Quote from: Marissa on December 02, 2013, 08:39:17 PM
Thanks for the relies and info everyone! I first started looking into SRS in 1998, so I don't think I'm rushing, but maybe I am getting impatient. LOL 
I'm having a really tough time finding doctors who have even heard of WPATH here in Maine. If anyone knows of any good endocrinologists from Boston north, I need to find one of those too. Maybe I could even go to Canada. I've been meaning to get a passport anyway. I also need FFS (especially rhinoplasty) but not sure how much I can afford. Is surgery a lot cheaper in Thailand? I have Medicare which currently won't pay for any of these surgeries AFAIK.
Thanks again!
Mara
hi mara! i'm drawing from a sheet i pulled up when i looked up informed consent clinics, so here's what i've got so far:
fenway health - boston, ma
mayra cruz-polanco - boston, ma. no url, but i'll throw in the name since it came up.
ellen rottersman - brookline, ma. not informed consent, but she explicitly states that she is quick in evaluating/writing letters & does sliding scale care.
Quote from: Tammy M on December 02, 2013, 08:49:45 PM
If you have been looking into SRS since 1998, you have had time to meet any WPATH requirements and you haven't started HRT or RLE yet, you can do those steps and wait a little longer. I have a friend in Maine who is on HRT and full time. If you send me an email I can get her doctor's information for you. I couldn't imagine anyone getting HRT without at least 1 yr on hormones, It will be 2 yrs for me, and the RLE is very well worth it because you need time to adjust to your new life. Good luck!
hey, i feel like this probably isn't the right attitude to bring into a post like this. when someone is asking for support, resources and advice to say that someone should be doing something some other way that doesn't necessarily align with how they want to do things is frustrating and unhelpful. at least that's how i feel when the same happens to me. i feel like it's somewhat common for people to defend or champion gatekeeping as sort of a "necessary evil" or a duty or responsibility that trans people have to doctors & the community in order to transition. i think that's a really ugly habit and that it's really important to dispel it, because what marissa said is right—the only one with the right to make the decision of what's right for her is her. it's up to each individual to decide whether they "need to adjust" to what may or may not be a "new life", and so telling people they don't know enough about themselves to make the right decision—well, i think that's wrong.
to be frank, marissa, i think as far as srs goes you may have trouble finding anyone who doesn't follow wpath/soc, which is kind of disappointing, i know, but them's the breaks. what you may be able to do is have someone who is willing to work with you to interpret the soc in ways that are most beneficial to you, and understand the need for your own autonomy and decisionmaking regarding surgery. the same goes with an IC endocrinologist. best of luck regardless