It is summer but with Covid around it certainly doesn't feel it with no one able to be away or stay with anyone overnight so I've spent my time out just exploring in the fresh air.
I've found myself thinking during this period about where things need to be for everyone including people like me to feel accepted.
Comparing how things were when I grew up in the seventies and eighties and today we can see some clear signs of progress in what we might call gender roles in society and how we can ensure people are raised to take full advantage of those opportunities.What seems to be helping us to achieve the most we can right now in society is that people are realizing there are traits that belong to both genders, and those traits that were traditionally considered 'masculine' are there in women, and the 'feminine' traits are there in men.
It's no longer seen as a problem when someone shows traits that are often considered to belong to the opposing gender--men cry and get upset in bad situations, or are gentle and soft holding a baby in their arms.
Women are more and more in the positions of power (here in the UK we've had two female Prime Ministers), and taking control of rough situations.
I don't think we need to go to a society where the women are wearing the business suits and running things while the men are dolled up in short skirts with makeup and painted nails.
That's where I break with some feminists and most on the sissy fetish side.
I hold to reverse the roles completely would be just as disastrous as the way things had been run.
Instead, we need the roles equalized and that femininity should never be seen a bad thing.
When we can get to the point where a parent gives their child a pair of panties and a sundress to wear for the day and nobody cares whether the child is a girl or boy, the world will be a much better place.
We'll get there slowly--as the previous generations die out and the new ones grow up, acceptance of things like this grows.
Someone who grew up with a 'macho' father becomes friends with a more feminine boy and realizes there's nothing wrong with it.
Now, their son grows up to be accepting of both feminine and masculine things, and their child more so.
Those of us who grew up experiencing both sides of the equation when the roles were so much more rigidly defined seem to be some of the biggest champions for equality.
I learned firsthand that girls don't have a more difficult life compared to boys, but instead each gender faces their own difficulties and with each gender were variants such as Jane Girls like me and Tom Boys.
We have the right to be free to be me.
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