Quote from: Naturally Blonde on July 19, 2012, 05:11:07 PM
I really don't understand some the recent posts in Susan's? I was born transsexual and my brain is and always has been clearly wired female which is why I couldn't adapt to being male throughout my life. The addition of estrogen didn't change my already female brain.
The common--and somewhat biased, imho--view is that a TS is born that way. I believe that everyone has male and female parts in the brain, just like (nearly) everyone has male and female parts on the body.
The penis is really just an extra-large clit, the scrotum is really just the vulva, the testes are really the ovaries, etc.
All parts are present in the early development of the fetus, and it's only the introduction of large amounts of hormones that cause these parts to either ascend or descend (ovaries -v- testes), enlarge or remain (penis -v- clit), or development of mammary glands (which both M and F's have; but only estrogen causes these glands to actually produce milk).
It is reasonable to think that the mind/brain symbiosis have both "male" and "female" elements, it's just a combination of nature (hormones) and nurture (social development) which "create" a certain type of brain. Obviously the basic structure would be there based on hormones, but the "wiring" of the brain is well-known to be influenced
strongly by social indoctrination (i.e., learning).
So, a TS could sense "being a woman" from his/her earliest memories, but it is also possible--indeed, far more likely--that any cross-gender tendencies would be stifled as part of any reasonably strict society. These induced suppressions could be released at some point in the future (due to any number of reasons, traumas being only one) and the person would perceive themselves as "becoming" transexual
at that point in time. But, if the prevailing custom is "Thou must be trans from birth, or thou art not trans", then a later-in-life TS would have to fabricate an "I remember being trans when I was 7 years old" story.
Better to have the truth of each transition; from these we can gain actual knowledge, not dogma.