YmirGF
Bodhisattva in Recovery
Thanks for posting what I would have.People
Yeah, not giving a rip about assigned gender traits.
Not applicable
Duly noted.
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Thanks for posting what I would have.People
Yeah, not giving a rip about assigned gender traits.
Not applicable
Duly noted.
more questions, lol.When you hear the term feminine male, what do you think of? How about masculine female?
Well that depends on the context in which a person uses them.Do you have differing feelings on the two?
No.Do you find one more positive or negative than the other?
Yes, and I do not think that is more or less valuable in and of itself.Bonus: Is it possible to be neither more feminine or more masculine? Do you think that is more positive, less positive, or the same as having predominantly one trait (according to your definitions of feminine and masculine.)
*Note that this is in the discussion rather than debate area.
When you hear the term feminine male, what do you think of? How about masculine female? Do you have differing feelings on the two? Do you find one more positive or negative than the other?
I believe any emotionally and even psychologically sound person is both feminine and masculine as appropriate to circumstances. To be all one or the other is to be dysfunctional in some way or another.
I would question the accuracy of your use regarding the term feminine and masculine here. I think this pushes toward a stereotype of feminine and masculine that is not internally consistent. People use the terms in a wide range, but the feminine=emotional masculine=logical is, in my opinion, one of the least accurate descriptions.I tend towards being what is required for the situation. Not difficult being more feminine when dealing with children for example, when the caring side has to be what one exhibits. But if one is in any outdoor situation, especially any dangerous ones, the masculine side tends to come out, as the emotions are not really that helpful in many situations. Just my experiences in some situations - where we had one female with us when doing the Cuillin Ridge on Skye, for example - she was very competent but probably displaying her masculine side at the time. I am a bit suspicious of those who do seem rather rigid in their personalities - either way. I see myself as being very masculine - testosterone finger checked - but I am also probably more feminine than many in some ways - my preference for compassion over judgment, for example. A good balance is probably best.
I like discussion better then, @Revoltingest has a funnier definition than you.RF loosely defines the difference as debate being a back and forth exchange with the intent to debunk or rebutt the opposite position. Discussion is merely he exchange of positions.
From what I've seen, a male crying in public will earn scorn and humiliation, not empathy or understanding.And now it's much more OK for men to cry and women to show anger to pick two classics.
I would question the accuracy of your use regarding the term feminine and masculine here. I think this pushes toward a stereotype of feminine and masculine that is not internally consistent. People use the terms in a wide range, but the feminine=emotional masculine=logical is, in my opinion, one of the least accurate descriptions.
A very reasonable question! I left it deliberately vague to see what direction people interpret it first. If it conjured images of a style of dress, physiological characteristics, behavior, identity, or a mix.I think of "in what way masculine or feminine? And to what degree?
That's fair.I like discussion better then, @Revoltingest has a funnier definition than you.
I think it depends on the crowd. In my generation (30-somes), literature and television written for women by women tended to heavily feature what could be considered stereotypically feminine men rather than earlier generation's Fabios. That still exists, of course, but it's not the powerhouse social standard it once was.From what I've seen, a male crying in public will earn scorn and humiliation, not empathy or understanding.
I would question the accuracy of your use regarding the term feminine and masculine here. I think this pushes toward a stereotype of feminine and masculine that is not internally consistent. People use the terms in a wide range, but the feminine=emotional masculine=logical is, in my opinion, one of the least accurate descriptions.
Nowadays I think just about how they look. In a cultural sense men are still not supposed to show much emotion in general.When you hear the term feminine male, what do you think of?
How about masculine female? Do you have differing feelings on the two? Do you find one more positive or negative than the other?
Yes. Many in the younger generation don't seem to belong much to either, good for them I don't think anything negative about it.Bonus: Is it possible to be neither more feminine or more masculine? Do you think that is more positive, less positive, or the same as having predominantly one trait (according to your definitions of feminine and masculine.
When you hear the term feminine male, what do you think of? How about masculine female? Do you have differing feelings on the two? Do you find one more positive or negative than the other?
Bonus: Is it possible to be neither more feminine or more masculine? Do you think that is more positive, less positive, or the same as having predominantly one trait (according to your definitions of feminine and masculine.)
Do you think it's possible to strike a balance between the two? Do you think that's healthier, less healthy or neutral compared to being more one or the other (but not necessarily extremely so.)
Man, thank you for sharing that powerful experience!I think a balance gives greater flexibility in how you respond effectively to circumstances and situations, and therefore allows you to respond effectively to a wider range of circumstances and situations. In the sense that functionally (as opposed to dysfunctionally) responding to any circumstance or situation is generally a sign of health, a balance is therefore healthier than leaning significantly one way or the other.
Incidentally, when I look back at some of the "toughest" men I've ever personally known in my life -- the fire fighters I once worked with some decades ago -- I see how most of the men who struck me as exceptionally competent (they were all at least competent -- you don't hold down such a job if you're not at least that) were so very often the men who had a noticeable feminine side.
Of course, I don't mean "feminine" in anything like the "girly", "effeminate" or "hyper-feminine" senses, but rather in having marked "feminine" traits, such as superior empathy for others, caring-ness, and even remarkable gentleness in key ways. I don't know how exactly that might fit in with their being more than usually competent to fight fires, but I think the correlation might be significant and bear on my point that having both feminine and masculine traits gives you greater flexibility in dealing with challenges.
I'll give you one example. Something that has stuck with me for years, and in some ways is still a bit of a mystery to me. We were extracting a recently killed young man of about 20 or so from a vehicle accident. My job was to hold his body up at a certain angle so we could get the tools in to cut his corpse loose. Because of that odd angle, and the crumpled nature of the van he'd been driving, I had to hold his still warm body more or less a close as you would hold a lover in order to get the necessary leverage. There's no better way to describe it.
The work was unusually difficult and slow, and blood was still draining from the wounds in his body in a stream as thick as my small finger. A third or half of me became soaked with it. I held that position for about forty five minutes, the whole while all but forced to stare into his open eyes. Towards the end, there was no way I wasn't feeling grief for the guy, mourning him.
Then, if I am not entirely mistaken about this, one of my crew, a man I thought one of the more competent fire fighters, looked at me with an expression on his face that I can only describe as as one of the most compassionate looks I have ever received from anyone. I was almost startled by the purity of it! There was nothing like pity in it, none of that other stuff; just pure, probably spontaneous compassion. It is still to this day as vivid as yesterday in my mind. But how on earth did he know or sense how I was feeling -- for he certainly seemed to. You don't know this about me, but I have a nearly perfect poker face, and I was certainly wearing it that day. There wasn't even a hint of a tear in my eyes. Yet, unless I am utterly mistaken, he knew how I felt.
I mentioned in another post but one of the inspirations for this thread is a trans woman who describes herself as not super effeminate, and didn't like dresses and makeup. So it was super cool to talk with her about challenging this cultural preconception that female identity =/= femininity > masculinity.I do not feel negatively about any form of gender expression or lack thereof, being that I'm trans myself and exposed to a large variety of folks in the LGBTQ+ community.
When you hear the term feminine male, what do you think of? How about masculine female? Do you have differing feelings on the two? Do you find one more positive or negative than the other?
Bonus: Is it possible to be neither more feminine or more masculine? Do you think that is more positive, less positive, or the same as having predominantly one trait (according to your definitions of feminine and masculine.)
*Note that this is in the discussion rather than debate area.
I'd frubal your post, but I don't want to hurt Digital's feelings more than I already have.I like discussion better then, @Revoltingest has a funnier definition than you.