Recursos en Español
Para encontrar recursos de ASERT que han sido traducidos al español, haga clic aquí.
To find ASERT resources that have been translated into Spanish, click here.
Para encontrar recursos de ASERT que han sido traducidos al español, haga clic aquí.
To find ASERT resources that have been translated into Spanish, click here.
Transgender means someone does not identify with the sex/gender they were assigned at birth. It is the opposite of cisgender, which means you identify with your assigned birth sex/gender.
Sex: Biological sex is often labeled as two main categories based on one’s reproductive functions: female or male. This is assigned to you at birth.
Intersex: individuals who are born intersex are born with reproductive or sexual anatomy (body parts) that don’t fit into the male/female binary. They are often born with genitals that do not match with their inside reproductive organs. People may also have both male and female parts on the inside and outside. In some cases, individuals do not know they are intersex until puberty.
Gender: gender is a social/cultural construct, often confused with “sex.” This is how a person identifies.“Men” and “women” are typically viewed as the gender norm. However, gender is a broad spectrum and is not binary, meaning there are more than two ways/genders to identify as.
Transgender people have always existed, even before the language we have now to describe it. It has been frequently referred to as other names in different cultures, such as “two-spirit” in Native American.
Transgender people use the pronouns that are typically associated with the gender they identify as, i.e. he/him for male and she/her for female. They can also use they/them or it/its pronouns, or neo-pronouns. Neo-pronouns go beyond “she,” “he,” and “they”): xe/xir/xirs, fae/faer/faers, ze/hir/hirs, or ze/zir/zirs.
Transitioning refers to the process of changing your assigned gender to the gender they identify as. Socially, that can mean telling the people important to you, changing your name, and/or dressing in a different way. Medically, that can mean taking hormones, having surgery to add/remove breasts, and/or change genitalia. Not every transgender person medically transitions for a variety of reasons, and that is okay. You don’t have to medically transition to be seen as the gender you identify with. Some transgender people do some medical procedures and not others, and that is okay, too.
Gender dysphoria is a feeling that some transgender and non-binary people have. This means that they feel uncomfortable with their body because it doesn’t match how they want to look and be identified as. For some people it is a mild discomfort they can ignore, and for some people it can be debilitating. Some transgender people don’t experience it at all. Whether you experience gender dysphoria or not does not define if you are transgender.
This information was developed by the Autism Services, Education, Resources, and Training Collaborative (ASERT). For more information, please contact ASERT at 877-231-4244 or info@PAautism.org. ASERT is funded by the Bureau of Supports for Autism and Special Populations, PA Department of Human Services.