. Then this person is
probably transsexual and wants to
change his/her physical body, so
that it's more coherent with the
social and mental sex.
As Sara Lund I have a male body,
a non-masculine social gender
role and a masculine mental
gender role.
As Claes Schmidt I have a male
body, a masculine social gender
role, and a masculine mental
gender role.
My biological sex always remains
male, that is, the sex of a
man.
"Sex" can thus be considered an
collective concept and it's not
always the body that determines
the sex.
Sometimes it's important to refer
to the biological sex, when the
international terms for
transpeople are used.
"Male-to-female", MTF, where the
first letter marks the biological
sex and the last letter stands
for "direction". The opposite
concept is referred to as FTM
(Female-to-male).
I thus identify as an MTF
transvestite.
If you are confronted by a gender
transgressor and feel unsure of
how you should address that
person, the simplest way to solve
the problem is just to ask
him/her how he/she identifies and
wants to be addressed - and to
then hold on to that form of
address.
Gender
identity/Sexuality
Gender
identity (man or woman)
A transperson naturally
spends a considerable amount of
time pondering over his/her
gender identity, that is, his/her
experience and sensation of being
a "woman" or a "man", "both" or
"neither" or leaning towards one
or the other direction. Human
beings always know what sex they
belong to, regardless of what
biological sex they've been born
into. You may not know
immediately, but you will usually
know quite early if something
isn't right. And that you're not
like everybody else. The sense of
alienation comes at an early age.
You really want to be "normal",
and you're ashamed that you don't
fit in.
I was so ashamed I didn't even
dare to tell my mother how I
felt. Or later my wife
Gender expression (masculine
or feminine)
Does a man have to look like
and dress like a man in order to
be considered "normal"? Only 50
years ago, trousers were thought
of as typically male garments,
and a woman dressed in trousers
would have been considered highly
"abnormal". People peeked at her
and whispered about her behind
her back (very much like they do
about MTF transvestites today).
But the few persistent women, who
had the strength to be different,
turned the other eye and
persevered. This has led to the
fact that they*ve conquered the
whole masculine wardrobe, and are
allowed to dress even in a suit
and a tie without being thought
of as deviant or "abnormal".
How far would you say that the
men have come?
Is it men or women who really
need to liberate themselves?
Sexuality
Are transpeople hetero-, bi-
or homosexual?
For an outsider it may be easiest
to assume that the so-called
hetero norm (man + woman 4ever)
is at work also in these
situations. That is, if a man
uses the clothes and attributes
usually used by women in order to
attract men, he must be doing so
for the same purpose - to attract
a man!
The problem is that the "norm"
once more clouds our sense of
reason. Is it really logical that
a man who is interested in men
who like men, would want to
"dress up" like a woman?
Obviously, there are men who like
"phallic women", men in women's
clothes, but usually this is not
the case.
There are also women who accept,
or even like, men in women's
clothes. And, thankfully, there's
quite a few of them.
But why do you do it then, if
it's not to have sex?
- Seriously! There IS more to
life than sex!! Can you really
not come up with any other
reasons? Is it just because we're
gender transgressors, that it has
to be connected to sex? Do you
think in the same way about
parachute jumpers and divers? And
singers or actors who "just
looove being on stage". Is it
your honest opinion that even
these people give expression to
their "penchant" in order to get
a sexual kick out of it, or is it
the "hetero norm" that makes you
automatically see things in a
sexual light?
What if they do it for the same
reasons as I would give you -
because they enjoy it and it
makes them feel good!
My conclusion is thus that
"sexuality" and "gender identity"
are not directly related.
It's very common that transsexual
men (e.g. born women) are drawn
to men also in their new gender
identity and thereby become
homosexual or "gay" in their new
identity.
The percentages of homo-, bi- and
heterosexual people among
transpeople are practically the
same as in the rest of
society.
The fact that a person is born a
man but feels like a woman, or
the other way around, has nothing
to do with his/her sexuality, but
only with the gender identity
that is right for that
individual.
There is thus a great
difference between gender
identity and sexuality.
Sara Lund/Claes Schmidt
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