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Started by dj1990, July 29, 2012, 10:52:49 AM
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Quote from: Laura91 on July 29, 2012, 06:56:21 PMMy surgeon just went with informed consent.
Quote from: Tristan on July 29, 2012, 09:34:28 PMmy doctor did not require a letter.
Quote from: Laura91 on August 04, 2012, 07:38:59 PMI will send you a PM.
Quote from: tara tricks on August 16, 2012, 06:02:24 AMI understand SOC and guidelines, but they are just that. I am not espousing a reckless or cavalier attitude toward the process of transitioning and self-awareness, but I am against the use of guidelines as gate-keeping rhetoric when people who have never experienced gender dysphoria tell me what it is and isn't and claim to be experts in a personal phenomenon they have never experienced. /rant off
Quote from: kelly_aus on August 16, 2012, 06:12:39 AMMy gyno is a member of WPATH. She understands very well what gender dysphoria is like, she is a post-op trans woman and she is certainly not the only one.
Quote from: tara tricks on August 17, 2012, 01:42:24 AMI think that is awesome. My first gender therapist was a transwoman, which certainly was an advantage for me. And I am very thankful for those with that unique perspective to be involved in WPATH. I think that has a huge effect.However, the research is predominantly being conducted and has historically been conducted by people who are not trans. The history of trans healthcare was formed by outsiders. This is especially troublesome when the issue is largely phenomenological and there is no objective test or criteria. People like Harry Benjamin were sympathetic but his theory was incomplete and misled transcare policy for decades because of his projection of gender onto his patients and subjects. I am definitely intending not to make these doctors, researchers and healthcare professionals out to be villains, but the fact remains that gender identity and gender dysphoria is poorly understood and is almost impossible to communicate the depth and reason for the pain we feel. Our society, and by extension, the medical and research community is still largely locked into the notion of the gender binary, a construct of gender identity and gender identity expression that quickly seems obsolete after only reading just a few of our stories.