/r/GaySoundsShitposts
A trans meme subreddit for trans things!
A trans meme subreddit for trans things!
1 - No off-topic content
Please ensure any posts you make relate to being trans/nonbinary/genderqueer/gender-non-conforming in some way.
2 - Be nice to each other, no bigotry of any kind
Bigotry includes transphobia, homophobia, sexism, racism, ableism etc..
3 - Don't break sitewide rules
This is an obvious one, but we need to say it just in case. This includes posting uncensored screenshots of chats, or threatening violence against others.
4 - Be amazing
Please don't say things which you wouldn't say to someone's face, or support ideas here which hurt factions of the trans community. Things like transmedicalism will be dealt with as transphobia.
5 - Don't link to transphobia
Please don't link to transphobia (or other bigotry), even if your personal intent is to challenge the bigotry in some way. This is a meme sub. It's supposed to be fun.
6 - NSFW content must be marked as such
If your post includes Not Safe For Work (over-18/sexual) content, mark it as NSFW. Posts must still be on-topic for the subreddit, i.e. no pornography (even if the explicit bits are cropped out) or sexual content for the sake of being sexual. Explicit post titles are not allowed. NSFW comments are only allowed on posts marked NSFW.
7. No posts that invalidate other users' identities If your post will be exclusive for a certain gender please include the proper flair. Please ensure your post doesn't alienate other trans people. This includes:
Thanks to /u/SincereBoots for the banner!
Other cool subs:
/r/TransQualityGifs - Our very own HighQualityGifs remix, made by the amazing /u/six_inches_lighter and u/FoodOnion!
Need to get here quickly? Use /r/GSSP!
/r/GaySoundsShitposts
I feel bad for his boyfriend… 🌰 🌰 🔨
What Pokemon do you think have a transgender aura? Type balance is not that big of an issue.
OC is mine💙 artist is Fyly_arts
In Spanish even a chair has gender and is considered a feminine word. So when i talk about myself I use third person to avoid gendering myself as a girl. Its exhausting. Do you have this in your language?
"The diagnosis of gender dysphoria requires that a life takes on a more or less definite shape over time; a gender can only be diagnosed if it meets the test of time. You have to show that you have wanted for a long time to live life as the other gender; it also requires that you prove that you have a practical and livable plan to live life for a long time as the other gender.
The diagnosis, in this way, wants to establish that gender is a relatively permanent phenomenon. It won’t do, for instance, to walk into a clinic and say that it was only after you read a book by Kate Bornstein that you realized what you wanted to do, but that it wasn’t really conscious for you until that time. It can’t be that cultural life changed, that words were written and exchanged, that you went to events and to clubs, and saw that certain ways of living were really possible and desirable, and that something about your own possibilities became clear to you in ways that they had not been before. You would be ill-advised to say that you believe that the norms that govern what is a recognizable and livable life are changeable, and that within your lifetime, new cultural efforts were made to broaden those norms, so that people like yourself might well live within supportive communities as a transsexual, and that it was precisely this shift in the public norms, and the presence of a supportive community, that allowed you to feel that transitioning had become possible and desirable.
In this sense, you cannot explicitly subscribe to a view that changes in gendered experience follow upon changes in social norms, since that would not suffice to satisfy the Harry Benjamin standard rules for the care of gender identity disorder. Indeed, those rules presume, as does the GID diagnosis, that we all more or less 'know' already what the norms for gender—'masculine' and 'feminine'—are and that all we really need to do is figure out whether they are being embodied in this instance or some other.
But what if those terms no longer do the descriptive work that we need them to do? What if they only operate in unwieldy ways to describe the experience of gender that someone has? And if the norms for care and the measures for the diagnosis assume that we are permanently constituted in one way or another, what happens to gender as a mode of becoming? Are we stopped in time, made more regular and coherent than we necessarily want to be, when we submit to the norms in order to achieve the entitlements one needs, and the status one desires?"
"those who defend the rigid male-female dichotomy succinctly symbolized by the icons on bathroom doors aren’t defending the safety of women (trans or cis). They’re defending a heteropatriarchal social order which is predicated not only on the privileging of heterosexuality but also on the disparagement and the physical, emotional, and psychological terrorization of women, the gendervariant, and visibly LGBTQ+ individuals."