sexually dimorphic attributes) and some social.
A lot of people get things very wrong about me on first glance because of the apparent categories I belong to. I usually interpret me as being a "category violation", or a surprise, and this has been integrated into my character identity.
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Maybe nonbinaries don't like existing as a category surprise? They want to be very unsurprising in relation to their apparent categories?
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Also, I strongly suspect societal gender is more predictive of what it means to be predictive of for nonbinary people than nonbinary people might be aware of? Like, I know one afab nonbinary person who I find I understand much more accurately through the context of 'woman.'
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