Who can say to be a woman? Is one with genitals of a woman, those outside and inside body with hormonal functions of a woman and bodily cycles of a woman.

Personally I very much like women who speak their minds and stick to what they think is right. What comes to what sex we feel we are we should be is the agony of contemporary people who have endless desires and needs that must be fulfilled. Well, you are the sex you are born to, this I agree with. Whether transgender people and transsexuals feel they are more women than women normally I want to ask what is more woman than a woman? How dare you diminish womanhood of anybody who is born female. Is sexuality the most ruling characteristic in being human, something to be altered, something to parade and compete with, something to constantly go through and be traumatized with, something that you can build with plastic surgery if you have the money. You can make a scene of yourself, a fabrication and an act of being a woman. When womanhood is clothes and makeup, maneuvers of extravaganza and theatrical flamboyance to show off to be the most feminine you can be what are you other than a pose and fake. To be more than a woman is someone who also is a man, that is two sexes in one body at least. Figure out a new name for that sex, won’t you and be proud of that creation without imitation. Germaine Greer has right to her opinions. She is not violating anybody. To be able to tolerate difference is something transgender people should obviously learn.

www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/10/men-talk-about-periods/411931/ “ In one 2011 study, researchers asked a group of college-aged men to describe how they had learned about menstruation. The responses had a few common themes, the authors observed: The men had largely picked up snippets of knowledge from female family members and, later on, girlfriends, but by and large were still fuzzy on the basic mechanics of the female reproductive system. “Boys’ early learning about menstruation is haphazard,” the researchers wrote. “The mysterious nature of what happens to girls contributes to a gap in boys’ knowledge about female bodies and to some negative views about girls.””