Yes it's not dissociative identity disorder/split personality but rather dissociative disorder/depersonalization.
It's similar yet different. But still closer to the truth than Yamato being trans.
Nah, no dissociative disorder fits Yamato because he
never dissociates. Whenever he's "feeling Oden" he stays perfectly aware of his "Yamato, son of Kaidou's" identity as he explicitly stated. Conscious perception of oneself is never interrupted, never seems to inform of anything remotely similar to being an outside observer (which is what despersonalization requires), nor experiences episodes of dissociative amnesia nor doubts his own identity but adds an additional layer to it; and more importantly, this whole "Oden persona" isn't causing Yamato significantly clinic distress nor causing him functioning deterioration.
As a psychologist I know it's fun to open whatever book or check some Hollywood movie and turn disorders into character templates, but it's never as easy as "this person identifies as another one, therefore split personality"; that's Sheldon Cooper's Asperger level of bullshit, plain and simple. I've seen dissociative patients and they're nothing like Yamato.
The lecture I get from Yamato's character is the same as others have pointed out: I just believe he turned Oden into an embodiment of freedom and took it to its fullest, hence why his train of thought was "since Oden was a man, I will become a man". But, as I said, it isn't a dissociation from his original self but just a layer to it. This doesn't mean that, on top of it, Yamato couldn't identify as a man overall too, but for now I just believe he took the Oden persona, everybody accepted it (for one reason or another; Luffy just goes along it while Kaidou made Yamato took full responsability of it, for the better or the worse), and this bathroom situation is just what a person who became a man because Oden was a man would logically do.
Luffy showed some opposition to Yamato addresing himself as Oden back when they first met, so maybe he will require him to drop the impersonation in order to join. If Yamato keeps seeing himself as a man after that and his treatment is similar to that of Kiku and Morley (who are undeniably trans), then I will see Yamato as trans too.
By the way, I find it hilarious that people are so reactionary to Yamato sharing a bath with the guys. It's just nudity, guys; nothing bad will happen to you if you share a bath with other naked people, whatever sex they are.
She's one thing: A character with a quirk that Oda solely uses for gags.
Problem is that the western world (especially most activists) don't understand that Japanese people have a completely different relationship with this whole gender topic: They are way less serious about it.
That's why Oda also once again uses her Oden shtick to create a comedy moment with her boobs, Sanji's nosebleeding, Brook blushing and Momo getting his first boner this chapter.
Oda would never do that if it was a serious or even important topic for him, bc he's the last one that wants to offend someone.
His treatment of Kiku shows how he treats characters that should really represent the LGTBQ community and it's night and day compared to a gag character (in that regard) like Yamato.
I think my previous answer to Solis addressed this too. Yamato being trans or not will end up depending on whether the treatment Oda chooses after he drops the Oden roleplay is like that of Kiku's or not.
This!!!
If only it were so easy.
![Kobeha :kobeha: :kobeha:](https://i.ibb.co/P6XbSwV/kobeha.png)
How many people do you think would rather want to be cis gender and straight so they can be "normal".
Being trans or gay or lesbian or whatever is NOT a choice. It's how the person IS, not what they want to be.
Exactly! I mean, just imagine it: "Yeah, I truly want to belong to a collective with some of the highest suicide rates, twice the chance of being unemployed, four times more likely of suffering violence, and so on". Freaking absurd.
The "it's just a choice" argument is common when discussing these issues because it frees people from taking action and reduces the moral discomfort they experience. "They just chose it, it's up to them to solve it, therefore has nothing to do with me and I don't have to get involved". It's the exact same attribution bias that helps people to deal with cognitive dissonance regarding drug addiction, homelessness and pretty much any "uncomfortable" social issue.
In other words: when you believe it's their choice it's easy for you to look away.
What approach did i had towards you? I didn’t even quote you lol
Not towards me but this issue.
Nobody is talking about ''lifestyle's'' here or whatever. With ''magicaly'' changeing your gender i refer to people here saying, that Kiku for example is a Woman, because he is a woman at heart. He was born a man, what he thinks or feels he is in his heart doesn't magicaly change his gender. He is a man.
And again, what is a man?
That doesn't answer my question...
Why can't i identify as Black? (I am white btw)
Do you have black-defining traits just like trans people share defining traits from the gender they identify as? Do you have an actual perception of yourself as a black person like trans people do, or it's just a mocking situation because you obviously don't identify as black nor such identification and the subsequent discrepancies cause you daily distress?
Same as above.
You seem to be an expert, so may i ask a question.
What makes a man - that identifies as a woman - a woman? Since it has nothing to do with biology, genitals etc. but is a mental thing. What defines mentaly a woman then? If it is enough to be ''a woman/man at heart'' to change your gender, then there must be some clear definitions, right? Or is it just because the person doesn't feel happy in their body and wish they were in a different body? Which there are many of those cases. But i don't know.
I'm no expert, first and foremost. But I know better than your vague mumbling of concepts, it seems; for example, why do you make a distinction between "biology" and "mental thing"? Why do you assume that being "a woman/man at heart" doesn't have a biological correlate? How do you address the fact that our body is plastic and therefore can be altered by our environment? Since it has been observed that gender dimorphism can also be traced to brain structures and such structures seem to influence gender identity in spite of other "biological traits" such as genitalia, what should we priorize to establish the gender of a person? A person with male-congruent brain structures but XX chromosome and a person with female-congruent brain structures but XY chromosome are each what, a man, a woman, something undefined...? How do we address a person who isn't XX nor XY, which there are millions of? And a person with both genitalia or none?
I think you are starting to understand how complex this issue is, hence why you weren't able to tell me what defines manhood/womanhood. I'll make it easier: what must be "magically changed" for a person to transition from one sex/gender/whatever you call it to the other?