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How many therapy sessions did it take for you to get a surgery letter?

Started by Nero, December 21, 2008, 12:48:25 AM

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Janet_Girl

My surgeon stood by the SOC.  One year RLE and HRT. And two letters.  I am one step away from the day, and that is for the week to hurry up and get to Friday.


Janet
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YoungSoulRebel

Quote from: Josh on October 29, 2009, 03:55:17 PMneeding a therapist/psychologist/psychiatrist letter isnt really held onto as law much any more.  people are starting to see us as sane and not as crazies who need a professional to verify our every trip to the super market.

At the risk of being accused of raining on the parade, seriously, I think that there is, in fact, some valid reasons for a psychological evaluation.  I've encountered at least two people on-line who are basically "FTMTF" -- and one of them even went so far as 18+months on HRT and then scheduling, then very soon after cancelling her chest surgery and very openly regretting HRT because many of the changes testosterone makes are permanent.  her story was that she realised, "almost too late in some ways, but definitely too late in others" (her words) that she wanted to transition for the wrong reasons.

One of the TS women at my local TS/TG group has even agreed with my experiences and has said on several occasions that she's run into far more FTMTF persons than MTFTMs, and she has also noted that the "FTMTF" women go further in their physical transitions than "MTFTM" men, and therefore have more to ultimately regret, so there's obviously an underlying issue here that this new-found easier-access to FTM HRT and chest surgery is not adequately addressing.  And if you look up the TS standards of care for physical transitions in the U$, it really is far easier for FTM persons to score HRT and top-op (both of which result in many irreversible changes) than it is for MTF persons to score HRT and possible breast augmentation (the changes resulting in both of those endeavours are, in contrast, largely reversible).

On one hand, the U$ didn't even completely recognise FTM as a valid form of transsexualism until 1977 (and there are LOTS of reasons for that), so it's almost novel that said orgs are finally not only recognising us, but cutting self-identified FTM TS persons so much slack -- but why?  And to what end?  There are far deeper societal issues at work here than just a handful of doctors "deciding we're not crazies" and "taking us seriously".  As grateful as I am that going on HRT was a relatively headache-free experience for me, I've known far more TS women who've been trying for YEARS to "get taken seriously enough" to even have their therapists consider, and I've also encountered just enough "ex-FTMs" who now seem to get off on bad-mouthing the FTM community and the doctors who enable our physical transition every chance they get, that it leaves a bad taste in my mouth.  I also like to think that my doctor, being a woman herself and being my primary care physician off-and-on since I was fifteen (that's thirteen years) didn't sign me up for my first injection a week before my therapist faxed in the letter due to some underlying internalised misogyny of hers fostering the possible notion that I may be "better off", even if I'm jumping the gun -- I hope she made her decision because she knows that this is what's best for me, due to a long and good doctor-patient relationship between her and myself.
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Dorothy

I was in therapy for 16months before I received my authorisation for GRS.
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Jamie-o

I got my T letter after 5 sessions in 3 months.  (Well, actually, 6 months, but that's because I had to take a 3 month hiatus for financial reasons.)  I saw him once more about a month after starting T and during that session he indicated that he would be willing to give me a surgery letter.  At this point I haven't actually gotten it, though, because I'm at least a year away from being able to afford surgery anyway.
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IanToxic

My psychologist has been pushing me to schedule a consultation with a top surgeon and to find out information and what not. I found out that the Transgender Center up in Philly that does top surgery along with a bunch of other things actually doesn't require a letter well it's optional lol so yeaaah I dunno. I guess the point is that there seem to be a few that don't require a letter lol
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Christian

Quote from: YoungSoulRebel on November 03, 2009, 05:09:16 PM
One of the TS women at my local TS/TG group has even agreed with my experiences and has said on several occasions that she's run into far more FTMTF persons than MTFTMs, and she has also noted that the "FTMTF" women go further in their physical transitions than "MTFTM" men, and therefore have more to ultimately regret

There was a special on msnbc a few weeks ago called "A Change of Heart" about 2 MTFs who de-transitioned back to male. It was pretty interesting.

Here is a link to it if anyone is interested:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/26470734#26470734

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ELY_M

None, I never have any therapy.
I went by consent model for both T and top surgery. 



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Krissy_Australia

I had 4 sessions over 3 months for approval for HRT. Ive had 3 sessions over the past year of hrt to see how myself and the family are coping. I need one more session after my FFS for him to write a referal for GRS. All up Ide say about 12 hours of therapy
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Carson

I had 8 appointments over 4 months and I just got my T letter but I could have gotten it a month ago if I had been able to get an appointment with Dr. McGinn earlier.
Call me a cheat but I make my own fate.

http://www.formspring.me/carson1234
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