Quote from: suzifrommd on December 24, 2013, 09:00:50 AM
OK, fair enough. But where is the line drawn, when you have a client who THINKS they have seen all the angles, have given it the requisite thought but you feel otherwise? Are you ethically bound to do what you can to protect them from an unwise choice? Or are you philosophically bound ultimately to accept their choice?
Good questions. Personally, I hate being parented and having my autonomy stolen from me from an overly parental/parentified state. We have too many laws, too many ideas about how to limit behaviour and too many litigants. Civil action.
My view, and it's only mine on ethics, is that 'the devil's in the detail' of ethical codifications. You mention that ethics and philosophy (of morality) are not really innately aligned. People say that 'moral people are ethical people'. The answer to that is 'well, often yes, but also, no--inherently no as well'. Consider this: at the core of the client-therapist relationship are five moral principles: autonomy, fidelity, non-malefasence, beneficence and justice. Those are deeply ensconced in professional practice and laws governing regulation of the health-care industry. It's the autonomy moral fundament that is most truly violated by ethical codification. Because, the minute you 'prescribe' (parentify) a process, you are stripping a being of their auntonomy, on some level, by forcing adherence to an ethical principle. You (The State) is forcing compliance of the therapist, limiting another's autonomy. We do this, because people understand that invading autonomy sometimes saves lives because sometimes people, what? lose judgment, make bad decisions? so we parent them, like we do children, to stop them harming themselves or others. I dunno about all that. I really don't. In this topic area, the 'ethics of parenting others through gender dysphoria'. I.e. 'stripping them of some autonomy because "we" know better'. Hmm, there's an arrogance in that, I believe, perhaps in the profession as professional arrogance?
Where's the line you ask? I don't really know. But, what I do know is that were there no laws, and were the client truly empowered to define their own journey, they also have the 'right to make my own mistakes and live with the consequences'. That also includes, if you look deeply, and implies that litigation and consequences to *all* others for your own decision become irrelevant, null and void, and so *no* other then becomes the focus, either of your happiness or unhappiness about your choices in transitioning.
That second extreme has other problems. In our society--a deeply prejudiced one against trans-gendered people--I do not believe that the soul can truly be abandoned to themselves, to suffer from prejudice, without consequence to the prejudicial majority who cause harm by transphobia, etc.
QuoteI ask this from the point of view of someone who just spent most of the past year with my therapist weighing the pros and cons of surgery and deciding that despite the difficulties I will better off getting SRS, only to have the psychologist I hired to evaluate me for the second letter, refuse to write it. Not only that but he somehow convinced my therapist to withdraw her support as well.
I have great empathy for you here. "Therapist Be Gone" is what I want to scream. They probably have some diagnostic issue that they are concerned about, either of Axis I or Axis II pathology, (and our diagnostic system is deeply flawed, don't get me wrong here). Alternatively, they are the hyper-vigilant anxious therapist, afraid of post-surgery litigation in a world gone completely mental about legal consequences.
Did they explain what the blockade was?