Transgender Umbrella
Androgyne People
Some people find they do not feel comfortable thinking of themselves
as simply either male or female. Instead they feel that their gender
identity is more complicated to describe. Some may identify their
gender as right in the middle between male and female, while others may
feel mainly male but not 100% male (or vice-versa not feel 100%
female). Alternatively, they may entirely reject defining their gender
in terms of male and female in any way. As their gender does not
conform to traditional ideas of gender as binary, they have created new
words to describe themselves, the most common are androgyne, polygender, genderqueer or third-gender,
although other terms are also occasionally used. However, some people
will prefer not to define themselves using anything more specific than
just transgender or trans.
There is no set definition as to
whether someone is androgyne, polygender, genderqueer or third-gender,
but it is commonly agreed within these communities that self-definition
is the most important criteria. Due to society’s expectation that all
people, including transgender people, will identify as just either male
or female, it can be very difficult to work out how to express a gender
identity which is neither simply male nor female. Some people may
therefore experience a long period of uncertainty about how they relate
to the highly gender-stereotyped world around them.
People
who call themselves androgyne, polygender, genderqueer or third-gender
also span a very wide range of desire to transition. Some have no
interest at all in physically changing their body. Others may wish to
partially physically transition (for example taking hormones but not
having any surgery or, alternatively, having some surgery without
taking hormones). Some others will follow the same transition route as
transsexual people do but reject identifying simply as the gender they
transition to. Occasionally, the desire to transition might fluctuate
over time.