Hairless (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 3:30 pm MrT, I think your test has to do with center of gravity. Most women carry more weight in there caboose.
Yes but do these pants make my butt look big?
Hairless (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 3:30 pm MrT, I think your test has to do with center of gravity. Most women carry more weight in there caboose.
mrt (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 2:36 pm Did you ever do the one where you put a chair down step back just enough to bend forward, lean your head against the wall and try to grab the chair and stand up? "Men" can't but women can. And me for whatever reason?!?! :-\
transward (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 8:38 pm I think this is a case where subtle differences between men and women bodies are amplified by learned behavior to become a sexual sign. The average man’s shoulders are wider than his hips. Women are usually the reverse. When a man swings his arms they clear his hips. With women, the shoulders being narrower than the hips, if they swing their arms straight down, they bump into their hips, so their arms have to angle out for clearance. When transsexuals try to lean to walk like women the first thing they are told is to rotate their thumbs out, which also has the nice side effect of thrusting the breasts out for admiration. So a rather subtle difference becomes a sexual identifier.
Transward
kristoff wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 2:51 pm Mixed messages... My arms turn out with the thumb test. On the other hand, I can't pick up the chair and stand up, either.
punkypink (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2009 9:12 pm But ive never learned or even bothered to try to walk like a woman. I'm comfortable being a tomboy. I do think that it isn't an accurate indicator at all. I've since conducted the test on YET another cisgendered male and he has arms that taper outwards as well.
Out of 6 subjects so far, I've only had one whose arms hang straight, while the other 5 all have arms that taper outwards. Out of those 5, only one has any likelihood of being transgendered, the other 4 are quite reliably cisgendered.
I am wont to believe that tapered arms when in a "thumbs out" position aren't even a subtle biological difference, much less one that could be amplified to become a sexual identifier via learned behaviour.
I will continue to conduct the test and report my findings here, but I am believing more and more that there is no basis for saying that the way one's arms are shaped when the palm is facing forward is indicative of transsexualism in physical males.
I am also worried that some transwomen are focusing on such false "indicators" for their validation, or that they place over-emphasis on learned behaviour. Personally, I feel learned behaviour can only bring one so far. Without any sort of self-certainty of one's own gender identity or confidence, one would simply end up a caricature of a woman rather than being one. Afterall, not all transwomen are girly feminine sort of girls, just as not all cisgendered girls are the girly feminine sort. Ultimately, being a woman, is as simple as being yourself. As I say, let the real you shine.