Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

What is "trans" and why does it justify undoing sex in law, society, culture and history?

1000 replies

FlirtsWithRhinos · 06/10/2025 12:54

In the Trolls thread @Tandora and I discovered that in a recent thread she had thought she was very clear about what "trans" is while I thought she was simply describing symptoms that could have many causes and did not justify why these symptoms should be treated as actual material facts by others.

Clearly I missed something in that earlier thread but I can't go back because it has reached its post limit, so rather than derail the trolls thread, I am restating my question here.

Looking forward to @Tandora engaging with my questions to help me understand what I missed about her position in the original thread.

__
Tandora · 02/10/2025 21:28
Right- this is your question. which is why im trying to explain what being trans is. It's entirely relevant, the reason people can't comprehend the issue is that they simply can't comprehend what it is to be trans.
_

FlirtsWithRhinos · 02/10/2025 23:13
But Tandora you haven't explained what being trans is. All you've done is played the old TRA game of "Not that" when anyone else tries suggest an definition, any definition at all, that appears to fit the random claims you are making that feeling very wrong in the sex you actually are is somehow interchangeable with being the sex you are not, or that a characteristic of the mind somehow overrides the reality and consequences of differences of the body for both the trans person and for others.

You have made all sort of hand wringing emotional claims on behalf of trans people, and roundly insulted everyone who doesn't accept your argument of "they just are, alright" as closed minded and uneducated (which frankly would be hilarious to anyone who'd ever met me), and yet never once explained exactly why this thing makes the differences of sex and the social consequences of those differences, facts that are entirely and unproblematically accepted as real in all other circumstances, suddenly inconsequential and irrelevant in the face of a trans person's mental self image.

So I'll ask you again.

What is "being trans" Tandora?
Is it being one sex but with a deep and aching wish you were the other sex, maybe like a blind person has a deep and aching wish to see, or a lonely little girl has a deep and aching wish that she had been born as one of the popular kids instead?

Or is it actually being, in an innate mental way, in ways we don't yet understand, the other sex, implying that sex is not in fact a descriptor of the body but of the mind?

Because take away the emotional manipulation and neither definition actually justifies the demands being made of women in its name.

Neither definition changes the fact that people with female bodies do exist and do face social and physical consequences because of those bodies, and neither a man's deep feeling that he should have had a female body, nor a man's deep feeling that women don't need to have a female body, changes the embodied experiences and needs and self knowledge of the people who actually have a female body one iota.

Because these are things that are entirely to do with the experiences of women, and so no experience or feeling, no matter how genuine, of a man is relevant to them.

And regardless of which definition you go for, in fact regardless of any definition you go for that places more weight on a man's idea of himself as a woman than the embodied fact of female existence, outside his own mind he is simply not relevant to who women in the original female sense are and what women in the original female sense need at all.

No definition of woman that is stretched to include male people is more relevant to the needs and experiences and reality of female people than the simple old fashioned sex based definition and there is sinply no way round that.
face of a trans person's mental self image.

So I'll ask you again.

What is "being trans" Tandora?

Is it being one sex but with a deep and aching wish you were the other sex, maybe like a blind person has a deep and aching wish to see, or a lonely little girl has a deep and aching wish that she had been born as one of the popular kids instead?

Or is it actually being, in an innate mental way, in ways we don't yet understand, the other sex, implying that sex is not in fact a descriptor of the body but of the mind?

Because take away the emotional manipulation and neither definition actually justifies the demands being made of women in its name.

Neither definition changes the fact that people with female bodies do exist and do face social and physical consequences because of those bodies, and neither a man's deep feeling that he should have had a female body, nor a man's deep feeling that women don't need to have a female body, changes the embodied experiences and needs and self knowledge of the people who actually have a female body one iota.

Because these are things that are entirely to do with the experiences of women, and so no experience or feeling, no matter how genuine, of a man is relevant to them.

And regardless of which definition you go for, in fact regardless of any definition you go for that places more weight on a man's idea of himself as a woman than the embodied fact of female existence, outside his own mind he is simply not relevant to who women in the original female sense are and what women in the original female sense need at all.

No definition of woman that is stretched to include male people is more relevant to the needs and experiences and reality of female people than the simple old fashioned sex based definition and there is sinply no way round that.

_

@Tandora I don't have much free time this afternoon. Please don't take slow replies as bad faith and be assured I will be coming back to this thread when I have to engage properly as I really appreciate you wanting to explain this to me.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
11
MurkyWeather2 · 07/10/2025 18:21

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:18

Well that's not true- I've been called a transphobe by "gender critical feminists " on mumsnet lol. But I've never been called transphobic by a trans person in real life or on Reddit.

Engage with @FlirtsWithRhinos posts. Put some flesh on your assertions. Show us some detail

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:22

WarrenTofficier · 07/10/2025 18:20

I know, I've had to deal with my mother's flash backs and the resulting UTI because she couldn't use the gender neutral toilet.

But Tandora will continue to dismiss such reactions as moral panic and bigotry.

I'm not advocating for only gender neutral toilets.
I'm concerned that if this completely unworkable EHRC guidance goes through that is most likely to be the result. Complete own goal.

MurkyWeather2 · 07/10/2025 18:26

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:22

I'm not advocating for only gender neutral toilets.
I'm concerned that if this completely unworkable EHRC guidance goes through that is most likely to be the result. Complete own goal.

Is @FlirtsWithRhinos asking difficult questions that you cannot answer? Are you, possibly, a bit out of your depth with her?

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:26

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:22

I'm not advocating for only gender neutral toilets.
I'm concerned that if this completely unworkable EHRC guidance goes through that is most likely to be the result. Complete own goal.

What is the problem with sex based protections in law?

What about sports?

What about hospital wards?

I’ve got a cancer that only women can get. If sex doesn’t matter, how did that happen?

WarrenTofficier · 07/10/2025 18:27

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:22

I'm not advocating for only gender neutral toilets.
I'm concerned that if this completely unworkable EHRC guidance goes through that is most likely to be the result. Complete own goal.

You are advocating for trans women in women's toilets, which is exactly what the toilet my mother couldn't use was. Letting some men into women's spaces makes them gender neutral.

nicepotoftea · 07/10/2025 18:27

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:03

For Eddie Izzard to be a transwoman he would need to have a pervasive, consistent, persistent, profound, recognition/ awareness/ (cognitive) experience of self as being female.

Edited

So if the expericence is not consistent, does that mean that he isn't trans?

AskingQuestionsAllTheTime · 07/10/2025 18:28

Yet again, answering something said many pages ago; these threads move so fast!

"why just sex? Why not height, or headshape? Why don't we get people freaking out because their legs are too long or too short?"

During early adolescence, I grew nine inches in height during less then a year and my hands and feet grew two glove sizes (we had to wear gloves for school-church, so I know I had) and three shoe sizes. This growth-spurt was thought by the doctor to be because I spent almost two-thirds of a year in bed with four childhood diseases in quick succession – we didn't get vaccinated against much apart from polio, back then.

For some time thereafter I was extremely clumsy and quite unable to judge distances properly, so I kept tripping up over things and walking into them, as well as knocking objects off tables. My mental map of my own body was all wrong. My mother was very sympathetic, and assured me I would grow, not out of it but into it. I did.

She didn't rearrange the house to accommodate my new body-map, though.

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:29

WarrenTofficier · 07/10/2025 18:27

You are advocating for trans women in women's toilets, which is exactly what the toilet my mother couldn't use was. Letting some men into women's spaces makes them gender neutral.

Your mother has been sharing public toilets with trans women all her life.

Gender neutral spaces are available for everyone. I'm advocating for women's toilets that trans women can also use. Not toilets available for everyone .

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:30

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:26

What is the problem with sex based protections in law?

What about sports?

What about hospital wards?

I’ve got a cancer that only women can get. If sex doesn’t matter, how did that happen?

I didn't say that sex doesn't matter. I believe that sex matters .

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:30

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:29

Your mother has been sharing public toilets with trans women all her life.

Gender neutral spaces are available for everyone. I'm advocating for women's toilets that trans women can also use. Not toilets available for everyone .

Edited

So because you don’t know your consent has been violated, that’s ok?

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:31

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:30

I didn't say that sex doesn't matter. I believe that sex matters .

So what’s the issue with sex based protections as provided for in law?

DeanElderberry · 07/10/2025 18:32

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:30

So because you don’t know your consent has been violated, that’s ok?

That's very creepy. 'It can't have been rape, she was asleep'.

No men in women's facilities.

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:33

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:31

So what’s the issue with sex based protections as provided for in law?

i don't have a problem with sex based protections in law. I have a problem with the introduction of policies that are making it impossible for trans people to participate in public life/ leave their homes

WarrenTofficier · 07/10/2025 18:34

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:22

I'm not advocating for only gender neutral toilets.
I'm concerned that if this completely unworkable EHRC guidance goes through that is most likely to be the result. Complete own goal.

Also that is massively disingenuous of you given that you have said before you don't think anything should ever be separated by sex.

TheKeatingFive · 07/10/2025 18:34

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:30

So because you don’t know your consent has been violated, that’s ok?

Tandora believes women shouldnt have any rights to consent to who they share their intimate spaces with

MurkyWeather2 · 07/10/2025 18:35

Ok, I'm out. We're back at the trolling one line answers now.

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:36

WarrenTofficier · 07/10/2025 18:34

Also that is massively disingenuous of you given that you have said before you don't think anything should ever be separated by sex.

This is completely false.

Heggettypeg · 07/10/2025 18:36

I'm struggling to analyse the process that leads from " I have a feeling" to "l know that feeling means I am a woman" (or a man).

Maybe you have an icky feeling about a certain part(s) of your body. Your penis, or your breasts. You'd rather they weren't there, or were differently shaped.
You could, in theory, have that feeling in isolation from the world, and without needing any words to express it. It could be completely inborn and visceral.

To start to frame that feeling in terms of your sex at all, however, you would need to have met the concept of sexes, and know that the bits of your body you don't like have a connection with sex, and with one sex in particular. So already your perceptions of the outside world are coming into play.

This knowledge in itself wouldn't automatically lead to "I am really a member of the other sex." You might assume that having the ick about parts of your body to a greater or lesser degree is part of the normal human condition. Or conclude that it's just a psychological oddity of some people (including yourself) - unfortunate and unpleasant to live with, but ultimately meaningless.

To make the further leap to "I really belong to the opposite sex" requires particular ways of thinking about your feeling, even when the feeling is a visceral feeling about an objective physical reality. Your feeling is what it is, but labelling it can only be done by a process of trying to match it to one of the options you are (a) aware of at all and (b) see as relevant. Both those things are socially and experientially influenced.

I think what I'm trying to express is that the idea of somebody "just knowing" or "recognising" something, even about themselves, isn't as simple and obvious as it seems.

Imagine several people who don't know about the existence of mules seeing their first mule:
A. Well, it's an animal, with non-cloven hooves, but I don't know what sort.
B It's a donkey. lt's got long ears.
C. It's too big and too sleek for a donkey. It must be a funny-looking horse.
A has made a partial match but admits being unable to take it further without more information. B and C are both trying to fit the mule into the world they already know, but they divide up the world in different ways.

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:39

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:33

i don't have a problem with sex based protections in law. I have a problem with the introduction of policies that are making it impossible for trans people to participate in public life/ leave their homes

Edited

I’m glad your view has changed because that’s not quite what you said before.

I look forward to the campaign beginning through legal and peaceful means so that I can voice objections in a similar fashion.

Taztoy · 07/10/2025 18:40

DeanElderberry · 07/10/2025 18:32

That's very creepy. 'It can't have been rape, she was asleep'.

No men in women's facilities.

It really is and for me as I’ve said before it is a line that has to be held as moving down that line is perilously close to rape apology.

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:44

Heggettypeg · 07/10/2025 18:36

I'm struggling to analyse the process that leads from " I have a feeling" to "l know that feeling means I am a woman" (or a man).

Maybe you have an icky feeling about a certain part(s) of your body. Your penis, or your breasts. You'd rather they weren't there, or were differently shaped.
You could, in theory, have that feeling in isolation from the world, and without needing any words to express it. It could be completely inborn and visceral.

To start to frame that feeling in terms of your sex at all, however, you would need to have met the concept of sexes, and know that the bits of your body you don't like have a connection with sex, and with one sex in particular. So already your perceptions of the outside world are coming into play.

This knowledge in itself wouldn't automatically lead to "I am really a member of the other sex." You might assume that having the ick about parts of your body to a greater or lesser degree is part of the normal human condition. Or conclude that it's just a psychological oddity of some people (including yourself) - unfortunate and unpleasant to live with, but ultimately meaningless.

To make the further leap to "I really belong to the opposite sex" requires particular ways of thinking about your feeling, even when the feeling is a visceral feeling about an objective physical reality. Your feeling is what it is, but labelling it can only be done by a process of trying to match it to one of the options you are (a) aware of at all and (b) see as relevant. Both those things are socially and experientially influenced.

I think what I'm trying to express is that the idea of somebody "just knowing" or "recognising" something, even about themselves, isn't as simple and obvious as it seems.

Imagine several people who don't know about the existence of mules seeing their first mule:
A. Well, it's an animal, with non-cloven hooves, but I don't know what sort.
B It's a donkey. lt's got long ears.
C. It's too big and too sleek for a donkey. It must be a funny-looking horse.
A has made a partial match but admits being unable to take it further without more information. B and C are both trying to fit the mule into the world they already know, but they divide up the world in different ways.

To make the further leap to "I really belong to the opposite sex" requires particular ways of thinking about your feeling, even when the feeling is a visceral feeling about an objective physical reality. Your feeling is what it is, but labelling it can only be done by a process of trying to match it to one of the options you are (a) aware of at all and (b) see as relevant. Both those things are socially and experientially influenced.

The labelling may be socially learned in the same way that - "I see my wife as a hat", what a hat is, is socially learned.

But it's not a process of analysis- oh I think I'm a woman because I like dresses/ dolls etc. nothing like this at all.

It's a profound, automatic, almost subconscious ,pervasive , all consuming direct perception of self - you can listen/ read the so , so many, many different ways that trans people have described this.

Plastictreees · 07/10/2025 18:44

MurkyWeather2 · 07/10/2025 18:26

Is @FlirtsWithRhinos asking difficult questions that you cannot answer? Are you, possibly, a bit out of your depth with her?

Why are you obsessively repeating posts and harassing this poster? You cannot force someone to answer you, you should know this considering you were hectoring about forum etiquette earlier. This poster can ignore you if she so wishes, and I wouldn’t blame her for doing so.

DeanElderberry · 07/10/2025 18:46

Plastictreees · 07/10/2025 18:44

Why are you obsessively repeating posts and harassing this poster? You cannot force someone to answer you, you should know this considering you were hectoring about forum etiquette earlier. This poster can ignore you if she so wishes, and I wouldn’t blame her for doing so.

,

🙄

WandaSiri · 07/10/2025 18:47

TheBroonOneAndTheWhiteOne · 07/10/2025 17:58

I've never told anyone this.

I was raped thirty years ago by a male patient when we were in a mixed-sex ward.
The police did their best but could not get a charging decision from the CPS as it was my word against his.

In 1990, my ex-husband (who I had divorced because of his violence) got into my house and subjected me to a serious sexual assault.

I do not want to share single sex spaces with men. It's obvious why.

My dignity, safety and comfort should not be sacrificed in order to allow transwomen into SSS. No women should be subjected to this.

It's an abomination.

💐
You shouldn't ever feel you have to disclose to justify your need for SSS. Big hug.

Imdunfer · 07/10/2025 18:48

Tandora · 07/10/2025 18:44

To make the further leap to "I really belong to the opposite sex" requires particular ways of thinking about your feeling, even when the feeling is a visceral feeling about an objective physical reality. Your feeling is what it is, but labelling it can only be done by a process of trying to match it to one of the options you are (a) aware of at all and (b) see as relevant. Both those things are socially and experientially influenced.

The labelling may be socially learned in the same way that - "I see my wife as a hat", what a hat is, is socially learned.

But it's not a process of analysis- oh I think I'm a woman because I like dresses/ dolls etc. nothing like this at all.

It's a profound, automatic, almost subconscious ,pervasive , all consuming direct perception of self - you can listen/ read the so , so many, many different ways that trans people have described this.

Edited

"But it's not a process of analysis- oh I think I'm a woman because I like dresses/ dolls etc. nothing like this at all. It's a profound, automatic, almost subconscious ,
pervasive , all consuming direct perception of self "

It cannot be. Because the people with that perception of self have never been the opposite sex and therefore cannot possibly know what it feels like to be the opposite sex.

So it must either be a desire to adopt stereotypical behaviour or the opposite sex, or a visceral hatred of the sex they are, or both.

No trans man has any idea what it feels like to be me.
.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.

This thread is not accepting new messages.