Community Conversation => Non-binary talk => Topic started by: T90 on July 30, 2015, 01:34:33 PM Return to Full Version
Title: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: T90 on July 30, 2015, 01:34:33 PM
Post by: T90 on July 30, 2015, 01:34:33 PM
I realise that Gender Dysphoria can manifest itself in many different ways, but I was wondering if it's a different experience altogether for NB people.
For myself, as someone who wishes to look, sound, and pass as completely female but not change my male body, I often find it incredibly distressing (and Dysphoria inducing) that HRT would be a difficult option for me as I don't wish to change my sex. I have my first appointment with a psychologist coming up in the next month or so, and I feel that Gender Dysphoria is very different for me than for someone wishing to undergo SRS.
For myself, as someone who wishes to look, sound, and pass as completely female but not change my male body, I often find it incredibly distressing (and Dysphoria inducing) that HRT would be a difficult option for me as I don't wish to change my sex. I have my first appointment with a psychologist coming up in the next month or so, and I feel that Gender Dysphoria is very different for me than for someone wishing to undergo SRS.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 04:11:02 PM
Post by: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 04:11:02 PM
Not sure what you mean by "HRT being a difficult option". Are you saying that you want HRT but you're having personal qualms? Or is the medical community putting obstacles in your way?
To answer your first question, my dysphoria was very different from most other people. I didn't hate my male parts (but would have exchanged them in a minute for female parts if they had been offered). I didn't hate being male, I just really wished I'd been born female.
I did get HRT. No one gave me any trouble. I did have to get past a few incompetent and outright hostile mental health practitioners before I found the right treatment. But I was easily able to get HRT when I wanted it - the incompetence and the hostility didn't stand in the way. When I told my therapist I was ready for hormones, no issues were raised.
Non-binary people are every bit as entitled as binary trans folk to transition and present as they wish, whether that means hormones, surgery, both, or neither. Please don't let anyone tell you differently.
To answer your first question, my dysphoria was very different from most other people. I didn't hate my male parts (but would have exchanged them in a minute for female parts if they had been offered). I didn't hate being male, I just really wished I'd been born female.
I did get HRT. No one gave me any trouble. I did have to get past a few incompetent and outright hostile mental health practitioners before I found the right treatment. But I was easily able to get HRT when I wanted it - the incompetence and the hostility didn't stand in the way. When I told my therapist I was ready for hormones, no issues were raised.
Non-binary people are every bit as entitled as binary trans folk to transition and present as they wish, whether that means hormones, surgery, both, or neither. Please don't let anyone tell you differently.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: T90 on July 30, 2015, 04:23:11 PM
Post by: T90 on July 30, 2015, 04:23:11 PM
Quote from: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 04:11:02 PM
Not sure what you mean by "HRT being a difficult option".
I meant that while I wish to appear and pass as female, I really don't want to ever develop breasts or have other areas of my anatomy shrink. If there was a type of hormone replacement that would just feminize my face, hair, and skin then I would do it in a heartbeat. I think I probably identify most closely with the term Genderqueer, so for me I fell uncomfortable with my gender and not so much with my sex.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 06:59:55 PM
Post by: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 06:59:55 PM
Quote from: T90 on July 30, 2015, 04:23:11 PM
I meant that while I wish to appear and pass as female, I really don't want to ever develop breasts or have other areas of my anatomy shrink. If there was a type of hormone replacement that would just feminize my face, hair, and skin then I would do it in a heartbeat. I think I probably identify most closely with the term Genderqueer, so for me I fell uncomfortable with my gender and not so much with my sex.
Ah. That makes sense. Maybe it was the opposite for me. I really wanted a female body but I didn't want to have to live a female life, though somehow during the whole process that changed.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Allison Wunderland on July 31, 2015, 04:03:10 PM
Post by: Allison Wunderland on July 31, 2015, 04:03:10 PM
Let me quote my colleague, Dr. Judy, MD . . . (She's a forensic chemist/pathology, retired) Dr. Judy is a "sof' butch lesbian" -- first time I met her, I thought she was cis-male.
"You're no more female physiologically, than I am male. We shouldn't be required to tweak our endocrine systems to be who we already are!"
And so, take a look at my signature -- We need to change social attitudes, not our endocrine system.
Here's a "scale" for figuring out where you sit:
Cis-F 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 Cis-M
I sit at 1 or 2 on the right of Zero. I understand perfectly well that I'm born male. But I feel like I lost the gender crap shoot. I don't like what I got handed to me.
(Childhood sexual abuse, uncle on me, for years . . . This complicates my perspective. Naked in the mirror I look like my abuser, and it's threatening. 100% service connected, PTSD, for childhood sex abuse, aggravated my military service.)
Physically, wishing the genitals would go away, along w/ beard, 2ndary male body hair. Heterosexual (cis women), but at 67, not sexually active with others. I am not willing to change who I am so I can "pass" as a fairly ugly female. I wish I could be Kiera Knightly . . . I know lots and lots of cis-F who wish they looked like Kiera Knightly . . .
Brass tacks honest here . . . I want the full-boat, not a "transition" . . . I want periods, risk of pregnancy, real mammaries (b cup would be nice).
And so my "solution" for all this is that I am open about being "trans" (as in "transcendent") and I move to the middle, ('Mahu" in Hawaiian culture, although this idea gets bastardized on Google.)
My "mantra" -- guide lines . . . "authentic" "integrated" "ME" . . . I'm not going to "become someone else." Not going to change my name, (I'd like to get the "M" off my ID).
We wear (seamlessly) both gender clothing . . . JUST LIKE THE CIS-F LOCALLY . . .
Recreational beach casual, cargo shorts, shorts, beach sandals, tank tops, T's, button shirts, earrings (6 lobe piercings), shoulder-length hair worn pulled back or let down.
This results in a sort of "gender neutral" look, obviously "cis-M" but neutral enough that no one notices that essentially everything I'm wearing is "women's" clothing. (Lot's of political assertion on this point.)
NO ONE NOTICES, but also it's perfectly apparent to anyone who pays attention that I'm NOT "one of the boys." Not "sissy" or "femme" -- I own/ride a Harley full-dress, guns, knives, active recreation/exercise --
JUST LIKE MY CIS-F SISTERS ! ! !
I'm not broken, and don't need to jump through a litany of medical/legal hoops to be ME.
We need to CHANGE the expectation of the hetero-normative dyad.
Wish I were cis-F,
Being cis-M is sexually threatening for me, on acct. of the sexual abuse.
What we have learned from all this, in the past six months and I've been dealing for 65 yrs at least. What we have learned is that there are more choices for us than "cis F and cis M" --
Women cross the gender boundary in clothing all the time, women's fashion adopts a lot of "boy style" fashion for women. Women can wear men's clothing, but it is taboo for men to wear women's clothing.
THIS NEEDS TO CHANGE --
(dresses/skirts are about Patriarchal sexual access, and a DIFFERENT political issue for another thread.)
Men need to be allowed culturally to express the aspects of their ID which don't fit the "Male dyad" -- Lotsa different kinds of males out there, and females . . . Pretty limited gender expression, but it's changing.
I looked at Finasteride and HRT, even bilateral orchiectomy (surgical castration), in order to mediate the "threat" I feel with testosterone, male pattern body hair, penis, testes . . .
Dr. Judy warns, "Endocrine balance is delicate. You don't want to mess with that balance to become who you already are."
We don't need medical intervention to liberate ourselves and become who we are, who we always have been. There's a broad, safe, liberated, joyous "MIDDLE" in gender presentation that is open to those of us who search.
I still wish, continually . . . wish I were female.
"You're no more female physiologically, than I am male. We shouldn't be required to tweak our endocrine systems to be who we already are!"
And so, take a look at my signature -- We need to change social attitudes, not our endocrine system.
Here's a "scale" for figuring out where you sit:
Cis-F 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 Cis-M
I sit at 1 or 2 on the right of Zero. I understand perfectly well that I'm born male. But I feel like I lost the gender crap shoot. I don't like what I got handed to me.
(Childhood sexual abuse, uncle on me, for years . . . This complicates my perspective. Naked in the mirror I look like my abuser, and it's threatening. 100% service connected, PTSD, for childhood sex abuse, aggravated my military service.)
Physically, wishing the genitals would go away, along w/ beard, 2ndary male body hair. Heterosexual (cis women), but at 67, not sexually active with others. I am not willing to change who I am so I can "pass" as a fairly ugly female. I wish I could be Kiera Knightly . . . I know lots and lots of cis-F who wish they looked like Kiera Knightly . . .
Brass tacks honest here . . . I want the full-boat, not a "transition" . . . I want periods, risk of pregnancy, real mammaries (b cup would be nice).
And so my "solution" for all this is that I am open about being "trans" (as in "transcendent") and I move to the middle, ('Mahu" in Hawaiian culture, although this idea gets bastardized on Google.)
My "mantra" -- guide lines . . . "authentic" "integrated" "ME" . . . I'm not going to "become someone else." Not going to change my name, (I'd like to get the "M" off my ID).
We wear (seamlessly) both gender clothing . . . JUST LIKE THE CIS-F LOCALLY . . .
Recreational beach casual, cargo shorts, shorts, beach sandals, tank tops, T's, button shirts, earrings (6 lobe piercings), shoulder-length hair worn pulled back or let down.
This results in a sort of "gender neutral" look, obviously "cis-M" but neutral enough that no one notices that essentially everything I'm wearing is "women's" clothing. (Lot's of political assertion on this point.)
NO ONE NOTICES, but also it's perfectly apparent to anyone who pays attention that I'm NOT "one of the boys." Not "sissy" or "femme" -- I own/ride a Harley full-dress, guns, knives, active recreation/exercise --
JUST LIKE MY CIS-F SISTERS ! ! !
I'm not broken, and don't need to jump through a litany of medical/legal hoops to be ME.
We need to CHANGE the expectation of the hetero-normative dyad.
Wish I were cis-F,
Being cis-M is sexually threatening for me, on acct. of the sexual abuse.
What we have learned from all this, in the past six months and I've been dealing for 65 yrs at least. What we have learned is that there are more choices for us than "cis F and cis M" --
Women cross the gender boundary in clothing all the time, women's fashion adopts a lot of "boy style" fashion for women. Women can wear men's clothing, but it is taboo for men to wear women's clothing.
THIS NEEDS TO CHANGE --
(dresses/skirts are about Patriarchal sexual access, and a DIFFERENT political issue for another thread.)
Men need to be allowed culturally to express the aspects of their ID which don't fit the "Male dyad" -- Lotsa different kinds of males out there, and females . . . Pretty limited gender expression, but it's changing.
I looked at Finasteride and HRT, even bilateral orchiectomy (surgical castration), in order to mediate the "threat" I feel with testosterone, male pattern body hair, penis, testes . . .
Dr. Judy warns, "Endocrine balance is delicate. You don't want to mess with that balance to become who you already are."
We don't need medical intervention to liberate ourselves and become who we are, who we always have been. There's a broad, safe, liberated, joyous "MIDDLE" in gender presentation that is open to those of us who search.
I still wish, continually . . . wish I were female.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Cadence Jean on July 31, 2015, 05:38:18 PM
Post by: Cadence Jean on July 31, 2015, 05:38:18 PM
Quote from: T90 on July 30, 2015, 04:23:11 PM
I meant that while I wish to appear and pass as female, I really don't want to ever develop breasts or have other areas of my anatomy shrink. If there was a type of hormone replacement that would just feminize my face, hair, and skin then I would do it in a heartbeat. I think I probably identify most closely with the term Genderqueer, so for me I fell uncomfortable with my gender and not so much with my sex.
I believe there to be specific procedures and drugs to assist you with changing your body into something you're comfortable with. I know there is a model who appears completely feminine from the shoulders up, but has not undergone hormone therapy. I wish I could remember her name...she went to Dr. Mayer for FFS. So, it would be possible for you to get FFS without hormone therapy - that would feminize your face.
As far as having feminine hair, the hormone that causes male pattern baldness is called DHT. There are drugs on the market, like Dutasteride, that you could take which have a low probability of impacting your mammary glands or genitals. It will prevent your body from converting testosterone to DHT. I started taking DHT long before estrogen, and I noticed very quickly that my hair thickened up and my points of recession didn't grow any larger. Maybe you could see an endocrinologist or your primary care provider about getting on DHT, which may cover some of your hair concerns. Also, if you have dark facial hair, you may be a candidate for laser hair removal, which takes care of that.
I couldn't suggest anything about your skin, especially. Maybe moisturize a whole lot, all over?
Just some suggestions. Best wishes for you on your journey.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: T90 on August 01, 2015, 07:53:05 AM
Post by: T90 on August 01, 2015, 07:53:05 AM
Quote from: Cadence Jean on July 31, 2015, 05:38:18 PM
I believe there to be specific procedures and drugs to assist you with changing your body into something you're comfortable with. I know there is a model who appears completely feminine from the shoulders up, but has not undergone hormone therapy. I wish I could remember her name...she went to Dr. Mayer for FFS. So, it would be possible for you to get FFS without hormone therapy - that would feminize your face.
As far as having feminine hair, the hormone that causes male pattern baldness is called DHT. There are drugs on the market, like Dutasteride, that you could take which have a low probability of impacting your mammary glands or genitals. It will prevent your body from converting testosterone to DHT. I started taking DHT long before estrogen, and I noticed very quickly that my hair thickened up and my points of recession didn't grow any larger. Maybe you could see an endocrinologist or your primary care provider about getting on DHT, which may cover some of your hair concerns. Also, if you have dark facial hair, you may be a candidate for laser hair removal, which takes care of that.
I couldn't suggest anything about your skin, especially. Maybe moisturize a whole lot, all over?
Just some suggestions. Best wishes for you on your journey.
There's quite a few models who appear very feminine without HRT, such as Seth Atwell and Michael Nowlan, and these are people who I admire and certainly aspire to be like one day. Michael Nowlan even identifies as Genderqueer, which I think may well be how I identify too.
Thanks for all that information. :) It seems there may be a number of possibilities for me then. Although I have a full head of long dark hair, hair loss would be one of my biggest worries in the future. Certainly I will mention some of the things you've mentioned once I start to see a psychologist (later this month hopefully).
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: JB_Girl on August 01, 2015, 11:20:17 AM
Post by: JB_Girl on August 01, 2015, 11:20:17 AM
Transition and dysphoria are not tightly coupled. I felt dysphoric decades before I did anything like begin HRT or Electrolysis or even wearing feminine clothes. I eventually hit a wall of despair and began minimal medications.
But since gender is a mental reflection of how you internally visualize yourself. Surgery or no surgery, endocrine balance or no endocrine change. None of it is the issue. "To thy own self be true, then it shall follow as the night the day, you cannot be false to anyone" or something along those lines.
I wore a dress with a beard for a while but finally had to do something about the beard or quit looking in a mirror. I have moved from no hormones to low dose HRT to transition levels as my level of comfort with myself changed, but one thing I will never do is destroy or defame the person who taught me much about life, much about honesty, and much about courage. To my way of thinking to destroy the village to save it is idiotic. To destroy or deny the human who lived in a male package just because the package is now mostly female would be equally foolish.
Nice to be here,
Call me Minga.
But since gender is a mental reflection of how you internally visualize yourself. Surgery or no surgery, endocrine balance or no endocrine change. None of it is the issue. "To thy own self be true, then it shall follow as the night the day, you cannot be false to anyone" or something along those lines.
I wore a dress with a beard for a while but finally had to do something about the beard or quit looking in a mirror. I have moved from no hormones to low dose HRT to transition levels as my level of comfort with myself changed, but one thing I will never do is destroy or defame the person who taught me much about life, much about honesty, and much about courage. To my way of thinking to destroy the village to save it is idiotic. To destroy or deny the human who lived in a male package just because the package is now mostly female would be equally foolish.
Nice to be here,
Call me Minga.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Torquill on August 17, 2015, 02:04:27 AM
Post by: Torquill on August 17, 2015, 02:04:27 AM
I'm dysphoric about specific things. After bra shopping this afternoon (ugh) I'm pretty convinced that I want breast reduction surgery, because large breasts really don't fit what I feel like my body should look like. I'm a little frustrated by my jawline. But I love my shoulders, I love my butt, and I'm actually pretty happy with my undercarriage (it performs well for me).
I've always been the person I am, I just didn't admit it until this year. To that end, I'm used to being me in this package. Some of my dysphoria is just a desire to have a body which people won't misgender all the time -- I run up against hard limits on my presentation, and it leads to distress when people call me "miss". But that's not all of it.
I think I may experience dysphoria differently than many binary trans people, if nothing else because I have the a la carte version, rather than the whole menu version. I have only a few things I want to change, and the rest can stay as it always has been, even though it's associated with a gender I no longer claim.
--Sam
I've always been the person I am, I just didn't admit it until this year. To that end, I'm used to being me in this package. Some of my dysphoria is just a desire to have a body which people won't misgender all the time -- I run up against hard limits on my presentation, and it leads to distress when people call me "miss". But that's not all of it.
I think I may experience dysphoria differently than many binary trans people, if nothing else because I have the a la carte version, rather than the whole menu version. I have only a few things I want to change, and the rest can stay as it always has been, even though it's associated with a gender I no longer claim.
--Sam
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Tessa James on August 17, 2015, 12:38:54 PM
Post by: Tessa James on August 17, 2015, 12:38:54 PM
I so appreciate the views shared from the NB perspectives here. It is refreshing to understand other narratives that don't necessarily fit the classic model. I think the model narrative has been reinforced historically because we learned that there were certain points we needed to hit to ensure the gatekeepers would let us in. Many would apply but precious few were chosen and they fit the early models for people who would likely pass as cis gender.
That is changing. We know of many people now who may or may not accept the labels but do transition in some way. I think of our former Mayor of Silverton Oregon who chose to feminize years ago with some surgery but no HRT. Other examples are noted in earlier posts. One size still doesn't fit all but we should still have access to the health care we need. Gender dysphoria is a term i learned a few years ago but a feeling I've experienced for the majority of my life. Why should some individuals dysphoria be considered any less legitimate than another's??
We get no special merit badge for the type or duration of our suffering and pain. But we clearly know how to jump through hoops to get what we need. ;D
That is changing. We know of many people now who may or may not accept the labels but do transition in some way. I think of our former Mayor of Silverton Oregon who chose to feminize years ago with some surgery but no HRT. Other examples are noted in earlier posts. One size still doesn't fit all but we should still have access to the health care we need. Gender dysphoria is a term i learned a few years ago but a feeling I've experienced for the majority of my life. Why should some individuals dysphoria be considered any less legitimate than another's??
We get no special merit badge for the type or duration of our suffering and pain. But we clearly know how to jump through hoops to get what we need. ;D
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Lady Smith on August 18, 2015, 04:53:22 PM
Post by: Lady Smith on August 18, 2015, 04:53:22 PM
I found that I couldn't bear the way testosterone twisted my mind to the point of feeling like I was going crazy so HRT and an 'orchi' were the only way to go for me. BUT then on the other hand I had very low testosterone for years as I was growing up and it was only when I was older that my T levels began to impact badly on my sense of self.
Much of my dysphoria seems to have been centred around knowing that I wasn't male, but 'fleeing' too far into femme territory in order to rid myself of the aspects of maleness I'd come to hate if not outright despise.
To pick up on JB Girl's metaphor I think I was trying very hard to burn down the village in order to save it, but fortunately it looks like I haven't done myself too much damage overall and it will be possible for me to heal and recover.
'Incompetent and outright hostile mental health practitioners', - yes Suzi it's amazing just how many of them there are isn't it. Unfortunately it's not like getting your car repaired where you can go back and demand they fix it properly if they mess up. The incompetent/hostile ones are more than happy to take your money no matter how useless they might be.
Much of my dysphoria seems to have been centred around knowing that I wasn't male, but 'fleeing' too far into femme territory in order to rid myself of the aspects of maleness I'd come to hate if not outright despise.
To pick up on JB Girl's metaphor I think I was trying very hard to burn down the village in order to save it, but fortunately it looks like I haven't done myself too much damage overall and it will be possible for me to heal and recover.
'Incompetent and outright hostile mental health practitioners', - yes Suzi it's amazing just how many of them there are isn't it. Unfortunately it's not like getting your car repaired where you can go back and demand they fix it properly if they mess up. The incompetent/hostile ones are more than happy to take your money no matter how useless they might be.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: phoenix633 on August 18, 2015, 08:51:06 PM
Post by: phoenix633 on August 18, 2015, 08:51:06 PM
Well for me. I definitely want chest surgery. I don't want to appear at all like a woman but not too masculine either. I currently just look like a 14 year old boy. It think maybe I'd be okay without T if I could pass for the 25 year old I am and socialize with people my age without them instantly reading me as a kid. I like mens clothes and mens hair. I'd like my voice to be deeper and face to change but I don't really want facial hair. I'm okay with getting body hair and even facial hair sometimes sounds cool, I'd probably still decide to go clean shaven. I want to stay thin and not appear too masculine in my personality and dress but still look like a guy in his 20's. So I am definitely either leaning towards male or male but kinda in the middle. The idea of looking like a dude who is bulky and has facial hair and look like very much a man is uncomfortable to me. So I would guess a FTM on the far masculine end would want to look like that and not be afraid of the hormones making them too masculine. I'm a thin person with a high metabolism and very strict healthy unprocessed diet and very active life style so I'm hoping I remain thin. And as far as beard, I would shave it and maybe if I got a lot of money get it removed with lazer hair removal or something. Or maybe I'd like facial hair. I feel like if I shaved every day it wouldn't bother me. I don't want the look of a beard but don't mind stubble. I feel once I look like a man I would be more comfortable doing feminine things. I also find my balance through ways besides appearance. Like as far as how I interact, I definitely have a nurturing feminine side. I like to talk about emotions and stuff. I want to take dance classes in the future. I want to appear like I said, instead of a thin kinda adrogenous female like I do now a guy who is also thin, clean shaven and no too masculine in clothing and mannerisms. I find a weird mix. I like typically masculine things like climbing trees and fixing things etc. and also a lot of typically female things. So I kinda feel like I can relate to both men and women and everyone inbetween. But at the end of the day I feel like I am not male or female but have always deeply desired a male body. But trying to find a balance physically is tough.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Allison Wunderland on September 30, 2015, 03:21:16 PM
Post by: Allison Wunderland on September 30, 2015, 03:21:16 PM
Quote from: phoenix633 on August 18, 2015, 08:51:06 PM
Well for me. I definitely want chest surgery. I don't want to appear at all like a woman but not too masculine either. I currently just look like a 14 year old boy. It think maybe I'd be okay without T if I could pass for the 25 year old I am and socialize with people my age without them instantly reading me as a kid. I like mens clothes and mens hair. I'd like my voice to be deeper and face to change but I don't really want facial hair. I'm okay with getting body hair and even facial hair sometimes sounds cool, I'd probably still decide to go clean shaven. I want to stay thin and not appear too masculine in my personality and dress but still look like a guy in his 20's. So I am definitely either leaning towards male or male but kinda in the middle. The idea of looking like a dude who is bulky and has facial hair and look like very much a man is uncomfortable to me. So I would guess a FTM on the far masculine end would want to look like that and not be afraid of the hormones making them too masculine. I'm a thin person with a high metabolism and very strict healthy unprocessed diet and very active life style so I'm hoping I remain thin. And as far as beard, I would shave it and maybe if I got a lot of money get it removed with lazer hair removal or something. Or maybe I'd like facial hair. I feel like if I shaved every day it wouldn't bother me. I don't want the look of a beard but don't mind stubble. I feel once I look like a man I would be more comfortable doing feminine things. I also find my balance through ways besides appearance. Like as far as how I interact, I definitely have a nurturing feminine side. I like to talk about emotions and stuff. I want to take dance classes in the future. I want to appear like I said, instead of a thin kinda adrogenous female like I do now a guy who is also thin, clean shaven and no too masculine in clothing and mannerisms. I find a weird mix. I like typically masculine things like climbing trees and fixing things etc. and also a lot of typically female things. So I kinda feel like I can relate to both men and women and everyone in between. But at the end of the day I feel like I am not male or female but have always deeply desired a male body. But trying to find a balance physically is tough.
Here's a view from the other side of the fence --
Cis M here -- just for the record, because LOTS of people in here talk about gender without ever designating where they started out.
Yeah, totally for sure . . . I wish I were FEMALE . . . long legged, body hairless, nice B-cup mammaries to fill the bras I own. I wish I were able to get "tagged" as cis-F from a distance, by how I walk/stand, how the clothes drape, facia
l features.
Wish I didn't need to shave every 6 hrs. Nose to toes and it NEVER gets down to "feeling smooth" but rather only gets to "feels like a fresh shave." Would be nice to get out on the beach, bikini . . . bare, no huge knob in the pants, cleavage, no chest hair, no facial hair . . . I'd like to have periods. Yes, I hear they're a pain in the ass. Shaving is a pain in the ass.
OTOH, I own a full hawg Harley -- 900 lbs curb weight. If it tips, I can lift it back upright. I don't think I'd be able to do that on estrogen, or even finasteride to block DHT.
Not into make-up, painting my nails. I like jewelry, but not the huge/gawdy stuff. I suspect if I looked "hot" on all the other points, I might paint my nails.
Besides the Harley, I have a John Deere (tractor and lawnmower), chain saw, guns, cannons, knife collection . . .
Lots of behavior out there that is non-gender specific: Hiking, biking, bird watching, kayak, archery, fishing . . .
-- and a wardrobe full of heavy-duty recreational gear (boots, pants, jackets, polar fleece)
-- and a wardrobe full of prom-dresses, skirts, tops, lingerie . . . I have some dolls, stuffed animals. I understand clothing, clothing design/materials better than most cis-F.
Point being, most people have broad spectrum interests and behaviors. Lots of feelings are not gender-specific. And lots of "gender specific" traits should not be.
I expect that were I female, I'd be wearing a lot of cis-M stuff. Sex is one thing. Gender presentation is something else.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: nicole99 on October 01, 2015, 03:40:29 AM
Post by: nicole99 on October 01, 2015, 03:40:29 AM
Hey T90,
I'm not sure NB's do experience it differently.
If you do experience it in a different way, how do you feel about it? Are you worried about your psycs reaction? Being taken seriously and validated? I think those are the important questions here.
I'm not sure NB's do experience it differently.
If you do experience it in a different way, how do you feel about it? Are you worried about your psycs reaction? Being taken seriously and validated? I think those are the important questions here.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: captains on October 01, 2015, 03:54:45 AM
Post by: captains on October 01, 2015, 03:54:45 AM
Quote from: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 06:59:55 PM
Ah. That makes sense. Maybe it was the opposite for me. I really wanted a female body but I didn't want to have to live a female life, though somehow during the whole process that changed.
Your posts often resonate with me, Suzi, but I think this is the first time I've ever my own complex gender-and-sex-feelings laid out so succinctly. I'm the same, but from the other direction. I can feel my attachment to my female social position slowly eroding, but if I were to magically wake up in a cis male body under the condition that I wasn't allowed to tell a single soul, I would be perfectly happy.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: boheme on October 01, 2015, 06:38:24 PM
Post by: boheme on October 01, 2015, 06:38:24 PM
Quote from: Allison Wunderland on July 31, 2015, 04:03:10 PMWomen cross the gender boundary in clothing all the time, women's fashion adopts a lot of "boy style" fashion for women. Women can wear men's clothing, but it is taboo for men to wear women's clothing.
THIS NEEDS TO CHANGE
Absolutely! :icon_chick:
Quote from: Allison Wunderland on July 31, 2015, 04:03:10 PM"You're no more female physiologically, than I am male. We shouldn't be required to tweak our endocrine systems to be who we already are!"
And so, take a look at my signature -- We need to change social attitudes, not our endocrine system.
Quote from: Allison Wunderland on July 31, 2015, 04:03:10 PMDr. Judy warns, "Endocrine balance is delicate. You don't want to mess with that balance to become who you already are."
We don't need medical intervention to liberate ourselves and become who we are, who we always have been. There's a broad, safe, liberated, joyous "MIDDLE" in gender presentation that is open to those of us who search.
There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that the majority of my dysphoria about being perceived as a "man" is indeed about socialisation. Most of the time, I actually feel completely fine living as a member of my birth gender, except of course when I am around people who love telling others how they or someone else is so much of a "man"/"woman" because they do or enjoy some arbitrary, essentialist thing x :icon_frown:. Sometimes I wonder, would I even socially transition at all if it weren't for the binary? I've been thinking about this a lot recently, and I always end up settling on, "probably not".
With that said, I can honestly say I have never felt happier in my body (at least, not since the dearth that was male puberty started) than I have been after starting HRT. The way my testosterone levels have plummeted; the way my skin has softened; the way my body is changing in ways that I had thought would be forever impossible for me... This still, despite the fact that nearly everyone in my work and social circles is completely oblivious to the changes that are taking place (a source of constant bemusement!) :laugh:
And I guess that's the thing. Would my life be endlessly less complicated were I able to simply express the feminine aspects of my personality openly, without fear of ridicule, segregation and discrimination? Oh my, would it ever! But even if this were the case, and I could actually truly live simply as a person, not as a gender, would I still modify my body with hormones and surgery to bring it as close as possible to the female archetype? I've been thinking about this a lot too recently, and I've realised that the answer to this question -- at least, for me -- is, "absolutely".
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: nicole99 on October 02, 2015, 05:50:24 AM
Post by: nicole99 on October 02, 2015, 05:50:24 AM
My dysphoria was often such a physical thing. I don't believe socialisation had anything to do with that aspect of it. Nobody required me to tweak my endocrine system or have surgery, I never saw it as a way of becoming myself. But I desired it. I wanted it and I needed it. My body is mine to shape as I see fit, and shape it I have. You don't change it to be who you are - you change it to feel better, to be safer, to find peace or acceptance. All good things.
Telling people to not change their endocrine system is taking away their agency over their own bodies. It is based on the idea that being able to modify out bodies is somehow a mutilation.
If you need medical intervention, if you want to change your endocrine system or have surgery to feel better then this is something that should be an option. Also I don't care what society says, I love that I grew killer tits. They make me happy.
Telling people to not change their endocrine system is taking away their agency over their own bodies. It is based on the idea that being able to modify out bodies is somehow a mutilation.
If you need medical intervention, if you want to change your endocrine system or have surgery to feel better then this is something that should be an option. Also I don't care what society says, I love that I grew killer tits. They make me happy.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Allison Wunderland on October 02, 2015, 08:41:55 PM
Post by: Allison Wunderland on October 02, 2015, 08:41:55 PM
Sure, there's not a clear line that defines "corrective" medical intervention. Some see surg. as corrective, some see "Fleischsalat" (German). One-eigth the objective dose of SSRI (Zoloft) for less than a week put me in the ER. Hormones play a role here too. My personal hormone equilbros is pretty skittish.
I pierced my ears. No cartalige, no gauges, no tats. That's my limit. No psych meds, no HRT. I think about bi-lat. orchi all the time, electrolysis . . . still thinking.
But at 67, meds & surg are stress-city. Besides, at 67 we all begin to look neuter.
I pierced my ears. No cartalige, no gauges, no tats. That's my limit. No psych meds, no HRT. I think about bi-lat. orchi all the time, electrolysis . . . still thinking.
But at 67, meds & surg are stress-city. Besides, at 67 we all begin to look neuter.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Lady Smith on October 05, 2015, 05:50:27 AM
Post by: Lady Smith on October 05, 2015, 05:50:27 AM
QuoteBesides, at 67 we all begin to look neuter.
That's soooo true! In many ways it's great being past my 'use by' date and being an old lady. I can wear what I please and do what i please because I'm free of the 'meat market' and being happy and single is just sooo good.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Claire on October 09, 2015, 11:13:38 AM
Post by: Claire on October 09, 2015, 11:13:38 AM
I know this is not new but I guess we all need to discover it for our selves. There are so many pieces to this and they all have their own scale. Wanting to be male or female. NOT wanting to be male or female. Wanting to be seen as male or female. NOT wanting to be seen as male. Wanting to feel male or female. Etc... We all sit on these many many scales in different spots. For some people, they align. For some they kind of align. For some none of them align. And for some like me, where I am on each scale seems to move around independently.
Dori.
Dori.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Alexx86 on October 15, 2015, 09:54:29 AM
Post by: Alexx86 on October 15, 2015, 09:54:29 AM
For myself it feels like my dysphoria manifests itself in different ways.
I have a love/hate relationship with my breasts, not knowing whether to bind or not.
Chubbier non-binary folk, I think in some ways sit outside the conventional ideas of androgyny, which kinda sucks for me because the lack of validation can set me off inside and make me anxious.
Not wanting to use hormones or blockers also sets a new challenge for me, how do I express myself and the like.
I guess being non-binary and living with dysphoria differs from binary transfolk as we seem to be not going in a linear trajectory.
I have a love/hate relationship with my breasts, not knowing whether to bind or not.
Chubbier non-binary folk, I think in some ways sit outside the conventional ideas of androgyny, which kinda sucks for me because the lack of validation can set me off inside and make me anxious.
Not wanting to use hormones or blockers also sets a new challenge for me, how do I express myself and the like.
I guess being non-binary and living with dysphoria differs from binary transfolk as we seem to be not going in a linear trajectory.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Asche on October 15, 2015, 11:45:32 AM
Post by: Asche on October 15, 2015, 11:45:32 AM
From what I'm reading (not just this thread), people's sense of dysphoria varies all over the place. For some it's more social dysphoria, for others it's the body, and I know there are some other kinds of dysphoria which I can't think of at the moment, and all different proportions of all of the above. And there are trans people who don't feel dysphoria at all.
And this seems to be true whether someone identifies as male, female, or something else (or nothing at all, like me.)
IMHO, just as sexual orientation doesn't depend upon one's gender identity, neither does dysphoria. We are all special snowflakes.
And this seems to be true whether someone identifies as male, female, or something else (or nothing at all, like me.)
IMHO, just as sexual orientation doesn't depend upon one's gender identity, neither does dysphoria. We are all special snowflakes.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Alison-Rose on October 15, 2015, 06:09:31 PM
Post by: Alison-Rose on October 15, 2015, 06:09:31 PM
I can only reply based on my own experiences as someone who didn't go through with transitioning while still in my late teens and has now come out as genderfluid in my early thirties, so while I do feel dysphoria at times, I've no way of knowing if this is the same or different to other trans* people - surely all that matters is that having such a physical-emotional disconnect appears to be a frequent shared issue, or is the point trying to determine whether there are differences?
In my case, the biggest problems at the moment appear to be with my body hair, weight and relative lack of visible feminine characteristics compared to what I'd like, with these three factors listed in order of how easy they'll be for me to address, starting with the one I anticipate will be least challenging. I've already spoken to my partner about how the first affects me, and we've both planned to resume exercising once this year is out of the way, so that deals with the second.
However, that still leaves my growing unhappiness at how masculine I look, which didn't seem as big a complaint when I last tried dealing with my gender identity (I suppose testosterone will do that to you). One possible option we've discussed is for me to look into low dose hormones, though I'd want this to be through my GP as my health wasn't that great during my mid-to-late 20s, meaning there are concerns that won't be as much to worry about if I'm being closely monitored.
One thing my significant other has said she is terrified of would be to find years have passed with me on hormones and that I'm considering transition again, which even scares me because we've left the door open to look at this option further down the line if I begin to feel that way once more. Although it's early days, I'm quite happy with being genderfluid and having a short term plan for now, but there's just no way of knowing what the future may hold.
The greatest concern we both share is me becoming physically unrecognisable compared to my "old" self, if not in terms of my personality changing as well, though I'm not afraid of being told I look more confident, radiant and younger, which is a compliment I frequently see others mentioning in their own journeys, especially where hormones are involved. What I certainly don't want is to go too far in the process and risk alienating or even losing my biggest supporter...
Besides, we're planning for a large family, and naturally we're both aware of the risks that are likely to come with introducing female hormones into my system, particularly their effect on my ability to reproduce. Furthermore, I've read that my partner may also be compromised by anything I do end up taking, so this would be perhaps the single most important question we'd ask a therapist if I'm referred to chat about my options. I may have dreams, but holding onto my love is of greater importance.
In my case, the biggest problems at the moment appear to be with my body hair, weight and relative lack of visible feminine characteristics compared to what I'd like, with these three factors listed in order of how easy they'll be for me to address, starting with the one I anticipate will be least challenging. I've already spoken to my partner about how the first affects me, and we've both planned to resume exercising once this year is out of the way, so that deals with the second.
However, that still leaves my growing unhappiness at how masculine I look, which didn't seem as big a complaint when I last tried dealing with my gender identity (I suppose testosterone will do that to you). One possible option we've discussed is for me to look into low dose hormones, though I'd want this to be through my GP as my health wasn't that great during my mid-to-late 20s, meaning there are concerns that won't be as much to worry about if I'm being closely monitored.
One thing my significant other has said she is terrified of would be to find years have passed with me on hormones and that I'm considering transition again, which even scares me because we've left the door open to look at this option further down the line if I begin to feel that way once more. Although it's early days, I'm quite happy with being genderfluid and having a short term plan for now, but there's just no way of knowing what the future may hold.
The greatest concern we both share is me becoming physically unrecognisable compared to my "old" self, if not in terms of my personality changing as well, though I'm not afraid of being told I look more confident, radiant and younger, which is a compliment I frequently see others mentioning in their own journeys, especially where hormones are involved. What I certainly don't want is to go too far in the process and risk alienating or even losing my biggest supporter...
Besides, we're planning for a large family, and naturally we're both aware of the risks that are likely to come with introducing female hormones into my system, particularly their effect on my ability to reproduce. Furthermore, I've read that my partner may also be compromised by anything I do end up taking, so this would be perhaps the single most important question we'd ask a therapist if I'm referred to chat about my options. I may have dreams, but holding onto my love is of greater importance.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Swayallday on October 20, 2015, 12:10:42 PM
Post by: Swayallday on October 20, 2015, 12:10:42 PM
Quote from: T90 on July 30, 2015, 01:34:33 PM
I realise that Gender Dysphoria can manifest itself in many different ways, but I was wondering if it's a different experience altogether for NB people.
For myself, as someone who wishes to look, sound, and pass as completely female but not change my male body, I often find it incredibly distressing (and Dysphoria inducing) that HRT would be a difficult option for me as I don't wish to change my sex. I have my first appointment with a psychologist coming up in the next month or so, and I feel that Gender Dysphoria is very different for me than for someone wishing to undergo SRS.
Same here. I tend to stick to the narrative but i'm inclined to speak about non-binary next time. Sometimes talking too much isn't helpful either.
Last time I came in I stressed the intensity of my disrepancy towards my body.
At the time I only had the transition-process in mind and whilst the end-result is exciting, it's also freightening.(socio-cultural, financial, political, discrimination, work prospects, changing relationships)
She responded her only task is to discern whether there is no comorbidity (eg. if you have life goals, working on depression/anxiety, ...)
So i'm unsure how it is over there but I feel times are changing and the spectrum is broadening for possible HRT.
Looking at my past I fit the TS narrative but how I experience that differs:
I invented my own games played by both boys & girls.
I dress andrgynous, at times i've also dressed completely female.
I look up fashion, etc with girls (whom do that) because I like to share the experience.
I drove a female bike, not because it is female but because it is comfortable.
I played a sport with both boys and girls and at times I wore a skirt to fill in a position, I call this gender-neutral.
When dating cis-girls I often ended up confusing them since they felt it was like dating one of their girlfriends due to all the feminine behaviour and interest.
I don't want to treat people differently nor be treated different. For one I do feminine things because it makes the dysphoria dissappear but at the same time I just do these things because I like them so i'm uncertain how that relates to the whole "I'm a woman, I want to be a woman, i've always been a woman" TS narrative.
& i'm still going for HRT nontheless. To me it will be a biochemical soothing of what not is but possibly can be.
Whether you want to go all the way, I feel can be experimented with through the years.
Quote from: T90 on July 30, 2015, 04:23:11 PM
I meant that while I wish to appear and pass as female, I really don't want to ever develop breasts or have other areas of my anatomy shrink. If there was a type of hormone replacement that would just feminize my face, hair, and skin then I would do it in a heartbeat. I think I probably identify most closely with the term Genderqueer, so for me I fell uncomfortable with my gender and not so much with my sex.
With a low dose that might take years, plenty of time to find out other solutions along the way?
In the meanwhile you can still work on your voice.
& possibly if this wanting to appear more feminine, makeup can be applied.
Clothing
& personality in day to day life.
Don't hold back, be happy ;D
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: T90 on October 20, 2015, 01:16:47 PM
Post by: T90 on October 20, 2015, 01:16:47 PM
Quote from: Swayallday on October 20, 2015, 12:10:42 PM
With a low dose that might take years, plenty of time to find out other solutions along the way?
In the meanwhile you can still work on your voice.
& possibly if this wanting to appear more feminine, makeup can be applied.
Clothing
& personality in day to day life.
Don't hold back, be happy ;D
Great post. :)
I'm still waiting on my first appointment with a psychologist (due to a long waiting list right now) so I've tried to put things to the back of my mind just now, with the knowledge that the first appointment can be a proper starting point for me. If Anti-androgens could be safely used on their own without the risk of developing osteoporosis, then I'd definitely consider taking them right now.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: teamsaxon on November 12, 2015, 05:49:00 AM
Post by: teamsaxon on November 12, 2015, 05:49:00 AM
Quote from: suzifrommd on July 30, 2015, 04:11:02 PM
Non-binary people are every bit as entitled as binary trans folk to transition and present as they wish, whether that means hormones, surgery, both, or neither. Please don't let anyone tell you differently.
Not in South Australia :'(
Here if you want to have top surgery but not hormones you are not allowed to have any surgery.
The requirement in this state is 1 year on HRT.
So if you are non binary or even trans but you do not want hormones or cannot go on hormones for any reason, you cannot legally have surgery. I f*ing hate it.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: T90 on November 18, 2015, 01:56:47 PM
Post by: T90 on November 18, 2015, 01:56:47 PM
Every time I answer the phone people think I'm my dad and it's really starting to upset me. I'm seriously thinking that once I (eventually) get my psychologist appointment that I'll be likely to be referred to a Gender Identity Clinic. I can't help feeling that if there wasn't something wrong then these feelings wouldn't still be occurring at the age of 24. :(
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Futurist on November 28, 2015, 06:27:03 PM
Post by: Futurist on November 28, 2015, 06:27:03 PM
Quote from: T90 on July 30, 2015, 01:34:33 PMFrankly, I think that it depends on the specific person. For instance, in regards to myself, while I was born with a male body, I would ideally like to have a face similar to the face of a pre-FFS trans-woman. In contrast, many, if not most, of the (binary) trans-women with whom I have talked with want to (ideally) look completely indistinguishable from cis-women.
I realise that Gender Dysphoria can manifest itself in many different ways, but I was wondering if it's a different experience altogether for NB people.
For myself, as someone who wishes to look, sound, and pass as completely female but not change my male body, I often find it incredibly distressing (and Dysphoria inducing) that HRT would be a difficult option for me as I don't wish to change my sex. I have my first appointment with a psychologist coming up in the next month or so, and I feel that Gender Dysphoria is very different for me than for someone wishing to undergo SRS.
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Futurist on November 28, 2015, 06:28:48 PM
Post by: Futurist on November 28, 2015, 06:28:48 PM
Quote from: T90 on November 18, 2015, 01:56:47 PMWhat exactly is wrong with talking to a gender therapist about these feelings of yours, though? After all, even if you don't want to physically transition, you can still talk to a gender therapist about these feelings of yours. :) Indeed, it's not like this therapist is going to be able to force to you physically transition. After all, there is absolutely nothing wrong with being a non-binary and/or a genderqueer person. :)
Every time I answer the phone people think I'm my dad and it's really starting to upset me. I'm seriously thinking that once I (eventually) get my psychologist appointment that I'll be likely to be referred to a Gender Identity Clinic. I can't help feeling that if there wasn't something wrong then these feelings wouldn't still be occurring at the age of 24. :(
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: kittytessapuppy on December 04, 2015, 02:14:24 PM
Post by: kittytessapuppy on December 04, 2015, 02:14:24 PM
Umm, hi, I'm new here, but I'm confused, I thought non binary meant not one of the usual two (binary) genders, so not male or female? For example I'm non binary because I am tri-gendered, male, female, and androgynous. Our am I completely misunderstanding the terminology?
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Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Tessa James on December 04, 2015, 04:06:42 PM
Post by: Tessa James on December 04, 2015, 04:06:42 PM
Quote from: kittytessapuppy on December 04, 2015, 02:14:24 PM
Umm, hi, I'm new here, but I'm confused, I thought non binary meant not one of the usual two (binary) genders, so not male or female? For example I'm non binary because I am tri-gendered, male, female, and androgynous. Our am I completely misunderstanding the terminology?
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Welcome to Susan's Place KTP,
I think you are understanding these labels just fine. Man/male and Woman/female seem to be the polar ends of binary thinking. I consider myself non binary for many reasons including my long life living as a man. I evolved from feeling like a teenage girl when starting transition to feeling more ownership for being a trans woman. I am getting more comfortable with being just myself and support a diverse sense of what transgender means to us as individuals.
Nice name BTW;)
Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: kittytessapuppy on December 04, 2015, 11:14:27 PM
Post by: kittytessapuppy on December 04, 2015, 11:14:27 PM
Thanks, my name is actually derived from three things that are very important to me, Kitty is a stuffed animal I've had since I was 5, Tessa is a rattle bear my grandma made me, and Puppy was attached to Kitty originally, but I think I lost him xd.
BTW I'm not even sure about my own gender identity, to be honest. I don't know if I feel the way I do because I'm me, or because of childhood abuse. Not only that, but most psychiatrists and others would say that since I have autism, I am incapable of making that kind of decision. Although, I disagree xd
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BTW I'm not even sure about my own gender identity, to be honest. I don't know if I feel the way I do because I'm me, or because of childhood abuse. Not only that, but most psychiatrists and others would say that since I have autism, I am incapable of making that kind of decision. Although, I disagree xd
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Title: Re: Do NB people feel Gender Dysphoria differently from other Trans people?
Post by: Lady Smith on December 05, 2015, 04:58:39 PM
Post by: Lady Smith on December 05, 2015, 04:58:39 PM
My daughter is on the autism spectrum and something I've learned over the years us that most psychiatrists haven't got a clue as to what really goes on inside autistic folk's heads.
Welcome to the forum :D
Welcome to the forum :D