Dear Creature: Gender Non-Conforming vs. Nonbinary

Headshot of Creature Karin Webb. Pierced septum and medusa, glasses on top of forehead. Medium length light brown hair, light chin hairs, faint sparse mustache, blue eyes.

Dear Creature,

While out to dinner with my newest housemate, I was asked a question I wasn’t able to answer, but immediately thought of you as the perfect person to consult! We’re putting together a panel/social for queer, femme-identifying and gender non-binary folx, and we are inquiring about the differences between “gender nonbinary” and “gender non-conforming” identities, which I can only imagine are quite nuanced.

I think I might identify as queer, cis-fem, and at times gender non-conforming in the way I dress and behave and do sex… and other times in a highly gender conforming, feminine manner. I suppose behaving like a creature would also make me gender non-conforming… right? I feel rather behind on many conversations my peers are having on the subject matter, and I want to keep up… I’m just a bit out of practice.

I’d love to know your thoughts! Hope you are having a day filled with magic of all kinds!

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Thank you for this great question!

In general, I’d say “nonbinary” is an umbrella term which covers terms such as genderqueer, genderfluid, nonbinary, gender non-conforming, a-gender, third gender, two-spirit… etc. It’s descriptive of people who do not subscribe to or feel properly defined by the limitations of a binary male vs. female identity. Nonbinary identifying people generally believe ourselves to fall into identity spaces which are neither male nor female, or we embrace traits of both, and/or see ourselves as other. Nonbinary points to gender as a spectrum of two or three dimensions, rather than two sides of a coin.

“Non-conforming” is just that: people who acknowledge themselves as existing within male or female spaces at some level, but don’t subscribe to a conformist social view of how those genders/sexes are “supposed to” look/act/feel/desire/present… etc.

Considering these terms side by side, you can be both nonbinary and gender non-conforming. You can also identify as cis and non-conforming, or binary trans and non-conforming. On one level it can be looked at as: non-conforming is something you “do”, while nonbinary speaks more to who or how you “are”.

Identity is highly personal. We get to use the words we feel connected to, using descriptions of these words in the ways which make most sense to us. It’s important to keep in mind that people describe their identities in different ways, sometimes using the same words to invoke different meanings, feelings, and behaviors. It’s helpful to understand a variety of meanings when discussing these things with others.

To reference the way you describe your identity above, some of the words you are using seem to have slightly different definitions from the ones I use, and that’s great! One example of where our definitions seem to diverge is within the concept of conformity. I, someone who identifies as nonbinary, don’t personally subscribe to the concept of gender existing within the binary format at all, so “acting female” or “acting like a woman” doesn’t really mean anything specific to me. Therefore it’s hard to be “non-conforming” regarding my tastes and behaviors “as a woman” (which is also one of my gender identities).

To explore this ideal further: is it “feminine” for a cis man to desire anal penetration? My answer would be absolutely not. The prostate, when stimulated properly, can offer extreme pleasure. Is pleasure gendered or sexed? If we can say “no, pleasure itself is without sex or gender”, it follows that there is nothing gendered or sexed about the desire to or behavior of being penetrated. Therefore the desire to penetrate is also not sexed or gendered, meaning any person can desire penetration or to penetrate without it being seen as outside the norms of human agency and desire. It is not non-conformist to perform or desire either of these acts.

Another subtlety I’ll entertain in this conversation is that there is a difference between binary transgender identities and nonbinary transgender identities, particularly when it comes to issues of gender conformity. Those transgender people who view themselves as binary will sometimes have certain ideals or views more in common with cis people when it comes to gendered or sexed expectations. There may be more of an emphasis on or desire to “pass”, which can employ the tools of conformity at times. There are certainly binary trans folks who define “what a man or woman looks like” as what they themselves look like, by default of being a man or woman regardless of their personal ability to publicly pass as the gender they identify with.

So what even is the purpose of gender within descriptive language? I might say that certain “airs” contain an aspect of feminine energy or masculine energy, and that we all have each and other energies within us to draw from. So for me, non-conforming is less relevant to enunciate in general. My identities as genderfluid and nonbinary are already non-conformist by our binary social standards and definitions. Every individual has a capacity to take on and utilize a number of different energies, and therefore society’s ideas about conformity are just plain ‘ol incorrect by my definitions. Regardless, I certainly still get hung up on and have to examine and reexamine what I feel are instilled expectations vs. personal desires as I show my face publicly—or even as I define what I enjoy and find attractive about myself privately. Sticky work, unravelling this mess is…

To end on a positive note, if it’s empowering to you as a cis identifying person to interact with the socially constructed ideas of feminine and masculine as a jumping off point for conformity and non-conformity, then absolutely use those terms and words in the ways that describe your journey and your evolution best! This is one of the things that I love about identity conversations: they can go anywhere. When communicated thoughtfully and investigated more and more deeply, they teach us to hear one another and even to better understand ourselves more clearly over a lifetime.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
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Transition?

Makeup from a music video shoot this past weekend. I love the “both/and” present on my face..

Recently a number of people have mentioned something about my “transition” during conversation. They’ve been curious to know how I feel about what it’ll be like on the “other side”. I want to talk about this idea more fully. It strikes me that the question doesn’t quite pertain to my trans experience.

First off, I’m super glad to finally be read as something other than cis femme by people! It’s been a lifelong desire not to be boxed over in that perfectly wonderful, yet not quite me part of the gender world. Secondly, I want to voice the idea that I don’t consider myself to be in a “transition”. I don’t feel that word really applies to me.

I’m not from one place and going to another. I’m living my life as well as I know how to. I’m taking what, for me, has proven to be an anti-anxiety and anti-depression medicine: testosterone. This medicine also gives me facial hair and a bigger clit (among other attributes), which is awesome because I’ve always wanted facial hair and a bigger clit (among other attributes). For as long as I can remember I’ve been into body modification and costumes. Body mods which make me feel more like myself in little ways such as piercings and tattoos have never been geared toward assimilation with beauty standards set by society, but toward the ways in which I would like to see myself.

I’m genderfluid and I’m non-binary. I’m also, by way of career, a shapeshifter and a character actor. I’ve been so professionally since the age of 11 when I wrote my first monologue, which also happened to be my first drag performance. I hold all of the options within me. This is what makes me happy. I’m not interested in being a “man” in exactly the same way as I’ve never been interested in being a “girl”. I love my identities as a Woman and a Boy though, and I will forever be the creature and imp before you.

When the idea of “binary as ultimate trans designation” started to break down, and then was coupled with an emergence of non-binary options, an entire trans spectrum became more visible. That did more for my gender experience than almost anything else in my life. Suddenly I was free from the expectation that I can only be trans if I feel as though I am “the [binary] other”. I am not “the [binary] other”, I am many others and both. My journey taking Testosterone has led to a deeper love and respect for myself, and to higher levels of joy in my existence. Doors have opened, an enlarged perspective of the world is still being discovered, and a continually persisting disinterest in passing as anything other than exactly who I am is my ultimate goal. What you see is what you get. My body here and now is capable of a great many things regardless of its androgyny or it’s manifestations as femme and masc and…

As for the questions anyone might have: please never stop asking them! I don’t want to be less inspired to write things like this. I want to articulate personal things which shed light on matters of interest. I hope this perspective has inspired new questions too.

Love from inside the Creature, not the Chrysalis.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

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This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art. Thank you.

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