People might wonder how to ask others for their genitalia. The short answer is: just don't.
For those who want to know the reasoning behind, read on. Let me get this straight from the start: genitalia don't always match with expectations. If somebody is female, she doesn't always have boobs and/or a vagina. If somebody is male, he doesn't always have a penis. People have different names for this phenomenon. Some call it trans, some call it queer. Baseline is that you can't assume somebody's genitalia from their gender.
It's even more difficult with people who don't match with male or female. Call them queer, nonbinary or any other of the manyfold options. While female people often have boobs and a vagina and while male people often have a penis, you can't assume anything about those people. Well... you can, but you'll probably fail.
Well... if you can't assume the genitalia, why shouldn't you just ask? Apart from being rude and most of the time crossing boundaries, it's also unnecessary. This forum does have profies. People tend to fill the details they want others to know in those. So if you ask you either haven't read the profile (do that now!) or it's not in there - which most of the time means the person doesn't want you to know.
But well, it's no harm, right? Wrong. Well... in fact, often there is no harm asking. But you might ask somebody with gender dysphoria. This is a pretty common phenomenon with trans or queer people. While it is as different as people are, many persons with gender dysphoria are offended and hurt by questions regarding ther genitalia. Many experience their genitalia as something foregin, something not matching their body. So it does harm.
So the bottom line is: asking about genitalia is useless and migth cause harm. So why should you ask in the first place?
I can already imagine the buts. I know that a dominant person might need to know what the crotch area looks like. That means there might be a reason for asking people who you play with. Build up trust and the person you're playing with might be open to tell. And if they don't, you need to accept. If you can't play with somebody not telling you what their crotch area looks like, don't play with people who don't tell you upfront.
For those who want to know the reasoning behind, read on. Let me get this straight from the start: genitalia don't always match with expectations. If somebody is female, she doesn't always have boobs and/or a vagina. If somebody is male, he doesn't always have a penis. People have different names for this phenomenon. Some call it trans, some call it queer. Baseline is that you can't assume somebody's genitalia from their gender.
It's even more difficult with people who don't match with male or female. Call them queer, nonbinary or any other of the manyfold options. While female people often have boobs and a vagina and while male people often have a penis, you can't assume anything about those people. Well... you can, but you'll probably fail.
Well... if you can't assume the genitalia, why shouldn't you just ask? Apart from being rude and most of the time crossing boundaries, it's also unnecessary. This forum does have profies. People tend to fill the details they want others to know in those. So if you ask you either haven't read the profile (do that now!) or it's not in there - which most of the time means the person doesn't want you to know.
But well, it's no harm, right? Wrong. Well... in fact, often there is no harm asking. But you might ask somebody with gender dysphoria. This is a pretty common phenomenon with trans or queer people. While it is as different as people are, many persons with gender dysphoria are offended and hurt by questions regarding ther genitalia. Many experience their genitalia as something foregin, something not matching their body. So it does harm.
So the bottom line is: asking about genitalia is useless and migth cause harm. So why should you ask in the first place?
I can already imagine the buts. I know that a dominant person might need to know what the crotch area looks like. That means there might be a reason for asking people who you play with. Build up trust and the person you're playing with might be open to tell. And if they don't, you need to accept. If you can't play with somebody not telling you what their crotch area looks like, don't play with people who don't tell you upfront.