LOL, duplicate paragraph

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Jocelyn Badgley (Twipped) 2020-05-03 19:57:35 -07:00
parent 37e2950a7a
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2 changed files with 1 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -48,8 +48,6 @@ De forma singular, también pueden ser usados maliciosamente cuando un individuo
TLo mismo aplica para los nombres. Ser llamado por su nombre asignado (deadname o “nombre muerto”) en lugar del nombre que eligieron, puede sentirse invalidante cuando se hace ignorantemente, y completamente desdeñoso cuando se hace intencionalmente.
La disforia social se puede manifiestar, previo a la transición, en sentimientos de aislamiento o extravío cuando se interactúa con otrxs. Por ejemplo, una persona trans AMAN (asignada masculino al nacer), puede encontrarse muy incómoda cuando socializa en un grupo de hombres, como que simplemente no encaja. Puede sentirse profundamente heridx cuando las mujeres se intimidan por ellx en público, y frustrarse de que no es capaz de formar relaciones platónicas con mujeres debido a las expectativas heterosexuales.
También puede manifestarse como alegría o pena al ser etiquetado en tu verdadero género mientras aún se está viviendo en el género asignado. Ejemplos:
- Una persona AMAB siendo etiquetadx como una chica, con la intención de insultarlx, pero le provoca sonrojarse en lugar de enojarse.

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@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ All social gender dysphoria orbit around one central concept: What Gender do peo
While still in the dark, the only awareness is that something seems off about the way you interact with your interactions with other people. People of your assigned gender seem to interact with each other in ways that do not feel natural to you. Their behaviors and mannerisms feel strange and surprising, where interactions with individuals of your true gender feel easier. You relate to people closer to your own truth.
For example, an AMAB trans person may find themselves very uncomfortable in groups of men. They may feel out of place and struggle to fit in among their male peers. Masculine social interactions don't come naturally to them, and trying to emulate their male friends feels awkward. They may feel themselves drawn more to friendships with women, but become frustrated at the social and heterosexual dynamics that come into play between men and women, preventing them from forming platonic relationships.
For example, an AMAB trans person may find themselves very uncomfortable in groups of men. They may feel out of place and struggle to fit in among their male peers. Masculine social interactions don't come naturally to them, and trying to emulate their male friends feels awkward. They may feel themselves drawn more to friendships with women, but become frustrated at the social and heterosexual dynamics that come into play between men and women, preventing them from forming platonic relationships. This is if women are willing to form friendships at all. They may find themselves deeply hurt when women shy away from them on principle.
This feeling of wrongness intensifies as the person becomes more and more aware of their own incongruence, and upon realizing who they really are it takes on a new shape. For binary trans people this often may be about the intense need to be seen as your true gender, be it male or female. Some non-binary people experience this more as euphoria at being seen as neither male or female and thus only being referred to in ungendered ways, or from being read as different genders by different people in the same setting. Some experience intense euphoria when people are incapable of reading their gender and become confused.
@ -48,8 +48,6 @@ Singular they can also be used maliciously when a transphobic individual refuses
The same also applies to names. Being called by one's given name (deadname) instead of their chosen name can feel invalidating when done ignorantly, and downright dismissive when done intentionally.
Social Dysphoria may manifest pre-transition in feelings of isolation or misplacement when interacting with others. For example, an AMAB (Assigned Male At Birth) trans person may find themselves very uncomfortable when socializing with a group of men, like they just don't fit in. They may find themselves deeply hurt when women shy away from them in public, and get frustrated that they aren't able to form platonic relationships with women due to heterosexual expectations.
It may also manifest as joy or embarrassment at being labeled as your true gender while still living as your assigned gender. Examples:
- An AMAB person being labeled a girl, intending insult, but it causing them to blush rather than get angry.