tern wrote:
I hate all social norms and consider it genocide and enslavement for such thing as norms to exist on any scale ever. So obviously this includes norms for the genders.
Interesting way to put it but I for the most part agree.
I personally don't like to attach a label to my own gender.
If I went somewhere and saw a person working at a front desk or as a cashier, etc., I would walk away and be aware of the fact that they were biologically male or female. But the stereotypical assumptions that I've heard many others make related to gender don't necessarily come naturally to me. For example, at my job, I would not really process any kind of male:female ratio as others might. Looking back at my schooling, I have no idea as to which genders were "more present" in the classes I took. In addition to that, if I saw a boy playing with a doll and a girl with a truck I would think nothing of it. I've noticed most other people tend to think those situations are odd or inappropriate for their gender.
Perhaps I think this way because of how I was raised, or perhaps it is because I myself don't neatly fit into any sort of gender binary category, socially. Perhaps this way of thinking is the reason I can't stand the gender binary - because I can't recognize or understand it. It could go either way.
Maybe people with Aspergers are more likely to think this way.
It was hard for me to find words to express that, I hope it made sense.
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AQ 33
103 Aloof, 85 Rigid, 102 Pragmatic
AS 120/200 NT 84/200
INFJ