Quote from: Rejennyrated on April 09, 2016, 06:51:04 AM
It is actually becomming increasingly likely that I will be training in psych so while your argument holds true for about three years it will eventually likely become an incorrect assumption.
As for non binary people I don't see a problem. I don't call myself non binary because I just don't feel the need to analyse my identity to that extent. However others might easily assume that I was NB bcause I'm definitely a mixture of masculine and feminine traits, and I don't care a jot about "gender", the ONLY thing I ever cared about was that I wanted the physical bits to be female.
So I dont see any issue - to me its obvious that the only thing that matters in respect of SRS is what sex you percieved yourself to be physically and as far as that is concerned the RLE IS and always should be about presenting as that PHYSICAL sex - NOT about some airy fairy notions of "gender".
I know of lots of people who have successfully done their MTF RLE in the UK while always wearing tousers and "going drinking with the boys" - the only thing they did differently in that time was to physically feminise their bodily appearance - and none of them ever had an issue with the psychiatrists involved...
I think the problem may be that there are maybe still antiquated psychiatrists and therapists out there who are still insisting on the old fashioned "if you want to be a women you must always wear makeup skirts and take up flower arranging" concept of RLE which, in the circle that I move in, frankly went out with the Ark! I certainly never did any such thing and that was over 30 years ago... nor would I ever expect others to be asked to do so.
In short perhaps the problem is that we have a totally different conceptualisation of what an RLE involves.
I can't say I agree with your first post, but I definitely do with this one. In comparison the first one feels almost like your arguing a point without necessarily believing it. I expect I'm wrong and I don't understand you very well (I've read a lot of your other posts, but somehow never felt the need to say anything before).
Are you going to work with trans people? I'm sure you can make an enormous difference if you do.
Was this bit "we have a totally different conceptualisation of what an RLE involves" referring to me or "antiquated psychiatrists" in the previous paragraph? (its definitely not me).
I'm curious now what you think of my case. Just curious, it has no bearing on how I think or what I'll do. I want SRS but I don't want to socially transition before or afterwards - ie no RLE. Yet I am binary, and RLE would from a certain point of view mean presenting female. On the other hand I intend to live as male, so RLE would be doing that instead.
Assume for the sake of argument that I'm fully informed and sane. At this point in my life I've decided social transition is a last resort, and I'd only do it to avoid depression and/or suicide. Its not an ideal choice, more like the lesser of two evils. So I decided that if I get to the point where I can't deal with it any more, where I have to do something, then I'll have SRS because, well, why not. It might work, at least for a while.
I seem to be in a tiny minority, and I can't understand why. It seems a very logical approach to the problem, at least when you're older.
I'm in favor of informed consent for SRS, using the medical meaning of it.