If you run a womenâs community space, you provide coaching for women, or you are writing a book to inspire women, itâs okay to describe your work in that way. If your target audience truly is women, call them âwomen.â
You may be thinking youâd like to be more inclusive than that. However, you donât want to invite people of all genders to your activity.
The problem is, itâs not inclusive to invite âpeople who our society assumes are women.â Itâs not supportive to invite a trans man to join your womenâs group, because that can feel like you see him as a woman.

As a non-binary person, do I join womenâs groups or menâs groups? Usually I donât feel comfy in gendered groups, but occasionally I join a womenâs group. Iâve been to womenâs self-defense, women in tech events, and joined online groups for writing and publishing tailored for women. Iâve never been invited to join a menâs group, unsurprisingly.
Itâs kind of like locker rooms at a gym. I use the womenâs locker room, perhaps obviously, and people in there seem comfortable with me changing and showering with them.
However, some trans people do not feel comfortable using a gendered locker room. They may feel excluded from activities because using a menâs or womenâs locker room does not feel safe.
So should we name the locker rooms more inclusively? âWomen and people who I think look like women?â âWomen and women-identified?â âWomen and non-binary people?â I donât think so.
Because, fundamentally, the womenâs locker room is a womenâs space and should be named accordingly. Just naming the locker room differently does nothing to make it inclusive to other genders.

Some phrases sound inclusive, but may not actually be helpful. For example, itâs time to remove the phrase âwomen-identifiedâ from your vocabulary. I, a person who writes extensively about the words we use to describe people, have no idea what âwomen-identifiedâ actually means. Women and women who identify as women? Letâs just say âwomen.â Note that âwomenâ includes both cis and trans women, by definition. Trans women arenât âwomen-identifiedââthey are women.
âWomen and non-binary peopleâ is challenging because this often means in practice âwomen and women-liteâ or only people who are assumed to be women in our binary society. This likely excludes some non-binary people were were assigned male at birth and some transfeminine people.
âNo cis menâ is a very clear way to say what a lot of these descriptions hint at. But, weâre all scared of saying cis men arenât welcome, arenât we.
A small peeve: if you have a class, a paid business community, a coaching group, and it is just for women, please let me know upfront, so I do not need to wade through sales pages talking about how inclusive and LGBTQ friendly your program is, only to find, âwelcome, ladies!â at the end. Let me make an informed decision whether I want to join your community or not by letting me know right away who it is for.
If youâre thinking, wait, I donât want to lose potential customers because of their gender identity, consider making your business truly more gender-neutral. Donât wrap it in gender-neutral language but actually keep the core of it a gendered group.
On the flip side, some groups are gender-inclusive but members still use gendered language. Some Facebook groups I participate in are for everyone but cis men, yet posts sometimes still start with, âHi ladies,â or express gratitude for being in community with women. Iâm not upsetâIâm not offendedâIâm merely trying to raise awareness that a variety of different people participate and contribute to these gender-inclusive spaces.
I support womenâs spaces. I think they should be called womenâs spaces. I generally choose not to participate in these communities, however, I think they can be crucially helpful for the population they do serve.

I support spaces just for trans people. Yes, these are gendered spaces too.
I also support all-gender spaces.
My approach to building a community to support trans people, non-binary people, and women (with a lot of overlap between these categories) is to talk about trans rights, non-binary rights, and womenâs rights. I donât try to limit community members based on their gender. The cis men who participate tend to be allies.

Thanks so much for reading! Let me know what you think in the comments.
Take care,
Rey