I agree that the state of American health care sucks and has huge problems, and I think you could just as easily say "You will not have equal access to proper medical and psychiatric care in the United States if you are
poor," period. I don't know that transsexuals are the only category of people to whom that applies; in fact, I'm sure it's not. (Anybody seen
Sicko?)
But, that said, as one who arguably falls into the category of TS and poor (poor being a hugely relative concept--I have very limited income, but I long ago stopped
feeling poor, and many people are much worse off than me, I'm well aware of that), I refuse to feel "doomed."
That's an attitude that will kill you, for sure, and immobilize you into hopelessness and despair.
I am determined to find a way to start HRT within the next few months, even if I have to pay for every penny myself (and I may very well have to), and yes, surgery may be a way down the road because of financial limitations, but on the other hand the cost of surgery is less than the cost of lots of luxuries that many people take for granted); there are people who spend more on
vacations, and cars, and freakin' huge
televisions, than it would cost for me to have top surgery, and I just refuse to see it as something that is permanently unattainable to me.
The need for me to get this stuff going is motivating me hugely to save money on the one hand (tiny bits at a time, but it adds up!), and to find ways (like looking for a better, full-time job and getting off of disability) to increase my income on the other. I sort of feel that time wasted sitting around feeling sorry for myself because I'm not rich and don't have fabulous health insurance is simply time I don't have.
I've also heard (from people who've done it) that in some large cities (San Francisco, for example) there are clinics where you can get at least hormone treatment very cheaply, or free, if you don't have money.
I think you have to be determined, and creative, and resourceful, and very highly motivated, but my point is that if you take that attitude of "Damn, this won't be
easy, nobody's going to hand it to me on a plate, so I'm doomed!" you just might be. Pffffffft to that.
No, not everyone can simply just "choose to stop being poor" but realistically, for many of us in America it
is possible to begin making (even small) choices in our lives that will eventually make things better and more things possible. You can choose to channel your energy into the positive goal of overcoming whatever your particular adversity is, even if it's a long slow process.
Or, you can choose to be
doomed. Whatever that means. I'm not doomed until I take my last breath, and maybe not even then. I'll just be back to take another shot at things later.