From what I've heard, some people have always wanted both top and bottom surgeries, some people started off wanting only top surgery and then felt later like they needed bottom surgery as well, some people get top surgery and can't afford it or have medical issues that prevent them, some people can't get either because of financial or medical issues, and some people don't feel the need to get either. There's no 'right' way to be trans, and there's no regulations as to what procedures you go through, it's all about making you comfortable with yourself, not conforming to other people's ideas.
It doesn't make someone less of a man if they choose not to go through a very expensive, risky operation -- or in some cases, phalloplasty in particular -- more than one operation. Every single anesthetic you go under carries a risk, and that's before you start the risks of infection etc. There's no guarantee that you're going to get one on the NHS either, especially if you would rather get a metoidioplasty than a phalloplasty, because they believe that guys aren't satisfied with meta, so go and get phallo done later and they don't like 'wasting' their (our) money.
Does your dad really want to go and battle with the NHS over his son getting risky surgeries, which may or may not improve his quality of life?
Maybe nudge him towards looking at some results, and then he might see why quite a few trans men opt out of getting bottom surgery
despite still being men (this isn't to say that they're subpar/disgusting/horrific/[insert derogatory word here], just that they're not perfect, and it's quite easy to see how the actual surgery/ies are pretty nasty to go through, especially in the case of MLD flap phalloplasty (looks like a massive shark bite to me)).
Maybe don't say that you will never want bottom surgery, but rather just say that top surgery has got to be your main priority, and that it's not worth looking as far into the future as bottom surgery at the moment, considering you're not on T and have only just come out. Suggest that it might be better for your health if you waited to see if bottom surgery techniques were likely to become more advanced and that you are a man no matter what; you would love to get a penis, but they're neither anatomically perfect and quite risky at the moment.
Either way, plenty of people who are "half and half" have partners. Every one's bodies are different, and even if he wouldn't go out with someone who didn't have the genitals that matched their gender, other people will. There are roughly 7,090,659,130 people on the earth at the time I write this, and it's crazy to think that one man can suggest that none of them will love you purely on the choices you make regarding your health.
Quote from: Jeatyn on January 09, 2013, 05:13:29 PM
It amuses me to think that people who share your dad's views could have met any number of transpeople in their life and never even realised. Unless he has a very weird relationship with all of his friends and aquaintences there's no way he can know for sure what's in their pants
Also this. Whenever my grandfather gets disgusted over gay people on TV, or their general existence, I always cheer myself up by reminding myself that one of his favourite current actors - Micheal French - is bisexual. For someone who normally turns the TV off at any sign of gay people (or left wing politicians, Scottish people (except his Scottish wife and Scottish mother), Irish people, Welsh people, any foreign person in general...) he was quite keen to buy the box set of one of the series he starred in...