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Terms and Definitions |
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| Sex: | The biological physical body, it reproductive organs, it's secondary sex characteristics. Male and female as it is defined by doctors at birth. |
| Gender: | The social construct that masculinity and femininity are attributable to male and female physical bodies. |
| Gender Identity: | A persons intrinsic sense of self and the way they view themselves to be, regardless of their physical body's primary or secondary sex characteristics. Their internal sense of self of manhood or womanhood. |
| Transgender: |
"Transgendered" is a term commonly used in one of two ways.
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| Transition: | This is the period during which transsexual persons begin changing their appearance and bodies to match their internal identity. Because these changes are so visible, they must literally "out" themselves to everyone. Co-workers, families, friends. While in transition, they are highly vulnerable to discrimination. While gays, lesbians and bi-sexuals may have some choice about outing themselves, transsexuals usually do not. |
| Transsexual Woman: | This is a person whose designated sex at birth was "male", but has come to realize that she is a woman. She may be pre-hormonal, post-hormonal or non-hormonal as well as pre-operative, post-operative or non-operative. Regardless of what point she is with her transition, if she is identifying as female, she is to be considered female, and referred to with female pronouns. Always validate a person's chosen identity. |
| Transsexual Man: | Likewise, a transsexual man is a person whose designated sex at birth was "female" and has realized he is actually a man. Regardless of what point he is with his transition, if he is identifying as male, he is to be considered male, and referred to with male pronouns. Always validate a person's chosen identity. |
| MTF/FTM: | These terms originally were used only to describe transsexual people, but now are used to describe a larger spectrum of transgendered and transsexual individuals and simply indicate the "direction" of cross-gender identification. Male-to-Female or Female-to Male. |
| Transphobia: | This is the fear, hatred, disgust and discriminatory treatment of people whose real or perceived gender identity or gender presentation does not match, in a socially accepted way, the sex they were assigned at birth. Transgendered people, transsexuals, intersexuals are typically the targets of transphobia. |
| Biocentrism: | This is the assumption that people whose assigned sex at birth matches their gender identity throughout their lives are more "real"/and or more "normal" than are those whose assigned sex at birth is incongruent with their gender identity. This comes up for instance, women's shelters may be uncomfortable serving transsexual/transgendered women with the fear that their non-trans clients would be uncomfortable. Underlying this is a biocentric attitude that transsexual women aren't real women. When a service implies that trans women clients should be "grateful" when they are included in "women only spaces", this is also an example of biocentrism. |
| Intersexed: | Formerly known as "hermaphrodite." The preferred term for persons born with what is insensitively referred to as "ambiguous" genitalia and/or chromosomal anomalies. Parents are often coerced by the "medical experts" to have their children's genitalia "normalized" often resulting in the loss of sexual response and/or assignment to the wrong gender. |
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