Excerpts from Adam’s Notebook – Vol.16(3)

28 01 2010

So, classes started back up and in my effort to reject craziness, I have tried to back off of some of the other things in my life. I think I’m starting to find balance, but I believe school will have to completed before that balance falls into place. I’m enjoying this semester as my two classes are quite interesting. My first class is with my friends from Minneapolis – it is a delight to be in a class where I know so much about my classmates. Really rewarding. My other class really challenges me sometimes in my love of stereotypes; Human Sexuality. This week, in one of my discussions, I had to write about gender identity and transsexuals. I hope I wasn’t too controvesial – although…. I do love to shake things up and make them interesting at times.

Unit 3, Discussion 3 – Gender Identity

This quite interesting topic unfortunately suffers from a great social stigma within the United States; otherwise it may be more aggressively researched to determine the viability of the gender state and possible implications. The question is not so much has the gender changed; it is whether the body is now aligned with the gender. Did the woman in a man’s body finally find herself in a woman’s body and vice versa? Must gender be so black and white? Perhaps gender exists on a sliding scale and some men are more sensitive and insightful than others. Perhaps some women are more physically capable than others. Rathus, Nevid and Fichner-Rathus write about a third gender pointing out that “In some cultures …, a third sex or gender may represent an intermediate state between men and women, or it may represent a state of being both…” (Rathus, Nevid, & Fichner-Rathus, 2008, p.179) This would explain the phenomena of some transsexuals choosing to have surgery and some choosing no medication or surgery. It is possible that some transsexuals feel completely out of place in their own body and will go to any extent to have that resolved and others only feel a moderate tendency towards the opposite sex. It certainly aligns with the norms in American society in that some men appear to have feminine tendencies while living out their life as heterosexuals and seemingly happy to do so. The opposite can be said for women. So considering this sliding scale of gender identity, one could assume that in addition to black and white there are numerous shades of grey in between. Researching and acknowledging such an idea will first require the extinguishment of the social stigma of a transsexual.

Adam T

References

Rathus, S. A., Nevid, J. S., & Fichner-Rathus, L. (2008). Human sexuality in a world of diversity (7th ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon








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