Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / November 13, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in Dec. 2018
This term has two different parts: the word gender and the Latin prefix cis, which means "on the same side of". Its antonym or opposite is transgender and the prefix trans means "on the other side of."
The words cisgender and transgender are related to sexual identity
The term cisgender indicates that the sexual identity of a person matches the gender to which it belongs. Thus, it is someone who was born a man and is considered male or who was born female and is considered female. When this does not occur ID we are talking about a transgender person.
Being a cisgender or transgender individual has nothing to do with heterosexual or homosexual sexual tendencies. A cisgender can have any sexual inclination. Thus, there are cisgender homosexual men (they perceive themselves as men but have sexual interest in other people of the same sex), there are cisgender heterosexual men (they see themselves as men and they feel attraction by women) and the same happens with heterosexual or homosexual women.
Sexual orientation, biological sex and gender identity
We understand by sexual orientation, the type of sexual attraction towards other people (if a woman is attracted to men, it belongs to the category heterosexual and if he is attracted to women he would be homosexual or lesbian).
The concept of biological sex refers to differentiation genetics. The human being has 23 pairs of chromosomes and precisely the 23rd pair is the one that determines the sex of each individual. Genetic sex presents two variables: xx for women and xy for men.
It should not be forgotten that there are not only two genders (male and female) but that in some cases there are intersex individuals, which are those people who present characteristics of both sexes. These differences in turn imply a hormonal variation, that is, the predominance of estrogens or testosterone in male or female individuals. The environment and the individual circumstances of each person will influence the biological development of people.
Gender identity does not necessarily depend on biological sex, since it is about another question: how each individual perceives himself with respect to his sex
It is the answer we give to a question as simple as it is profound and totally personal: who am I?
To the margin From this initial question, other questions also intervene: How do I act? How am I perceived by others? And how do I feel about myself identity?
Photos: Fotolia - Elena3567 / Thinglass
Topics in cisgender