#Unbiased gender affirmation informational blog
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Please Reblog this Post Trans Community and Allies.
I am Zestual (some know me as Shadow), and I run a blog for female to male transition and have for almost four years now.
A little about me I am a retired social worker and addictions counsellor. I have completed all surgeries (last one was just over a decade ago). I've had chest surgery, I've had phalloplasy. I actually enjoy sleuthing the internet for proper information to inform the community that phalloplasty is not bad, and not nearly as risky as many say. As long as you take care of yourself pre and post op you will have a phallis that you've dreamed of.
This includes hormone treatments, top surgeries, metoidioplasty, phalloplasty, and much much more.
If you are looking for a resource that only uses reputable sources and is a source of unbiased information on transition.
Here is the blog directory:
https://www.tumblr.com/answersfromzestual/748974533324800000/improved-blog-directory-find-what-you-need?source=share
Feel free to ask question, send in concerns or questions. I welcome all blog related questions, comments, and concerns.
-Zestual
#Transgender#trans positivity#transman resource blog#Resource blog#ftm gender affirming surgery blog#Transgender educational blog#Ftm trans information#Ftm trans education#transgender ftm#phalloplasty#ask me things#ftm transition#transman#phalloplasty blog#lgbtq#Phalloplasty educational blog#Top surgery educational blog#Bottom surgery educational blog#Ftm trans educational blog#Ftm resources#transitioning#Tansmasc#Transfer#trans nonbinary#ftm phalloplasty#Ftm education#Unbiased gender affirmation informational blog
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As a person struggling with dysphoria for as long as I can remember, I wanted to share some resources and information for others to understand more about the experiences and struggles that detransitioners specifically go through, since March 12 is Detrans Awareness Day.
It’s so important for detransitioner stories to be heard! However, the detrans stories that receive the most media attention and coverage are often from biased right-wing sources that twist and repackage detrans narratives for an anti-LGBT and anti-woman agenda. This makes it even more crucial to spread awareness and information about detransitioners from unbiased sources that do not support the right-wing/conservative agenda, and so that misinformation is not further spread.
Detransitioners need the support, empathy, and kindness of the left-wing as much as all trans people and other LGBT+ people do, since many continue to suffer from dysphoria even after detransitioning, sometimes feeling worse than they did before. So I’ve linked some informational resources and websites below.
Post Trans is a website founded by two detransitioners from Belgium and Germany, which shares a collection of detrans stories from detransitioners and desisters.
Are You Asking Why? is a website for a grassroots organization created and run by a group of detransitioned and re-identified women since 2013.
Link to a transcript of a 2023 Q&A Panel with seven detransitioners.
@detransition is a Tumblr blog that shares resources and stories and answers questions about detransitioners as well. See their About page for more info.
@detransstories is another Tumblr blog where stories from detransitioners and desisters were shared. This blog is associated with the Pique Resilience Project website, created by a group of four detransitioned and desisted women, to provide resources for support for those who may be questioning their gender or identity. This 2 minute long YouTube video by them addresses some misconceptions about detransitioners.
Detrans Joy is a youtube channel independently made by a detransitioner who has been making videos to document and talk about her experiences and struggles with gender-affirming care.
Here is a link to an informational booklet created by the Post Trans organization (mentioned earlier), in which they gathered the written experiences of 75 female and male detransitioners and created the content based on their wishes, advice and thoughts. The 50-page long booklet has the objective to reach detransitioners and desisters, their relatives and close ones, people who consider a transition and wish for more information, health professionals such as endocrinologists or therapists, or anyone who wants to learn more about the topic.
Detrans Awareness Day website link, which also has a helpful Resources section.
There are many more other websites, blogs, articles, videos, organizations, and social media accounts that I could’ve linked to share some really valuable and enlightening stories about the experiences of detransitioners with the healthcare system, but I didn’t want to risk accidentally including any links that could espouse any potentially bigoted, conservative, right-wing, misogynistic, and/or anti-LGBTQ+ agendas. Regardless of what the detransition rate currently is or whether the statistics are up-to-date, detransitioner stories deserve to be heard, so that more research can be done to make sure that all gender-dysphoric people can receive the appropriate healthcare and treatment options to help, since social or medical transition may not work for everyone, but their pain and dysphoria still deserves to be addressed.
Please reblog to share this info if you support detrans people, trans people, all other gender-dysphoric people, LGBTQIA+ people, as well as gender non-conforming people in general! Hopefully these resources and information could save some lives, and help others who are questioning their gender identity to know that they’re not alone. ❤️ If you know additional resources, articles, videos, or other helpful info to share that is related to the topic of detransition or gender dysphoria, please add them in a reblog or in the comments! Please do not use this post to spread any hate for anyone from any demographics or groups! I don’t usually make posts on tumblr, but I just wanted to share some informational resources in case this might help anyone else who is struggling, as dysphoria is something I still struggle with too, and also because healthcare for all is a very important issue to me.
#DetransAwarenessDay#Detrans Awareness Day#detrans awareness#detrans#detransitioning#detransition#sfw detrans#trans#transgender#lgbt#lgbtq#lgbtqia#trans lives matter#trans lives are human lives#detrans lives matter#detrans ftm#detrans mtf#transition#healthcare#mental health#medicine#gender dysphoria#dysphoria#tw dysphoria#healthcare system#trans healthcare#detrans healthcare#lgbtq community#trans rights#trans rights are human rights
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9 Types of Unconscious Bias and the Ways They Affect Your Recruiting Efforts

We make countless decisions every day without even realizing it. Even as you sit here reading this, you’re making decisions. Decisions about the content, the questions being asked of you. And the answers to these are influenced heavily by something researchers refer to as “unconscious bias.”
What is “unconscious bias”?
Bias is an inclination or prejudice for or against one person or group. So, unconscious biases are unconscious feelings we have towards other people – instinctive feelings that play a strong part in influencing our judgements away from being balanced or even-handed.
One of the most prominent areas of life where bias can play out is the workplace. For example, one of the strongest biases we have in the workplace is gender bias. Why? Well, our feelings about gender and the stereotypes we’ve all associated with gender are something we’ve developed throughout our whole lives. Things like how or where we’ve been brought up, how we’ve been socialised, our exposure to other social identities and social groups, who our friends are/were, as well as media influences, all affect how we think and feel about certain types of people.
It’s important to mention, however, that most bias stereotypes do not come from a place of bad intent. It’s just a deep seated, unconscious stereotype that’s been formed in our brains through years of different influences we often had no control over.
How does bias affect our actions?
“Most of us believe that we are ethical and unbiased. We imagine we’re good decision makers, able to objectively size up a job candidate or a venture deal and reach a fair and rational conclusion that’s in our, and our organisation’s, best interests,” writes Harvard University researcher Mahzarin Banaji in the Harvard Business Review. “But more than two decades of research confirms that, in reality, most of us fall woefully short of our inflated self-perception.”
Biases affects us and our decision-making processes in a number of different ways:
Our Perception – how we see people and perceive reality.
Our Attitude – how we react towards certain people.
Our Behaviours – how receptive/friendly we are towards certain people.
Our Attention – which aspects of a person we pay most attention to.
Our Listening Skills – how much we actively listen to what certain people say.
Our Micro-affirmations – how much or how little we comfort certain people in certain situations.
Whether we are aware of it or not, each and every one of these things will affect who we select to come in for an interview, how we interview them, who we hire and our reasons for hiring them. So, how do you stop yourself from falling prey to the dangers of unconscious bias? The first step is simple – make the unconscious, conscious. By acknowledging the different types of unconscious bias we can start to address them.
Types of bias and how they affect your recruiting process
In recruitment, the following types of bias are all very common:
1.Conformity Bias
Based on a famous study that’s been around for decades, conformity bias relates to bias caused by group peer pressure. In the study, a group of people is asked to look at the picture above and say which line in Exhibit 2 matches the line in Exhibit 1. One individual is told to say what they think. The rest of the group is told to give the wrong answer.
We can see that line A of Exhibit 2 matches the line in Exhibit 1. But, when the individual who doesn’t know this is a test gives the correct answer is informed that the rest of the group has said Line B, in 75% of cases the individual decides to scrap their own opinion in favour of the groups’ opinion. Just think how this may play out in a panel talking about a candidate. If an individual feels the majority of the group are leaning towards/away from a certain choice, they will tend to go along with the group, rather than voice their own opinions.
2.Beauty Bias
This is the view that we tend to think the most handsome individual will be the most successful. But this can also play out in terms of other physical attributes a person may have.
For example, while 60% of CEOs in the US are over 6 foot, only 15% of the total population is over 6 foot tall. And while 36% of US CEOs are over 6.2 feet, only 4% of the US population is over 6.2 feet tall. So again, this shows some bias in terms of how we perceive a CEO.
It is common that recruiters will look to fill a role with someone who shares similar physical attributes to the person who held that role before, or who they believe looks like the kind of person who should have the role based on their preconceived bias.
3.Affinity Bias
Affinity bias occurs when we see someone we feel we have an affinity with; maybe we attended the same college, we grew up in the same town, or they remind us of someone we know and like.
When we interview someone we feel we have some affinity with, our micro-affirmations play out a bit more than they usually would. For instance, if they tell us they’re a little nervous we may smile at them more or offer more words of encouragement. Whereas, if a person we shared no affinity with told us the same thing, we perhaps wouldn’t be quite as warm towards them as we had been to the candidate we felt we shared a connection with. After the interview, you’d then speak in much higher terms of the first candidate and how much you feel they’d “fit in” over and above the second candidate.
4.Halo Effect
Halo is when we see one great thing about a person and we let the halo-glow of that significant aspect affect our opinions of everything else about that person. We are in awe of them, but due entirely to one thing.
For example, when looking through someone’s CV we may see they went to a highly regarded college where they received a certain high grade, or they had undertaken some very sought after work experience program. Due to the halo effect, we may tend to see everything else about that person surrounded by the glow of that singular achievement.
5.Horns Effect
The horns effect is the direct opposite of the halo effect, in that when we see one bad thing about a person and we let it cloud our opinions of their other attributes.
For example, when interviewing someone we might be put off by the fact that they speak very slowly because our unconscious bias has caused us to assume this as a sign of unintelligence. Cast in this light, everything they say or do for the rest of the interview could be tainted by our judgement.
6.Similarity Bias
Naturally, we want to surround ourselves with people we feel are similar to us. And as a result, we tend to want to work more with people who are like us too.
In terms of recruitment that may mean that we are more open to hiring individuals we see parts of ourselves in.
7.Contrast Effect
This plays out regularly in recruitment, particularly amongst those who spend large amounts of time sifting through CVs or conducting a vast multitude of interviews.
For example, if we’re looking at a number of CVs in a row, one after the other, we tend to compare and contrast them. We judge whether or not the person in front of us did as well as the person that came before them. When really, the only thing we should be comparing are the skills and attributes each individual has, to the skills and attributes required for the job, not those of the person that came directly before them.
8.Attribution Bias
This is the most common form of bias in the recruitment process. People constantly make attributions regarding the cause of their own and others’ behaviours; however, attributions do not always accurately reflect reality.
If we do something well we tend to think it’s down to our own merit and personality. When we do something badly we tend to believe that our failing is due to external factors, like other people that adversely affected us and prevented us from doing our best.
When it comes to other people, we tend to think the opposite. If someone else has done something well, we consider them lucky, and if they’ve done something badly, we tend to think it’s due to their personality or bad behaviour.
9. Confirmation Bias
This is one that recruiters have to be extremely careful about. When we make a judgement about another person, we subconsciously look for evidence to back up our own opinions of that person. We do this because we want to believe we’re right and that we’ve made the right assessment of a person.
The danger of conformity bias in recruitment is that our own judgement could be very, very wrong and could cause us to lose a great candidate for the job.
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@ejaz-talentscout @preethiblogs @premk-blog
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