Quote from: Zoe Louise Taylor on November 17, 2014, 12:03:55 PM
I got reffered to porter brook clinic in sheffield in february, and have my firat appointment on the 15th of December 
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I do have a quick question, will a gic in the uk prescribe hormones if im not currently out at work? I live the rest of my time as female, but dont currently work as female, as Im afraid of losing my job :/ ive been frantically applying for new jobs, but I really feel id be bullied if I were to come out at my current place :/
I do not know anyone at Sheffield. I was initially referred there but the waiting list was beyond a joke at that point (3 to 5 YEARS) so I want to Charing from which I have now been discharged. I know about a dozen people at Leeds and what they have gone through.
Both Leeds and Charing put a big emphasis on RLE as do most GICs because they reckon that you need to be committed to transition to make a success of it and RLE is seen as commitment. As for getting bullied at work, you are not in the USA - here in the UK there are laws about discrimination and gender related violence. Your employer will come down hard on anyone who violates that. Also we seem to lack the bible-thumping crazies who make the life of american trans folk such a misery.
Quote from: speckyhailey on November 17, 2014, 01:15:37 PM
I've heard about clinics refusing to give treatment based on RLE and living in a preferred role however I also recall reading somewhere about this being classed as something like 'non-clinical delay' as the guidelines state it is not needed and can be challenged.
Look hun - if you are basing your hopes on that document then you are in for disappointment. Maybe they will do it differently for minors, but for adults that document and its "guidelines" mean very little. Maybe one day the medical establishment will change but right now they follow their
own guidelines and the official ones are just sparkles and moonbeams. Nonetheless I come across trans people clinging to the "official guidelines" like a magic talisman that will produce results for them and they all get so frustrated.
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More people need to understand that hormones are not magic bullets - the changes they make are mostly internal, inside your head and no one can see those. That is why so many people on trans websites spend so much time under surgeon's knives for GRS and FFS, or getting hair restoration or having bristles killed off or having voice coaching, voice surgery, learning makeup, wardrobe, deportment and so on. Most of a transition is not hormone dependent, most of it is hard work and determination and sheer bl**dymindedness.
Hormones will produce some boobage and softer skin and a bit of fat redistribution and it will help but it maybe 15% - 20% of what will help. Just remember that in the UK your employer will not stand in your way and the police take gender related crime seriously.
Compared to many places worldwide the UK is a good place to transition, but the real key to a good transition is to take control of it yourself and make sure that all the admin happens on time, that appointments are made on realistic timescales and that you have clear objectives about what you want and be prepared to work with the gender clinics whatever their requirements are. Being politley pushy is OK but being demanding or unreasonable will just slow things down.
Before you go, get your name change sorted (takes less than an hour in any Magistrates' Court - cost £20) and get it changed on some utility bills or anything official and then
take it with you because it shows you are willing to push forward. If you can (and I will get roasted for this) go in a skirt. I know it is not supposed to matter and maybe you will never want to wear one again but are you seriously telling me that you cannot do it for less than an hour to tick whatever silly boxes exist? Yes I know it is dumb, yes I know we should not have to do it, yes I know women wear trousers (heck - I wear them all the time) but if it cuts down the length of time you have to deal with GICs then surely it has to be worth it. I know people who took a "principled stand" over many of the points I have mentioned and their transitions are so slow and take years - mine took less than 18 months.
You can drive a lot of this forward by simply finding out what the GICs want you to do and then doing
before they ask you to. It is amazing how much that speeds everything up.