Minuend
pat pat
- Local time
- Today 4:58 PM
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2009
- Messages
- 4,142
I'd think the neurological factor is very strong, on the level of being an asperger where you struggle to understand why people are not being rational and logical, not having the ability to instinctual connect with what people feel. The human brain will function in a way where it will turn up things most people would find weird or alien
I also think in extremes, communities can make people think they are something they are not. Balancing this issue will never be simple, and seeking simple answers is intellectually lazy
I don't feel I'm in the wrong body, but in a way I can understand that feel. And the more society push gender identities, the more I can relate, because I was never the typical girl. If I grew up today where being a girl was being interested and obsessed with the things typical of today, I think there's a chance I'd think myself the wrong gender. But, maybe, luckily, back in my days, being an outsider just meant I was goth
I also think in extremes, communities can make people think they are something they are not. Balancing this issue will never be simple, and seeking simple answers is intellectually lazy
I don't feel I'm in the wrong body, but in a way I can understand that feel. And the more society push gender identities, the more I can relate, because I was never the typical girl. If I grew up today where being a girl was being interested and obsessed with the things typical of today, I think there's a chance I'd think myself the wrong gender. But, maybe, luckily, back in my days, being an outsider just meant I was goth
