Muttly
Diamond Member
I missed some posts that happened so this is a bit after the fact. Swift has been providing some great info.
Interesting. That might depend on context? Or be one of those terms that is still evolving. I have often come across trans-masculine and trans-female, where the term was used to describe the spectrum. So, transmasculine includes AFAB masculine non-binary and transmen.
And that might depend on age, region, economics? I think bottom surgery can be more common in older trans individuals, where gatekeepers expected you to go through with it.
Trans-femme people are non-binary but present in a feminine way, and are generally AMAB; they don't want to be trans-women or to be seen as women but are feminine. They usually use "she" or "they" pronouns.
Trans-masculine (trans-masc) people are the same in reverse: generally AFAB, present as masculine but identify as non-binary rather than male.
Interesting. That might depend on context? Or be one of those terms that is still evolving. I have often come across trans-masculine and trans-female, where the term was used to describe the spectrum. So, transmasculine includes AFAB masculine non-binary and transmen.
"Bottom surgery" or "lower surgery" is surgery below the waist. This can mean a hysterectomy for trans men, or removing the testicles for trans women. There's also vaginoplasty - turning the genitals into a vagina - or phalloplasty - turning the genitals into a penis, but these are very expensive and comparitively uncommon.
And that might depend on age, region, economics? I think bottom surgery can be more common in older trans individuals, where gatekeepers expected you to go through with it.