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Andulka
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Today's Document
Mike Driver
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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ojovivo

PR's Tumblrdome

JVL
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

shark vs the universe

bliss lane

Love Begins
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
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Claire Keane
taylor price
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@momma-mogai-sphinx
Moved to @mogaimom
Moved to @mogaimom
Sorry for not posting in such a long time. Iâm thinking of remaking this blog. Itâd be more or less the same, but having my MOGAI blog as a sideblog instead of a main would make it much easier to manage, I think.
i hadnt seen any i liked w meanings out there so i made a flag for lesbians who use she/he or he/she pronouns!! i took insp from the 5-stripe orange lesbian flag, this any pronouns lesbian flag, and the bigender flag (tho u dont have 2 b bigender 2 use this flag)!! reblogs > likes. feel free 2 use this flag, tho if u make edits/post it pls credit me/@ me as id love 2 see em!!
the top is the basic one n the bottom has a neon one + a pastel one!!
no discoursing on this post!! ill just block ppl who do
softereal pride flag!!
with hearts:
without hearts:
this was originally supposed to be just a flag that looks pretty, but i decided it make it into an identity!! i hope you guys enjoy! this is my first coining, so please correct me if im doing anything wrong! ;w;
ââ シ ・ďžâ: *.â˝ .* :âďž. ââââ シ ・ďžâ: *.â˝ .* :âďž. ââ
softereal (pronounced soft-ear-e-al)Â - a flexible term that can describe gender and/or presentation! in terms of presentation, it can mean that your presentation is more soft, feminine, and delicate. in terms of gender, it can mean that your gender feels soft, ethereal, delicate, and light! it carries a feminine aura, and anyone can use it!
the people i have tagged donât have to reblog! iâd just appreciate it if they did! <3
@uncommongenders @mogaicore @momma-mogai-sphinxâ
Alibinary System Q&A
What is alibinary?
Alibinary is a word made from the prefix ali-, meaning other, and the word binary. Iâm using this word because the system I coined has to do with how different people who are not binary have different relationships to the gender binary.
I think just using nonbinary would make this information hard to find and make this system hard to talk about, since there are many nonbinary systems already.
That said, I donât think alibinary is meant to be an identity on its own here; please use alibinary system (or AS) when talking about the system, or âpeople who use the AS/alibinary systemâ, not âalibinary peopleâ or âalibinary communityâ or whatever.
But ali is similar to allistic! Appropriation!
1. Iâm autistic myself.
2. I donât think coining new words based on prefixes or using words such as alias, alibi and alien constitutes any sort of appropriation.
3. Alibinary and allistic donât even look similar.
What is this system composed of?
Viabinary, a word for those who relate to having an experience similar to a binary gender, while not being 100% that binary gender;
Mesobinary, a word for those who relate to having an experience of both binary genders, or to having an experience of being in-between binary genders;
Ideobinary, a word for those who relate to having an experience that does rely on binary or binary-related concepts, while not relating to have an experience that is similar of that of a binary gender;
Exobinary, a word for those who relate to having an experience that is completely independent of binary genders, or at least outside of binary experiences.
In the future, I hope to have more detailed posts for each of these experiences.
Isnât it problematic/bad/exorsexist/binarist to have all of these based on the binary?
Since binary genders are considered to be the norm, at least in most Western societies, I think itâs fair to say our relationships to the gender binary may affect how we experience exorsexism, dysphoria, erasure, and so on. This is why these terms are the way they are.
If you donât feel like they apply to your reality, if you donât feel like sharing spaces with people with completely different identities even if you face similar issues in some ways, or if you are uncomfortable with this system, you are free to not use those terms or participate on communities based on those terms.
What about people with multiple genders? Or genderfluid people? Or people who relate to more than one of those?
Anyone is free to use as many of these labels they want, if they feel like they apply to them.
Someone may say they are mainly exobinary but also relate to some ideobinary stuff, or that they are genderfluid and experience exobinary, mesobinary and viabinary issues at different times, and so on.
Is mascgender a viabinary or ideobinary identity?
This system is based on what issues one is/feels affected by, not on what gender identity someone is. A mascgender person may relate to both, or to one of those, or to none of those; that may vary from person to person.
If you are unsure of what applies to you, you may want to read more on each of these terms.
Are there combo terms?
Not for now. If someone wants to make them, I donât mind, but I think having more content for the system as it is should be more of a priority than coining more terms.
I want this system to be useful, instead of being just another set of identities and flags that people are like âoh coolâ before moving into the next ones when the set is finished, with no one remembering which term means what one week later.
Is there a term for those who donât fit any of these?
Not for now. If you feel like there is a specific set of issues that may need a word within this system (as opposed to something that may just be described as, say, neurogender issues, pomogender issues, aporagender issues or genderfluid issues), feel free to talk about it!
As for a term that just means ânone of the aboveâ, I donât see how that would be helpful, at least for now. I donât think you can manage to fit everyone who doesnât fit into this system as people who face the same kinds of issues, and itâs not like anyone is being forced to choose between viabinary, mesobinary, exobinary and ideobinary, so if you donât fit anything, I donât see any reason to want to have a word for it at all. Most people donât even know about this system!
Anyways, this system is not meant to replace any other sort of terminology. You can still identify as agender, lunarian, xenic, singularian, genderqueer, undefined, quoigender, apogender, genderflux, gendersylph, colorgender, nonbinary girl or whatever your other identities are, regardless if you use the alibinary system or not.
Donât you think this system can erase certain issues?
This system is meant to bring up issues and discussions that are not taken care of if we are talking about people who arenât binary as a whole, or if we are talking about issues within specific communities only.
This system is not meant to be a replacement for talking about more general or more specific issues.
We can still talk about aporagender issues. We can still talk about exorsexism. We can still talk about maverique specific issues. We can still talk about solarian specific issues. We can still talk about juxera specific issues. We can still talk about gender reductionism. We can still talk about bigotry targeting genderfluid people. We can still talk about hatred against xenogender identities. We can still talk about agender spectrum erasure. We can still talk about erasure of anyone who is not binary from transgender communities, or from âLGBTâ communities as a whole.
The alibinary system is supposed to be a tool to talk about specific issues, to be used alongside with other existing terms, not instead of them.
is there a term for a previously intersex person (mutilated sadly) who is transitioning back? like detransitioning, but cooler
Hi! So the only terms I know for anything like this were coined by @interpunked!Â
and the terms they created are masc-reclaiming, fem-reclaiming, and andro-reclaiming to refer to gender. They also intended them to be used for body type reclaiming as well like âŚmasc body type reclaiming, for example. They also said it should be sort of flexible for the intersex person to also create likeâŚcustom reclaiming terms. The whole idea is just sort of to point out that weâre sort of taking back something thatâs taken from us, whether thatâs gender or like physical transition. ( @interpunked please feel free to correct me if Iâve explained this wrong.)
Iâm not really aware of any other terms, so if any other intersex people would like to add on or create some new terms, please do!
Yes you got it exactly! Masc/fem/andro-reclaiming body or âreclaiming masc/fem/andro bodyâ or anything you like really.Â
To clarify on the custom-reclaiming stuff is the embrace that our bodies will be different as a result of our intersex variations and that prior to surgical removal to gonads or organs we wouldâve had an entirely different type of body to reclaim. But I also want custom-reclaiming to indicate an openness in gender - so hence if you donât vibe with the ideas of masc/fem/andro, you could always just put your gender in there, or hell, just say intersex-reclaiming body/reclaiming [my] intersex body or anything like that.Â
The whole point is to bring the focus less off of dyadic notions of transitioning and terms that may not fit our exact experiences or give us the contextual dignity of saying âwe wouldâve been this anyways if doctors didnât terrorize our bodiesâ⌠and to refocus it onto that very statement - that we wouldâve developed in a different way if doctors didnât terrorize our bodies. Hence âreclaimingâ our body rather than explicitly transitioning.Â
Of course in dyadic contexts one may feel like itâs appropriate to ID as transfem/transmasc etc. so like I identify myself primarily as transmasc in spaces where Iâm not either out as intersex (rare if Iâm in a space safe enough to ID as anything, honestly) or just to give people an idea of what Iâll be doing in the Future tense, but as an intersex person, itâs less of a straight transition and more of a reclamation effort. I coined these terms because I felt that transfem/transmasc didnât accurately convey our experiences with body and gender and transition.Â
Feel free to do as you please with this concept!Â
Sens- [when paired with an ending]: Relating to the trans(masc/fem/neutral/xeno) experience, but only sometimes, temporarily, or not completely. Examples could be people who are genderfluid (so would only be sens- during certain genders), people who are genderflux (similar to genderfluid), or who are bigender/otherwise polygender and only experience some part of the trans(masc/fem/etc) experience.Â
Theyâre kind of similar to the ad- terms, but not exactly. The ad- terms are linked here [link]. Please note that this is not my trying copy, replace, or steal those terms. These terms occupy very separate, yet similar, spaces.
Also just as an fyi, im nondysphoric trans friendly, and you donât need dysphoria to use these terms (in fact tbh I can think of a lot of reasons nondysphoric trans people would like them, but Iâm not gonna gatekeep either way)
OH alsoâanyone can use any of the terms; the terms donât imply an assigned gender at birth.
Examples of who/why:
Someone who is genderfluid and may feel a connection to trans[blank] or ad[blank], but not for long periods of time/not permanently.
Someone who is genderless and feels that their transitioning has nothing to do with their gender, just with their presentation.
Or, really, anyone that feels their gender and how they want to transition doesnât âmatch upâ with how people perceive them.
Flags are as follows:Â
Sensmasculine (blue)
Sensfeminine (pink)
Sensmascfem (purple, for when youâre sensmasc and sensfem)
Sensneutral (yellow/orange)
Sensxeno/Sensother (green)
It has been a while, but Iâve decided to coin a new word: outherinity (sounds like âoh-u-therityâ).
There are overall four qualities used to explain or define gender identities and expressions and connections: feminine, masculine, androgynous and neutral. Those are four subjective concepts yet possible to imagine, as we can use fem and masc as parameters for imagination.
But there are genders like maverique or possibly apora involving entirely new qualities. Still, there was no word for those new qualities. Those are outherine. Outherinity is a concept just to describe new qualities (or essences), giving a general name for a fifth, sixth, seventh etc quality.
Outherine qualities are as subjective as the other four mentioned. Only people themselves can determine whether or not their identities (or even expressions) are outherine.
People can describe outherine qualities as:
- entirely new, apart from those other four, yet not exactly xenine;
- entirely new, but can be compared to the overall four qualities;
- unique combinations among the other four (ex: someone can explain themselves as being simultaneously masculine and neutral, yet they still see this quality as something different).
This concept may even be useful for people with culture-exclusive genders, if they think the overall four qualities do not apply ou make sense to their identities and/or experiences.
Thatâs it! I hope this concept can be useful somehow!
Also, I forgot to address this too in my first post on the issue (because I was pretty tired when I wrote it), but saying âIâm not TMEâ does not necessarily mean youâre amab.
To start off- Iâm intersex. Iâm amab. But my body type happens to be more feminine. I do have breasts. The main reasons I do consider myself to be transfem though is because 1) I was out as a gay cis man for a very long time, 2) I do have a penis too, 3) Everybody in the homophobic and transphobic area around where I live knows me as a man. So when I began to dress more feminine when I came out as nonbinary people began throwing transmisogynistuc slurs at me and more attacks were directed towards me too. But not everybody is seen that way.
For example, there may be an intersex individual who is technically considered âafabâ due to having a vagina (or even not fully having one, depends), but may have a more âmasculineâ body type that leads everybody to perceive them as a man due to being intersex. They may even identify as a man for the time being, and if they choose not to identify as trans, then they should be considered a cis man if they so please due to their relationship with being intersex. But letâs say they want to begin transitioning to look more feminine and realize theyâre a trans woman or a feminine nonbinary. Thereâs still the potential that those around who see them as a man will lash out and use transmisogynistic slurs against them. I would consider that person to be non-TME. Thatâs not necessarily transfem, only if they consider themselves to be transfem.
Donât leave intersex people out of your arguments surrounding transmisogyny, you have to remember that every intersex experience is different and itâs possibly close to what you experience. Also, donât forget about intersex people when claiming things about âTME or non-TME determines your agabâ, because thatâs simply untrue and is a transmisogynistic statement and borders interphobia.
Do not argue with this post unless you are also intersex.
Cis, Trans, and Utrinque
Hello, my name is Alannah. Iâm here to present a new term that I hope is as useful to others as it is for me. Please hear me out.
Iâm an alter in a dissociative identity disorder system. I am a [nonbinary] girl, and I use she/her pronouns. Our body was designated female at birth, and at the time that I split (2011), I probably could have identified as cis. However, around 2013, I went dormant, meaning I wasnât around at all, no input on our actions whatsoever. When I resurfaced again, it was 2017. Other alters had begun taking testosterone in 2014. I awoke to having male-passing body. A different body shape, a deep voice, thick body and facial hair, a new legal name, and a new legal gender, amongst other things. Now, whenever I present as myself, I put myself and the system as a whole at risk. I deal with a great deal of dysphoria, and a great deal of fear regarding things as simple as how to refer to myself and which restroom to use, how to be me and not risk our life and career. I have to do a lot of work to make sure that I âpassâ as my gender.
Because of this, I cannot identify with the cis experience. Some parts of it, maybe, because I live in a body born with a vulva and uterus, and others alters have the memory of being raised as a girl, but the majority of it I cannot. There is actually much more that I can connect to in the experiences of trans women. But I am not, and can never be, a trans woman. There are elements of that experience that I can never know, and it would be wrong for me to claim a label that does not belong to me. So I experience parts of both experiences, but live neither life. There is not a word that describes this experience, so I have decided to make one to exist alongside of cis and trans.
Utrinquegender
Or utrinque for short. It means âboth sidesâ, in line with cis (âon this sideâ) and trans (âacrossâ). It is a modifier, and NOT a gender.
It is a word for people who genuinely experience aspects of both trans and cis experiences, but do not fit either label: female-aligned alters in dfab DID/OSDD systems whose system has medically transitioned to male and male-aligned alters in the reverse situation. I am also open to it being used by individuals that have hormonal conditions that cause them to produce far too much of the âwrongâ sex hormone, causing them to develop secondary sex characteristics, if said condition has done so. If you have another situation that I have not mentioned, feel free to ask, because I cannot list every applicable scenario.
I really hope that this can be a useful term for others, because I know Iâm not the only one that has been left without a word. Please do me a favour and spread this, so that this term can gain visibility and usage.
admasculine: transitioning towards masculinity
adfeminine: transitioning towards femininity
these are meant to be slightly more inclusive than âtransmasculineâ and âtransfeminineâ. who wouldnât feel included by trans-? why do we need ad-? iâm glad you ask! here are some examples:
an AFAB bigender person who has been on T for a long time and now needs to do the same things as transfeminine people to pass on girl days would be transmasculine but adfeminine
a man in a system who has to dress up the body of his cis woman host when he fronts to feel himself would be admasculine
a trans woman would be adfeminine, because itâs an umbrella term that transfeminine falls under
a cis man with kallmanâs syndrome who chooses to take T might be admasculine
an AFAB nonbinary femme might call themselves adfeminine because they feel like theyâre transitioning into a different kind of femininity than the heteronormative role they were assigned at birth
a butch woman who transitions but wants to avoid the connotations of transmasculine might feel more comfortable calling herself admasculine
a woman in a system whoâs transfeminine inworld but fronts into an AFAB body would be adfeminine
an intersex person who has undergone medical intervention but doesnât consider themselves trans might talk about their experiences instead as an adgender person
Orientation Umbrella Terms
I was thinking and came to the realization that thereâs no real distinction between orientations such as homoromantic and demiromantic, even though those describe totally different ways of attraction. Lumping them together has its flaws, so I created my own labels to distinguish them from each other when coining orientations. Â
Affinitive orientations: Orientations describing what genders youâre attracted to, such as bisexual, pansexual, asexual, lesbian, gay, etc. Named for having an affinity for a given gender. Amative orientations: Orientations describing how youâre attracted to a person. Examples include demi-, weort- , mellow-, and fray-.Â
Neulher/Neuman Pride Flags
Neuwoman Pride Flag
Neuwoman (neulher/neujer): a woman that is neutrally gendered; a gender-neutral woman. Similar to neulier, neufemale, ningirl & neutrogirl/neutrowoman.
Neuman Pride Flag
Neuman (neumen/neumem): a man that is neutrally gendered; a genderneutral man. Similar to neutroboy/neutroman/neutromale, ninboy & neumale.
-ap
more genders babey
connumboy: fluid between multiple masculine or neutral gender identites, but never just one identity.Â
connumgirl: fluid between multiple feminine or neutral gender identities, but never just one identity.Â
i hope you guys like them!
not so friendly reminder that if youâre a MAP/NOMAP or support MAPs/NOMAPs you can fuck right off and unfollow me! this blog DOESÂ NOTÂ support pedophilia in any form!!!!
this blog DOES support people with mental illnesses, POCD included!
My dear lgbt+ kids,Â
Hereâs a hug for the âlabel hoardersâ.Â
Thatâs a strange term, isnât it? Hoarding sounds like you greedily cling to things you donât need or even take things away from people who need them more than you.Â
But thatâs not what you do. You just use multiple words to describe your life experiences.Â
Some people feel more comfortable just using one word, sure. Some may have the same experiences you do but choose not to label them. Thatâs great for those people - but you donât need to be one of them. You are you. You deserve to use the words YOU feel comfortable with - and if thatâs a whole bunch of words, thatâs okay!Â
With all my love,Â
Your Tumblr DadÂ