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♡youre safe here♡

@bi-lesbian / bi-lesbian.tumblr.com

🌙🌙🌸 ♡ Bi Lesbian positivity blog ♡ ◇ Wanna know what this identity means, why people use it, and the history behind it? Please check out my #explanation and #history tags! ♡ @rouge-the-bat is my main! @les-bi-cons is my pride icon request blog! ♡ ◇ My name is Rouge! My preferred pronouns are Lo/Lov, Fae/Faer, and Ro/Rose, but i go by all pronouns ◇ ♡ This blog also focuses on positivity for my other identities, namely Ace, Cupioro, Polyam, Feminenby, and Lovegender! but also has other and more general positivity, and is safe for anyone of any identity, including people with Mogai and Neopronouns! ♡ ◇ Each time I get hate Ill make another positivity post ◇ The world needs more positivity and less negativity! ◇ ♡ Any flags Ive made is absolutely free to use for anything (even merch!)! I only ask for @s on posts using them simply bc I love seeing them being used!! ♡
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aokozaki

[saw something dumb on twitter] [is annoyed by LGBT+ identity discourse again] [is tempted by the devilish darkness to make a post about it]

If you center the entire lesbian identity on "nonmen loving nonmen", you kinda paradoxically have to define what a man even is. And as you might guess from the wave of anti-trans legislation sweeping several governments, this is both a question that's very easy to politicize, and also difficult to coherently answer.

So like, let's assume we take the gender-identity respecting, broadminded answer of "a man is someone who in good faith identifies as such".

For one thing, it's odd that we're applying this broad idea of self-identification to the idea of "man", but not the idea of "lesbian".

(Almost like these two ideas don't quite go together and people who promote the "nonman" idea might perhaps have a different idea of how to define gender as it relates to a rigid sexual binary...)

But for another thing, using this definition of "man" to create the opposite in "nonman" used in our definition of "lesbian"? It's kind of a mess with shoddy reasoning and ample edge cases.

Like, often people pushing the nonman definition will acknowledge that several transmasculine identities can be included in lesbian attraction, so long as everyone involved (the lesbian and transmasc both) are okay with labeling their feelings thus --

(Again, rather odd that this openness shows up here, but draws the line at the mere concept of men, almost as if this definition is at best a retread of lesbian separatism, and at worst, outright TERF rhetoric coached in enough plausible deniability that even people who believe transgender people exist are getting fooled into using it).

-- but sure, good for them, respect for nonbinary identities.

But like, how do we separate "transmasc identity" from "man". We've got overlapping, fuzzy concepts here, and this is supposed to be a formal definition.

I've seen at least one person who tried to word this distinction as the idea that lesbian attraction does not include people who are "in any way men".

I'm not sure this actually solves the confusion here, but it did lead me to realize a huge edge-case in this definition.

Imagine a genderfluid person, who on some days, considers themselves a man, and on others days considers themselves a woman. That's a fairly vanilla, platonic ideal of genderfluidity, I feel.

But you see the problem, right?

Either this person can only be a lesbian on certain days, or the fact that they're sometimes a man means they cannot be a lesbian at all. Either solution here is completely absurd. And the latter may be outright bigoted.

(Also, I invite you to think where you've heard the kind of gender framework where manhood is inherently corruptive, that sits like a stain on you even if you move away from being a man.

I'm not being subtle about this: this whole definition of lesbianism originates in transphobic movements).

If you've followed my chain of logic this far, your response to the genderfluid example might be that the answer should be between the two absurd conclusions. That it depends on the individuals involved, and their boundaries. Just like the transmasculine identities, some people would include this in their lesbianism, and some wouldn't.

And, uh, yes, that's exactly correct.

But that solution is also kind of antithetical to prescriptively defining lesbianism as something that has to be a certain way, rather than a broad category of things it often is.

Either you accept that things like "man", "transmasculine", or "nonbinary" are broad, vague categories that depend heavily on personal experience and expression.

Or you don't, and start echoing gender essentialist talking points.

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shoutout to all my fellow lesbians who are told theyre not ""really"" a lesbian, i see you and stand alongside you and love you. youre wholly and completely a lesbian, your lesbianess is not dictated by anyone but you 💖

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i get a lot of asks along the lines of "can i be a [various mix of identities]? is that valid/possible?" and i just have to say:

you NEVER have to ask someone else for permission for YOUR OWN identity!

i know it can help feeling validating for someone else to assure you about your labels, but no one can dictate what you can be! not even me! you can only find the answer for your labeling within yourself!

heres a little tip for how to tell if your identity is valid: does it help you describe yourself in a way that feels best for you? then congrats! its valid!

it doesnt matter if it could be confusing to others! or viewed as contradictory! or various other bullshit reasonings people will try to use against you! its your identity, so it making sense to you is all that matters!

to quote the wonderful marina in her song "ancient dreams in a modern land"-

we are not queer to conform!

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reblogged

reminder that gender cant be tidied up into some distinctive "men" and "non-men" binary. you are not truly accepting genderqueer people when you use this sort of categorical framing. bigender people exist. genderfluid people exist. nonbinary people who dont even Know if they fall under "man" or "non-man" exists. and various other sorts of gender identities. by defining lesbian as exclusively "non-men" you are ostracizing so many genderqueer people.

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Anonymous asked:

To those anons asking if they can be a lesbian if theyre this gender. I think it's more productive to ask if *you personally* can identify as a lesbian, like does it feel misgendering? No? Then you can be a lesbian!

^^ yeah this is a good point!! i know it can be nice to have someone validate ur identity, but also keep in mind no one can be any sort of authority on your identity but you!

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shout out to lesbians who are men in some way! demiboy lesbians, masculenby lesbians, genderfluid lesbians, bigender lesbians, nonbinary men lesbians, agender man lesbians, transmasc lesbians, trans men lesbians, lesbians who are on the edge between or are both butch and trans men, lesboys, lesbians who are also gay men, and any other variety of lesbians who fall under this!

your complex gender and orientation identity is something to be celebrated, and youre a shining example of what being queer is all about- proudly being uniquely yourself and breaking out of the bounds of societal norms! were queer and were not here to be easily digestable to others or water ourselves down, were here to unabashedly be ourselves and make others get used to it, were not going anywhere!

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