Quote from: Vervain on October 18, 2016, 08:35:43 AM
I knew a woman in college who was EXTREMELY lucky and had gotten puberty blockers as a teen. She wasn't able to start HRT until she was 18, because this was the 90s and HRT was not started immediately at the time. But it meant that she didn't have very much time to go through puberty before starting HRT, and it made a difference. She had a very slender, feminine build, and even without HRT, I would never have guessed that she was trans if she hadn't come out in class. She also still remains the most beautiful woman I have ever met. If I hadn't been engaged myself at the time (and still trying to convince myself I was monogamous; as it turned out, poly is as intrinsic to me as my sexual orientation), I would have asked her out.
Some opponents who are against blockers are so juiced-up on having babies (
their life choice) that they think
everyone else wants to have them. And while I know many(most?) people have this desire, it is by no means universal. The choices is: babies vs. transition.
True story about self-determination:
I told my parents when I was four I was a girl and not a boy--using child's words. My parents said I was a boy and this could not be changed. As luck would have it, about a year later the story of Christine Jorgensen hit the papers. Jorgensen had SRS in Denmark. It was front page news everywhere and even kids knew about it. Armed with this new information I went to tell my parents that that was
exactly the surgery I wanted to fix me. That went over like a lead balloon.
They explained how the surgery did not "really" make Jorgensen a woman--arguments that persist to this day about almost every trans person the speaker happens not to like nor approve of. Bleh! The arguments sailed over the head of the five-going-on-six year old. Finally they brought out the blockbuster. Christine could not have babies. (How did people have babies anyway? This was beyond my pay grade.) Okay. Fine. I won't have babies. And that was that. I never pined for them because I needed to transition, not make babies.
Babies. Moot point and I never looked back.