🐱 9 Things People Get Wrong About Being Non-Binary

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CatParty
https://www.teenvogue.com/story/9-things-people-get-wrong-about-being-non-binary

When people see me or hear my name, they usually assume I’m a woman and go by she/her pronouns. But they’d only be partially right. I do identify as a woman, but I also identity as non-binary (yes, you can be both — more on that later) and go by they/them as well. Unfortunately, this is an identity that many people still misunderstand.

Non-binary sex educator and therapist Aida Manduley, MSWdefines a non-binary person as "someone who does not identify as a man or a woman, or solely as one of those two genders." It's often used as "an umbrella term for other identities that fall outside the man/woman dichotomy and may be more specific," they add. "However this person identifies their gender, it does not neatly follow the binary of man and woman."

That definition’s pretty broad because being non-binary means different things to different people. To me, it means that I reject the whole concept of gender. Growing up, I never felt people were wrong when they called me a woman, but it felt like a label imposed on me rather than one that fit. Then, in college, I learned about non-binary identity, and that did fit. Sure, I have likes and dislikes that some might label “feminine” or “masculine,” but I don’t feel any need to label them that way. The gender binary has made me feel pigeonholed, and I don’t want to identify with it.

Here are some things people tend to get wrong about being non-binary, in my own experience and that of other non-binary people.

1. There’s No Such Thing As “Looking Non-Binary”

Most people understand that you don’t have to wear dresses to be a cis woman or wear pants to be a cis man. Yet many people seem to believe you need an androgynous style to be non-binary, creating the assumption that I and other non-binary people who wear women’s clothes must be women. But you can’t tell how someone identifies based on what they look like, which is why it’s so important to ask.

“I wish that people wouldn't automatically use she/her pronouns just because of how I present,” says 19-year-old Kelley Cantrell. “They need to stop gendering people's presentations.”

“I wear my hair long, and I'm coded as feminine, read as a cis woman. That doesn't invalidate the fact that I'm non-binary,” agrees 24-year-old Alaina Leary. “There is no one specific way that it looks to be non-binary. Non-binary people have all types of gender presentations just like women and men do.”

2. Being Non-Binary Doesn’t Mean You Can’t Have Any Other Gender Identity

Some people identity as non-binary and as a man or woman or trans or something else. I personally identify as a non-binary woman because, to me, this identity acknowledges both that I don’t have an innate identification with any gender and that I’ve been socialized as a woman. Having more than one gender identity means different things to others, though. 24-year-old Rey Noble identifies as both non-binary and a woman to acknowledge that she loves her female-coded body but doesn’t always feel it accurately represents her.

3. Not All Non-Binary People Go By They/Them Pronouns

Non-binary people can also have a variety of pronouns. Some go by they/them, some go by she/her, some go by both, and some go by more than that. The only way you can know is to ask.

Similarly, some non-binary people will go by any pronoun, while others have a strong preference and feel deeply unacknowledged when it’s not honored. 21-year-old Yven likens it to being called by the wrong name. “There’s a real physical pang when someone call me by the incorrect names,” they say.

4. We Are Not All Intersex, Transgender, or Anything Else People Assume We Are

There’s some confusion about what it means to be non-binary. Some equate it with being intersex — that is, having a body not traditionally classified as male or female — but it has nothing to do with your biology. Intersex people can be non-binary, but so can people who are not intersex. Others equate being non-binary with being transgender, i.e. identifying with a gender other than the one you were assigned at birth. Some non-binary people feel this definition applies to them, but others don’t.

5. Non-Binary Identity Is Not Just a Quirk or Trend

“People are becoming more accustomed to the idea of transgender people, since it’s easier to explain the idea of feeling more attuned to the ‘opposite gender,’ but something that's in the middle or completely absent from the gender spectrum at all is still difficult,” says Yven. “I have people asking me what that feels like and then dismissing it when I describe or try to say it more of personality quirk rather than a genuine experience.” Manduley also comes across the idea that non-binary identity is just a trend — or, as they put it, "a Tumblr invention."

Being non-binary is not just a personality trait or a phase — it’s a real identity that's existed for thousands of years.

6. We Don’t All Feel We Were “Born in the Wrong Body”

This is a common narrative about transgender people as well as non-binary people, and while it’s true for some, it doesn’t make the identity of someone who does not relate to the “born in the wrong body” narrative less valid.

I personally don’t feel I was born in the wrong body; I feel I was assigned the wrong gender based on people’s misconceptions about my body. My non-binary identity isn’t the result of my brain chemistry; it’s a reflection of my disagreement with the whole system of gender.

"There's no non-binary card people have to get validated via distress about their bodies," says Manduley. "Relatedly, dysphoria can be common and is sometimes influenced by the ways in which society (at large and even LGBTQ-specific spaces) often pushes people to gender binaries and leaves non-binary people feeling broken, confused, and unsettled, like they're doing something wrong for 'not picking a side already.'"

Similarly, non-binary people don't always feel they were "born that way," Manduley adds. "For some people, their realization (or even discomfort with a binary assignment of man or woman) doesn't materialize until later in life," they explain. "For some, there's little to no distress, and just an internal acknowledgement that their gender is different and/or more complex than man or woman."

7. You Don’t Have to Be Equally “Masculine” and “Feminine” to Be Non-Binary

“I'd like people to know that non-binary isn't just ‘you are 50% man and 50% woman,’” says 23-year-old Kay Bashe. Non-binary people all identify as feminine and masculine to different degrees, just like men and women, and that may even change from time to time. Some don't identify with masculinity or femininity at all.

It’s not possible for anyone else to say how “masculine” or “feminine” someone is. Masculinity and femininity are just arbitrary labels we give certain traits. What seems masculine to one culture or person might seem feminine to another. And none of them are right or wrong.

  1. You Don’t Have To Prove You’re Non-Binary
I used to feel like a fraud for saying I was non-binary because I didn’t do anything differently from when I identified as a woman. I dressed the same, I acted the same, and I didn’t talk about being non-binary with many people.

Being non-binary doesn’t have to be a huge deal, though. You don’t have to do anything special or come out to anyone or behave any differently than you did before. The thing about gender is that it’s totally personal to you, so no matter what you say your gender is, you are right. You can’t be wrong.

“Being non-binary isn't as difficult or complicated as it might seem,” says Noble. “It's messy and weird in the fact that it's hard to think outside of the box that society constructed for us, but ultimately, it's a term that is welcoming and accepting of whatever you need for it to mean to you. It's something you can create for yourself.”

  1. Learning All These Things Isn’t Excessive Political Correctness — It’s Part of Being a Nice Person
Why is it worth our time to unlearn these assumptions, educate ourselves about non-binary identity, and try to understand how the people in our own lives identify? Because it makes us more supportive friends, partners, family members, and human beings.

“For people who don't identify as something outside of their assigned at birth gender, it can be difficult to understand the experience non-binary and trans people as a whole go through,” says Yven. “But learning to accept that people have completely different lives and experiences is part of being human. Supporting that someone is trying to be more comfortable in themselves is something that society should strive for and encourage.”
 
I'm just so bored this kind of shit gives me a non-reaction at this point.
I'm not even sure what gender is even supposed to be anymore in the first place since the whole shit just keeps looping back on itself and contradicting. Gender is not defined by behavior, clothing, appearance, preferences, etc. but then you act in a certain way or dress in a certain way or even transition to be a certain gender, that there are supposedly more than just two but they're all based on the default two ones... so tired simply.
 
I'm a man, but I also really like Fiddler on the Roof, Moulin Rouge, and Chicago, even though they're considered feminine things. All of these years thinking I was just an individual with their own likes and dislikes, apparently I should base my entire identity off of this fact and declare myself non-binary. DOWN WITH OPPRESSION
 
Back in the day, we called this "being a tomboy."

Or, you know, being a human being with many interests and tastes and goddammit like 90% of these are chicks insecure about their womanhood because they aren't ultra-feminine and model-attractive and I'm honestly just praying for this idiotic fad to die out already.
 
Everytime an article about gender gets posted, another school shooter is born.

Save the schools. Don't be a faggot.
 
Holy shit, you don't have to be an ultra-feminine girly girl to identify as a woman. I swear these people uphold rigid gender roles just as much as the dreaded cisheteropatriarchy does.
 
The whole "non-binary/genderqueer/blah blah" is just navelgazing. I mean, whatever, live how you want, call yourself whatever you want. What concerns me is that we're slapping too many labels on ourselves, and I think it's doing the exact opposite of what people want: defining gender roles too closely.

I see this as different from being trans. Almost every trans person I've met said that they always felt that there was something wrong, that their bodies were wrong, or that something just wasn't quite right with them. (One woman I know turned out to be intersex and wasn't aware of it -- she didn't tell me all the details, and I didn't ask, since I don't feel it's my business). And what's more, almost every one of them said transitioning made things feel right. Even if they didn't actually go the whole hog with surgery, or even hormones*, just living as their preferred gender was what did it.

But this...I don't know. I mean, it's not hurting me, but I wonder if they're doing exactly the opposite of what they want: they're trying to shove gender into a box. Instead of saying, "meh, I don't really give a shit one way or another, what gender I am isn't important to me," they ARE making gender roles more and more rigid. It might not be intentional, but I fear this might be the result.


*I'm guessing there are always reasons why a person might not want or be able to transition medically. Money, certain health issues, or fear, etc.
 
Learning All These Things Isn’t Excessive Political Correctness — It’s Part of Being a Nice Person

I love that this is the last point on the list, just as a sort of "fuck you" and an attempt to twist the knife in anyone reading this ironically because they have the smarts to know that all of this genderspecial bullshit is completely retarded.

Nice try.
 
Maybe I’m not social enough, but I’ve never met anyone being non-binary, genderqueer, or problematicfluid.
I don’t think these idiots exist except on the west coast and online.
Nah, these people definitely exist. I've hung out with at least 6 different ones, and even more online. It's a rapidly growing trend if you've hung around long enough with anyone from a tumblr, sjw, or special snowflake circle.

I remember one of the guys (that didn't mind going by "he" but still had "they" as an optional pronoun listed) mostly presented as masculine, sometimes wanted to cross dress for certain occasions (conventions), and liked some feminine stuff. Don't know when he started taking this identity publicly but he's in his 20s.
I know a nb girl who is the same as above except swap the male parts with female and she didn't start the identity shit til she was into her 20s.
Another who is same as above, while being an sjw.
These three all had a scene/emo phase.

I know two others who didn't start until after high school, who dress more androgynous but still can pass as tomboy and quirky hipster dude.

What they all have in common is that they don't act like a gendered stereotype--just like almost everyone else on this planet. I've gotten pretty close to some of them and I still don't fucking get the point of it. I think they're taking this "identity" shit way too seriously.
 
Back in the day, we called this "being a tomboy."
I wish this was still true. It's all right for a girl to be interested in boyish things. There is absolutely nothing wrong with it.

Or, you know, being a human being with many interests and tastes and goddammit like 90% of these are chicks insecure about their womanhood because they aren't ultra-feminine and model-attractive and I'm honestly just praying for this idiotic fad to die out already.
These people are ruining themselves with this polluted thinking.
 
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