Quote from: Valerie Elizabeth on October 25, 2009, 12:29:53 AM
Can I ask then why so many people on this board recommend people to a psychiatrist?
If everybody feels so strongly about it being removed, then why go to psychiatrists? Doing so only furthers the idea that it is a mental illness.
Thoughts?
Perhaps because the social and personal implications of the disorder are extremely stressful and often result in legitimate mental illness such as depression.
I would be interested to know how many of the people here are going to a psychiatrist with an aim to actually curing their gender identity incongruity by making the mind congruent with the body rather than vice verse. I doubt it's very many if any of the people here.
Furthermore, its listing in the DSM and the standards of care often give people little option.
I for one have been told so far by every doctor I've seen that they will not, under any circumstances prescribe HRT until a psychiatrist has given it the OK. I personally am at a point where if the next two doctors I see are no different, I simply have to go to a psychiatrist for an indefinite period of time until they give the go ahead, and KEEP going indefinitely after, or prescribed HRT is simply not going to happen.
It's a catch-22, I have to go to a psychiatrist and perpetuate the idea that it's a mental disorder, because of the perception that it's a mental disorder.
I personally after having seen two psychiatrist wouldn't recommend anyone to go to a psychiatrist FOR GID if they can avoid it, unless they genuinely feel it would benefit them.
Perhaps a psychologist would be a better choice.
But given my experiences with them, I don't feel I have a mental disorder, I feel going to a therapist that thinks me mentally ill for my condition to the point where they simply dismiss anything I have to say is unhelpful and is only of harm to my mental state, not help.
Don't misunderstand me, I don't think all psychiatrists are bad and that nobody could possibly benefit from seeing one. But if you have GID simply because you have GID, and not as a result of some kind of personality or other disorder, I don't think it's helpful to see one for THAT condition. To help with other issues in your life? To help with depression from your condition, sure, they might be very helpful.
But I don't feel that GID is a mental illness, and so I feel that the psychiatric professions ability to treat it directly is extremely limited.
Post Merge: October 25, 2009, 12:43:42 AM
Quote from: Kara-Xen on October 25, 2009, 12:38:37 AM
So what? Why would you ever wanna fight for greedy, cigar-smoking suits anyway in wars that go nowhere and will never, ever end?
That's not really the point. The point is you should be able too if you are physically capable.
It's like the argument that women should be barred from combat rolls, sure, most women don't want to be in the military, let alone a combat roll to start with, but a few do and if they're physically capable, they should be able too.