This post is lengthy but it carries a question I have been thinking about for a long time, thank you for opening it :]
Introduction
I will present a writedown of my thoughts on the topic, you may read it if you want to discuss my perspective. I’d be equally delighted to just read some thoughts or opinions from you.
My perspective
I’m at least questioning my current identity, however I’m often troubled by the problem stated in the title.
Gender Roles/Stereotypes
I consider gender roles outdated and problematic at least. This is possibly stemming from the fact, that I’m unhappy with the one assigned to me. In case I was too ambigous: I’m thinking about constructs including but not limited to:
- Men should be strong, they may pursue technical interests.
- Women are caring and supportive, their primary interests should be of a social nature. They care about looks and feels
I think these prejudices are actively harmful to non-conforming people, since they may be perceived as socially inept or weird (consider young adults/school).
Transgender Identity
On to the Trans Identity Part. I have gained the impression that transitioned people are doing their best to fulfill the roles and stereotypes assigned to their desired gender.
Conclusion
To me, it seems like efforts towards gender equality, and therefore the abolishment of stereotypes are clashing with trans peoples desire to fit in with society.
I see both sides, they have motivation I can understand, it feels like a conflict that cannot be resolved.
Thank you for sitting and reading through this, I’d be happy to discuss anything related.


In retrospect, my gender abolition was basically a cudgel I used to punish myself for my gender desires, a way to rationalize my gender as a violation of my politics and morality. And it makes a lot of sense in hindsight that the emotional need to repress my gender desires would need to find forms that didn’t feel reactionary or transphobic, but instead felt feminist and egalitarian.
This is really great advice, and ultimately similar to what I found helpful for myself.
One way of resolving the cognitive dissonance for me was to recognize that whatever moral problems I have with gender, trans people find themselves in a particularly difficult spot, and if there is anyone we are going to give a “pass” to for using gender, it should probably include trans people … at some point it became clear my need to alleviate gender dysphoria was more directly morally important in terms of how it makes me a functioning and good person in my life, and how being a functioning and healthy person impacts other people in my life, than any theoretical and political argument about how participating in gender or using gender was immoral.
For me at least I also had special rules: I wouldn’t have thought other trans women should be seen as immoral for feminizing the way I felt immoral for feminizing, for example. Recognizing I’m not special and I deserve what anyone else deserves was also important to helping me realize my rationalizations were irrational and designed to repress and punish more than they were about being a good person.