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#genderflux
glitched-dawn · 2 days
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Okay okay okay
So I got a lot of diversity and representation in my novels so far, right?
BUT
I NEED MORE
So Imma list a few characters (with numbers lol) and you can decide if I should change/add anything! (Of course, some are already decided and have partners, but that doesn't stop minor changes!)
You can tag a number and add an identity, or a sexuality, anything queer really! Or you can comment, of course, that'd be easier!
Number one:
From England, born in Canada, but has intense British accent
Literally white as snow
Gay but on the aspec, intersex (some kind of genetically fucked up thing with genitalia, I might be using the wrong label here so excuse me on that) masc
Number two:
From the USA
Honey-colored hue
Demisexual homoromantic
Number three:
From Sweden, has British accent
Also white, has a lot of freckles
Transmasc bisexual panromantic (ftm)
Number four:
From Russia/America
Coffee-colored hue (extreme tan ig? not much tan in Russia but they got that from their American dad ig)
Gay
Number five:
From Canada
Greyish ash-colored hue
Asexual panromantic genderfluid (mtf?)
Number six:
I have no fuckin idea where they're from but I'd say Los Angeles lol (but spends most of their time in the Darkrimm AKA hell)
Strong tan, I don't know how to explain it but light bread brown
Genderfluid femboy-ish polysexual
Number seven:
From Mexico
Soft brown hue
Gay, extremely gay
Number seven:
From hell itself, AKA the Darkrimm
Pale brown hue
Polysexual, but mostly actually falls for guys
Number eight:
Also from the Darkrimm
Northern European hue, if I can describe it like that
Thinks they're straight, but is most likely bisexual or pansexual
Number nine:
From North America
Strong brown hue
Gay, but extremely devoted-obsessed over one single guy
Number ten:
From Japan
Pale hue
Lesbian
---
Those are it! Of course, I can specify the numbers and give more details, as in where they're from really (like where they live), if they have any disorders, things like that! Lemme know if you'd like that idea :)
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polyamorouspunk · 2 months
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By the way you can be as much or as little trans as you want to be. Going all-out with bottom/top surgery, hormones, vocal training, etc.? Super cool. Just want hormones and no surgery? Cool. Just want vocal training? Awesome. Just want to wear different clothes? Still trans if that’s what you want. Want to change nothing at all other than using different pronouns than when you were a kid? If it’s trans enough for you, it’s trans enough for me. Only want to be trans sometimes, when you’re in the mood, when Mercury is in retrograde? Sounds legit to me. All levels of transness are valid.
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bloompawz · 1 month
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Imagine
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actualalivecreature · 4 months
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not femininity or masculinity but a secret third thing (faggotry)
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beautiful-indecision · 9 months
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it-is-only-a-novel · 5 months
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Some nonbinary people don't have a gender.
Some nonbinary people are a third gender.
Some nonbinary people are both a man and a woman.
Some nonbinary people are between man and woman.
Some nonbinary people are a few genders at once.
Some nonbinary people change their gender periodically.
Some nonbinary people have different amounts of gender.
Some nonbinary people have a little bit of a certain gender.
Some nonbinary people don't understand their gender.
They are all nonbinary.
(I'm sure I missed some, and for some more than one may resonate. Add in your own!)
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ssejdoesthings · 6 months
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Happy coming out day to my fellow queers who have to get out a PowerPoint presentation to explain their identity
Terfs back the fuck off.
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jiabeewrites · 10 months
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HAPPY PRIDE MONTH!!!
pride polls: gender edition
put your pronouns in the tags!
reblog to support another genderqueer!
(you'll probaby get a happy pride msg if i see u reblogged)
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strawby-salad · 5 months
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A customer called me by BOTH my pronouns today. Like an adult woman not a teen. Nobody has ever done that, not even my friends at work. It made me so happy. Everyone looks at me and just defaults to she/her but that woman actually took my funky lil name tags with cut up stickers into consideration even though we’ll never see each other again
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thefrogginbullfish · 1 year
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aroacejedi · 6 months
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Sometimes i want to be a she/her boy sometimes i want to be a he/him girl sometimes i want to be an extraterrestrial being beyond human comprehension spanning thousands of dimensions and existing beyond the boundaries of physics as we know it
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lemon-penguinn · 2 months
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I'm nonbinary. People, in general, do not tend to see me as a trans person, even though I identify as one.
Everyone usually thinks of me as a girl. A cis girl who has decided to pass herself off as a nonbinary person, or a trans boy, simply because she thinks it's "trendy". A cis girl who wants to be part of a community because she feels lonely. And that's because, by many people's standards, I just "don't look trans", whatever that means. I guess it's simply because my gender expression is not rigid. It changes.
Deep down, I feel like a stereotype: a teenager with a female body who claims to be a boy but occasionally wears dresses and skirts comfortably. In the eyes of others, perhaps, I am nothing more than a cis girl infiltrating trans spaces. I'll be honest: I've cried over this very situation many times, because, what am I to do about it?
Do I have to change and stick to the gender role that is expected of someone like me? Do I really have to change the way I show myself just because I'm not a girl, but I also don't perceive myself fully as a boy?
I think that's ridiculous.
In the end, saying that "if you are nonbinary you have to be androgynous" is something that perpetuates stereotypes and gender roles. It's like telling a trans girl that, to be a real girl, she has to wear a skirt - it makes no sense. Do all girls only ever wear skirts and dresses? Do all boys only ever wear black, loose tank tops?
Of course they don't.
My expression, my tastes, my clothes, my voice, and the way I act do NOT determine my gender identity at all, just like my private parts. Because I believe that gender is a part of us. Not a part of our body, our clothes or our personality. It's true, though, that our gender identity can influence those other things. I think that's why certain actions or concepts make us dysphoric or euphoric: because our gender influences whether we perceive positively or negatively those things that affect us.
But, until the day most of society can understand that gender isn't a rigid set of rules, nonbinary people will remain generally perceived as no more than "girls who want attention" (if we live in a female body) and "weird boys" (if we live in a male body). We do not exist. Breaking out of binarism is seen as a phase that will end once we grow up. Because, apparently, many people think that being nonbinary is something that doesn't exist in the adult world.
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ofishal-fish-posts · 3 months
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3,000 Followers Special: Official Fish Posts Gender Reveal
I have exactly, and I do mean exactly, 3,000 followers as of posting this...
So it's time for the big reveal...
I am genderfluid!
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I am also genderflux!
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this-is-exorsexism · 18 days
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people thinking that all afab nonbinary people are inherently moving towards masculinity and all amab nonbinary people are inherently moving towards femininity.
this is exorsexism.
this idea is often used to justify using the terms transmasculine and transfeminine in some kind of universally applicable way, but it's based on a gross oversimplification of the gender spectrum as a slider between male and female/masculine and feminine.
there is an infinite number of directions for an amab nonbinary person to go in. femininity is not the only one just because the gender binary says so. they could transition into an in between space, considering themself androgynous rather than masc or fem. they could transition into neutrality. they could transition into nonbinary masculinity. they could transition out of gender altogether. they could transition into a gender that has no ties to the binary. they could transition into fluidity. they could transition into an infinite number of things. the same is true for an afab nonbinary person.
take xenogenders for example. if an afab nonbinary person identifies as a specific xenogender, they'd be considered more masculine than before, but if an amab nonbinary person identified as the exact same gender, they'd be considered to be more feminine than before, even though most xenogenders aren't inherently masculine or feminine. not all nonbinary genders consist of a balance of masculinity and femininity.
when i came out, i didn't move towards the opposite of my AGAB by virtue of moving away from my AGAB. i am now equally far away from both.
the gender spectrum is not linear.
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tortiefrancis · 1 year
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