ruby sparks
Contributor
The question of the OP doesn't mean anything to me. I see the world as me; I respond to the world as me. I am male and surely observers might identify some of my behaviors as characteristically male. However, I don't process the world as a male; I process it as me.
I don't kill bugs because I am the male. I kill bugs because my spouse finds the task more daunting than I do. I carry heavy things because I can not because I am male. It may be true that I can carry heavier things because I am male, but that isn't why I do it.
I don't think of my life in terms of being male, though I am. I don't think about "what it means to be a man."
In many ways, that could be the perfect mentality. After all, we are all probably more similar, and similar in more ways, than we are different. And as you say, even when there are differences, it can be that the differences affect how we behave and not our sense of masculinity or femininity (although there being differences and our sense of them may be causally overlapping at the psychological level).
Some people though (and I have no reason to think this means you though it does apply to me, and most people), if they are somewhat oblivious to their gender, can run the risk of not being aware of the invisible ways it can confer advantages and/or disadvantages.
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