When it comes to expressing yourself as a woman, looks are only half the story. The real question is – how feminine are you on the INSIDE?
Take this fun gender identity quiz to discover your inner gender – and begin your feminization journey! It will help you answer the question:
Is your inner gender male, female, or a bit of both?
Note: This quiz is for entertainment purposes only. There are many ways to express your gender beyond traditional masculine / feminine traits, so don’t take the findings too seriously.
That said, have fun with the quiz and share your results in the comments below!
What's Your Inner Gender?
Question 1 |
Connected | |
Uncomfortable |
Question 2 |
I like to take my time and enjoy the experience | |
I try to get it done as quickly as possible |
Question 3 |
Not really | |
Yes, it comes naturally to me |
Question 4 |
Wine or a martini
| |
Beer or a Jack and Coke |
Question 5 |
What their job is | |
If they have any children |
Question 6 |
Easy | |
Difficult |
Question 7 |
Solve it myself | |
Ask for other people's input |
Question 8 |
Romantic comedies | |
Action films |
Question 9 |
Getting my point across | |
Coming to an understanding |
Question 10 |
Ask for an explanation | |
Try to read between the lines |
Question 11 |
Yes | |
No |
Question 12 |
What's going on in our lives | |
Business, politics, sports, or news |
What were your gender identity quiz results?
So, what was your score? I’d love to know, so please share your results in the comments below!
And in case you are wondering, MY inner gender is 75% female. I’m a girly girl, but I’m also in touch with my masculine side. 😉
Love,
Lucille
P.S. Are you ready to feel more feminine from the inside out? Learn how the Unleash Your Inner Woman Program can help you unleash the feminizing power of your mind!
I came out 75% inner female. Not surprised.
My score was 8#%. I am soooo happy, my inner self is so00o girly. Yea! When I wear my bra, panties, dresses and walk in my heels, my inner self says Yes! Yes! Yes! I LOVE being girly!
Love,
Zara
xoxoxo
92% female
I came in at 67% which surprised me.
My score was 83%. The answers that I marked is close to the way I truly feel.
Your inner gender is 58% female. I think I could have had a more female score but some of the questions didn’t have an answer that was truly the way I feel so I just opted for the one nearest to the way I feel.
Mandy
Well, 75% for me as well, but, as said, this is a test just for entertainment purposes only. Knowing my wife reasonably well, and predicting how she would reply to this quiz, I would guess that she’d come with a 75% score as well, or possibly even less. She has some traits that are hardly ‘female’ and is proud of them; nevertheless, she fully identifies as a cisgender heterosexual female and never questions her gender identity (or even presentation). Instead, she questions (not often, though) male privilege and how our society reflects male privilege so strongly even in the tiniest details (such as women not being heard by their male colleagues in a meeting of peers) although most people (including most women!) are not even aware of it.
Anyway, my point is that this ‘gender identity test’ draws from several different ‘levels’ of gender — possibly deliberately so! — some of which are fully arbitrarily set by the culture/society one lives in, while others may have their source in biological reasons (and society just amplifies such characteristics, deliberately so, to ‘force’ a wider separation between genders that there actually is).
Here is a good example. US culture, due to its origins — mostly a mix of British, German, Swedish and Dutch ancestry — is predominantly a ‘beer society’, simply because in those countries it was much easier to brew beer than wine. My country, further south, has been a wine-producing country for well over two thousand (documented) years, and, while in the cold highlands it might be easier to brew beer (or make strong liqueurs), in most of the country, wine is the preferred alcoholic beverage of choice, both for women and men. Even the strength of the wine (i.e. its alcoholic content) is not differently preferred by the genders, but rather by region, depending on the natural alcoholic content of wine produced in each region (we are a tiny country with lots and lots of microclimates, each with its own selection of different native grapes — most of which handed over from Roman times and further improved — thus allowing for quite different types of wine). Not even the rule of ‘white wine for ladies, red wine for gentlemen’ applies; it’s not even true that most women prefer white while most men prefer red; statistically, there is no difference between preferences.
Thus, picking a nice, soft white wine over a strong dark beer is not ‘womanly’ at all in my country, and, most definitely, not a sign of ‘girliness’.
The distinction of ‘wine for ladies, beer for men’ is a quirk of your heritage from former beer-brewing countries and nothing else 🙂
Another example: shopping style. The test doesn’t specify what you’re supposed to be shopping for. Again, in my country, you’ll see that women, in general, may spend eternities shopping for clothes for themselves and love every minute of it, while men, in general, may spend eternities in shopping for clothes and other things for themselves, but hate every second they have to wait for their wives! Women will also, in general, be quicker and far more efficient in shopping for food, while men will idly circle around the aisles for hours, not necessarily because they don’t know where things are, but rather because they’re enjoying the experience of looking at all the cool, shiny things sold in supermarkets these days. Also, it depends a lot on how much available time you have!
Thus, around here, guys can take eternities shopping, and enjoy themselves thoroughly; and the same applies to girls as well; it’s not even a split between genders on certain kinds of items. A typical example is shopping for physical books or music CDs/vinyls — if you’re into any of those items, you’ll spend eternities browsing around a shop until you find the item you always wanted, and loving every second you spent at the bookstore/music shop!
There is a slight tendency, among the older generations (Gen-Xers and baby boomers), for women to spend more time shopping for clothes than men, while men of those age groups may spend more time shopping for gadgets. The difference in the younger generations is far smaller (both shop for clothes and gadgets; both take a long time to do so, and enjoy themselves thoroughly!). And let’s not forget online shopping, which both genders spend eternities on.
Oh, I’m not grumbling and complaining about my score! Lucille was very clear when she stated that this is just for ‘entertainment’ purposes. It’s not a real, serious test. It most certainly does not account for cultural differences; more importantly, it’s based fundamentally on Anglo-Saxon stereotyping of the glamorous feminine role. Again, there is nothing wrong with that, either: Anglo-Saxon culture is the predominant culture in the world (think how weird the world would be if it weren’t!), which influences directly each and every person on our tiny planet. Stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination are measured according to the standards set by so-called Western culture (which is, in turn, set by an Anglo-Saxon world-view).
In almost every aspect (IMHO!) this is a good thing. I certainly wouldn’t like to be judged by, say, Iranian standards (with due respect to Iranians, of course) — or Russian ones, for that matter. But it’s also important to be able to be critical of our own culture and practice detachment to get a broader view of what actually is going on.
Thus, traditionally, we are told that ‘men are rational, women are emotional’. Therefore, men are supposed to be good at maths and physics and become doctors, engineers, scientists; while women are supposed to be better at forging relationships (thus, they’re allegedly good at PR, marketing, advertising, etc.) or at expressing their feelings through art. But today, most jobs in the STEM sector are taken by women (in many countries, overwhelmingly so); while the best chefs, the best painters, the best musicians, etc. are invariably male. Nevertheless, men are constrained from a tender age never to reveal their emotions; never to cry in public; not show weakness; while women are encouraged to do all those things — and at the same time, to keep their mouths shut and never express their opinions, and focus on pretty things, not on boring ones, such as advanced logic, or quantum mechanics.
In other words, our Western culture creates stereotypes that are not even in sync with the reality of its own society! (and I think that it’s awesome that it’s like that)
This test, much more than revealing what your ‘inner gender’ is, reflects how closely you’re aligned with the contemporary stereotype of femaleness in Western culture — independently if most (or any!) women are like that or not!
I was 83%, but a few answers could have been A or B depending on my mood.
I chose the more Female answers for those because I feel mor myself right now.