Genital nullification

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    Revision as of 07:36, 21 November 2020 by 2605:a601:aafd:da00:7463:ebdb:9f8a:44b (talk) (→‎See also: Removed "transexual" as its an outdated term for "transgender". Added "or" to the "and/or" as its not a requirement for both statements to be true for one person and allows more fluidity within the definition.)
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    Surgeries and procedures

    Genital nullification can mean many different kinds of surgeries to take away most or all of a person's reproductive organs and genitals. Some nonbinary people seek this as part of their physical transition in order to be sexless, and/or in response to gender dysphoria that makes them feel alienated from having any kind of genitals.[1] However, one need not have genital nullification in order to be genderless, because gender identity is different than physical sex. A person can be genderless while having genitals that most people would think of as female, male, or intersex. A person also need not identify as genderless in order to seek genital nullification.

    A person's options for genital nullification depend on what kind of body they started out with. For people who had a penis and testicles, genital nullification can mean using surgery to take away those parts, called emasculation.[2] For people who had a uterus, vagina, and labia, genital nullification can mean using surgery to take away some of those parts, called hysterectomy, vaginectomy, and some kinds of labiaplasty.[3]

    See also

    References

    1. "What are neutrois?" http://neutrois.com/0/neutrois.html
    2. "Non-Binary Options For Bottom Surgery". MTFsurgery.net. 8 April 2020. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
    3. "Non-Binary Options For Metoidioplasty". Metoidioplasty.net. 8 April 2020. Retrieved 28 June 2020.