Has someone ever said to you "you eat like a *insert gender*!" when you identify as the opposite gender? Or when you're gender fluid? What does it even mean to eat like a specific gender? Don't we all, as human beings, require the same nutrients from our foods?
As I walk into our school's dining hall I see girls sitting with boys, girls sitting with other girls, and boys sitting with other boys. Then I see the girls' plates in a striking juxtapose to the boys' plates. Plates full of vibrant shades of green next to plates full of dull brownish mixtures. You can probably guess at this point that it is more common to see a girl in our dining hall with a plate full of veggies or a salad (not even piled high) and to see a boy with a plate full of fries, burgers, pizza and pasta. If you had to take a wild guess, which plate of food is more likely to cause a person to gain weight? Yes, you guess correctly, it is in fact the typical profile of a boys plate.
Girls hesitate to get and even forego a second round of food, even if it is to the salad bar to get some more raw veggies, because they're afraid of being judged by 1) other girls and 2) boys. Boys are reprimanded by other boys if they only come to the table with one plate of food or don't go back for seconds.
In our society girls are terrified of gaining weight. This idea goes back to the idea of gender in the gym. Girls try to fit the social construct of feminine qualities by restricting food choices in order to be thinner. Boys try to fit the social construct of masculine qualities by eating everything in sight in order to bulk up. This is another example of how everyday things most people do are based on the constructed gender roles which creates a gender binary.
This social construct of gender is another reason that this society makes it difficult to openly be a trans person. If you do not fit into one of the two constructed gender categories then you are "abnormal." You are put in the DSM (Diagnostic and Statical Manual) for having a "psychological disorder." This idea perpetuates our societies construct of the gender binary.
As I walk into our school's dining hall I see girls sitting with boys, girls sitting with other girls, and boys sitting with other boys. Then I see the girls' plates in a striking juxtapose to the boys' plates. Plates full of vibrant shades of green next to plates full of dull brownish mixtures. You can probably guess at this point that it is more common to see a girl in our dining hall with a plate full of veggies or a salad (not even piled high) and to see a boy with a plate full of fries, burgers, pizza and pasta. If you had to take a wild guess, which plate of food is more likely to cause a person to gain weight? Yes, you guess correctly, it is in fact the typical profile of a boys plate.
Girls hesitate to get and even forego a second round of food, even if it is to the salad bar to get some more raw veggies, because they're afraid of being judged by 1) other girls and 2) boys. Boys are reprimanded by other boys if they only come to the table with one plate of food or don't go back for seconds.
In our society girls are terrified of gaining weight. This idea goes back to the idea of gender in the gym. Girls try to fit the social construct of feminine qualities by restricting food choices in order to be thinner. Boys try to fit the social construct of masculine qualities by eating everything in sight in order to bulk up. This is another example of how everyday things most people do are based on the constructed gender roles which creates a gender binary.
This social construct of gender is another reason that this society makes it difficult to openly be a trans person. If you do not fit into one of the two constructed gender categories then you are "abnormal." You are put in the DSM (Diagnostic and Statical Manual) for having a "psychological disorder." This idea perpetuates our societies construct of the gender binary.