Quote from: jenny_ on June 02, 2008, 07:56:56 PM
There is also the additional criteria that
Quote from: soc-v6
The patient has made some progress in mastering other identified problems leading to
improving or continuing stable mental health
A therapist won't prescribe hormones (or anything else) if theres concerns that they're refusing to tackle other problems (i.e. the abuse). And the three months is a minimum, Kate's right that some therapists require longer.
Gender transition is a big big thing, and therapists won't support the decision if they have doubts about the child's gender dysphoria.
That's great to hear, as I really feel "escaping" to male-ness isn't a proper
cure/treatment for having been abused.
Quote from: jenny_ on June 02, 2008, 07:56:56 PM
Quote from: JackieR on June 02, 2008, 03:20:16 PM
In essence, should *I* support a girl to become a man "IF" the basis of her desire/need is to run and hide from childhood abuse and ineffective upbringing? What happens when she's confronted with the reality that it's NOT a solution? Especially when she's already voiced suicide as an option to escape. I'm leaning towards helping her deal with the psychological pain, and advising caution towards jumping into HRT and other major moves in her life, especially when she feels that living as a man is a step she want's to skip - she just wants to "be" a man.
Its great that your wanting to help him deal with all the psychological pain, it sounds like he could really do with it. 
Should you support him in a gender transition, if your concerned about the reasons? Thats a very difficult decision. If you are right about the reasons and gender transition not being the right solution for him, then of cause its right not to support it. The difficulty is that you don't know what's going on in his head, and i think that just supporting him in going to a gender therapist is the best thing to do. An experienced gender therapist will help him figure out if hormones etc are the solution.
I'm fully backing therapy, but also finding someone who's experienced enough to properly ascertain dealing with the years of abuse, AND her current mental state.
Quote from: jenny_ on June 02, 2008, 07:56:56 PM
Quote from: JackieR on June 02, 2008, 03:20:16 PM
What confuses me most is the "join our club" mentality she (the child) raves about. How she's found a "safe" place to belong - the TS/TG community, and how she now has an insatiable desire to be a "real" member of such a caring comunity. She's drawn to the sensationalism of recent FtM's on Oprah and Barbara Walters, and wants to be in the same supportive spotlight. She talks of TS/TG, just as Punks, Emos, Goths, Nerds, Prep'ies, and Jocks and all the other cliques unite as a members-only group.
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with finding your "group", but it seams improper when the basis for joining a group is because your a victim of abuse. Like becoming a cop because you seek power to "get even" because of what was done to you, sure, becoming a cop is good, but doing it for the "wrong" reasons seams inappropriate.
If he needs support then perhaps a TS/TG community is the best place for it? Whether or not you think he's making the right decision, maybe talking to people who know what its like to have gender issues will help him to understand whether or not the abuse is the reason.
If he isn't gender dysphoric, then hearing other people talking about their dysphoria will perhaps help him figure out that he's not? And in the meantime he's in a supportive environment which will help face up to the past abuse.
What we're seeing is that the more she talks to TS/TG people, the more she wants to be like them, and the more she re-aligns her goals to become more TS/TG. The obvious question I've asked is if she's talked with people that thought they were TS/TG/Dysphoric, then later discovered they were just going through normal adolescent discovery of themselves and their body? She said nope - because
those people leave the boards when they discover the feelings were temporary. Then we get into the discussion of how the
thought they knew themselves, only to discover they didn't. Which frankly can be said about non-gender issues to, such as "I thought I wanted to be a fireman when I grew up, but now I want to be a florist..." then five years later, they change again, and want to be a bartender.
In essence, I'm all for communication, and I've seen
several people on this forum be cautious about people's life choices, as well as careless. It's nice to see both views exists in one place, it adds balance.
Quote from: jenny_ on June 02, 2008, 07:56:56 PM
Quote from: Kate on June 02, 2008, 05:30:52 PM
and my use of "her" pronouns. As an adult, he's a HE to me if that's how he identifies 
ditto what kate said. if he identifies as he, then thats what i'll call him. Jackie, i'm not giving my opinion either way on whether he has GID or not.
At this time she "wants" to be a "he", but it trying to find help from current TG people as to what she needs to change about herself to become a "he". She knows all about packing, binding, and HRT, but can't choose a name, isn't comfortable with
normal boy/men clothing, and is refusing to live as a boy/man because that's not as real as first taking HRT to become muscular, taller, and masculine.
So, at this point, I'm still calling her a "her", until she actually gets a name and starts dressing like a boy/man, and not a zoot-suit character. For example, if I came to work dressed as superman every day, it's not a gender issue that I'm dressed as a man, it's a psychological identity issue that I'm not dressing appropriate for the workplace, but instead as a make-believe character. (By the way, I did know a guy who used to wear a superman t-shirt under his suit - waiting for a moment to be a computer tech "super-hero" - the one time he tried it, he was a miserable failure, so embarrassing.)
Anyhow, I'm waiting for her to at least start pretending to actually be a boy/man, before caller her a him.
Quote from: jenny_ on June 02, 2008, 07:56:56 PM
Its great that he has you who truely cares for him. I hope things get better for both of you
*hugs*
jenny
At this point, I'm just looking for ideas for us to try to plot a course together - rather than trying to cram some ill-conceived ideas down her throat. It feels like EDUCATION is a good place to start.
Thanks.