Quote from: Rabbit on April 11, 2012, 08:56:45 PM...
If they want to put in some safeguards to help protect. That is fine... a year of hormones needed before surgery? Sure.
But, needing a mental screening before you can make your own choices?
...
This makes more sense. Now you're talking about a very specific facet of a process, not the entire thing as a whole.
I personally resented the feeling of having to "prove" to someone else's satisfaction, professional or not, that I was feeling what I was feeling. It felt like I had to justify who I was and subject my understanding of myself to someone else's scrutiny and judgement. I railed against it, initially.
When my therapist actually submitted a diagnosis, recently, she very intentionally communicated to me that GID was the only diagnosis she could determine, and that this was a good thing as it would make forward progress along my transition plan far, far easier. The immediate sense of relief and involuntary validation that I felt when she told me that was confusing at first, then pretty damn reassuring. I was not misinterpreting myself, I was not filling in the wrong blanks when identifying how I was feeling, I was not confusing one thing for another. I was gratified that she was thorough enough to have run down a list of things that my presentation to her could have been, and discounted them all as not applicable to me. In her words, "Now we can not be distracted and really focus on making your transition as successful as we can." It is kind of hard for me to resent that.
The fact that I felt better about it after the fact doesn't mean my initial resentment was misplaced or that I was wrong for feeling that way. No-one actually enjoys being judged when the result is so important.
For me, it simply meant that it was something I could deal with, gain perspective on and overcome in order to achieve a more important goal, which is moving forward.
Not for one second did I feel she was Gatekeeping. I'd prefer my health professionals to be as comprehensive as humanly possible and as thorough as the situation warrants at all times.
YMMV.
I know there are crappy therapists and crappy Docs out there, and my heart goes out to anyone who has ever had the misfortune to be on the receiving end of obstruction, prejudice and ridicule from those who are supposed to be helping and do no harm, but every single experience is just that. Singular, unique to that person.
That single experience can be shared as a cautionary tale, which is important to those seeking greater understanding and appreciated in that context.
I just feel strongly that presenting those personal, unique experiences as transgospel and pseudo-fact to label all things related in a negative light is dishonest and poorly done.
-Miki