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ABOUT A BOY: Transgender surgery at sixteen

Started by MadelineB, March 12, 2013, 01:41:16 AM

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MadelineB


ABOUT A BOY: Transgender surgery at sixteen
BY MARGARET TALBOT
MARCH 18, 2013


http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/03/18/130318fa_fact_talbot



For high-school seniors like Skylar—who live in prosperous suburbs, have doting parents, attend good schools, and get excellent grades while studding their transcripts with extracurricular activities—the hardest part of the college application is often the personal essay. They're typically asked to write about some life-changing experience, and, if their childhood has been blessedly free of drama, they may find themselves staring at a blank screen for a long time. This was not a problem for Skylar.

Skylar is a boy, but he was born a girl, and lived as one until the age of fourteen. Skylar would put it differently: he believes that, despite biological appearances, he was a boy all along. He'd just been burdened with a body that required medical and surgical adjustments so that it could reflect the gender he knew himself to be. At sixteen, he started getting testosterone injections every other week; just before he turned seventeen, he had a double mastectomy.

The essay question for the University of Chicago, where Skylar submitted an early-action application, invited students to describe their "archnemesis (either real or imagined)." Skylar's answer: "Pre-formed ideas of what it meant to have two X chromosomes." No matter what people thought they saw when they looked at him, Skylar wrote, he knew that he "was nothing along the lines of a girl."
History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.
~Maya Angelou

Personal Blog: Madeline's B-Hive
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