They’re on their own

I have been spending time reading the thoughts and experiences of FTMs in their teens and early 20s, in their own words, on their own blogs. In many cases, once past the initial euphoria of transition, I’m seeing a lot of despair, a lot of “this isn’t how I thought it would be.” Dysphoria continues for quite a few, and side effects from “T” are frightening and upsetting to a lot of young people (things like head hair loss, high blood pressure, and internal pain). 

What strikes me most is how FTMs have been abandoned in many ways by the medical profession, and how all they can really do is share their experiences and try to figure things out with other FTMs. This abandonment is not because their therapists and doctors don’t care. Most of them care very much. These professionals aren’t ogres. They have prescribed medical transition because that is the treatment that is currently seen as the answer to dysphoria. 

But because there are no good, long-term, controlled studies with a large number of subjects on this massive psychiatric-medical experiment, there is a lot that just isn’t known about the longer term experience of girls/women transitioning to FTM. For this reason, many FTM-run Tumblrs act as peer therapy hubs, where they try to advise each other the best they can. When doubts are raised about transition, though, it seems to be taboo to even mildly suggest that detransition might be considered. Mostly they reassure each other that whatever the issue (including serious reservations and regret), anyone who has started transition is truly trans and it is all a normal part of the experience.

gender critical detransition
blackholesandlesbians

sheshouldvebeena-son:

I am fucking terrified of admitting to everyone that I’m detransitioning and leaning towards radical feminism. All my friends will disown me, the part of my family that supported my transition will judge me…
Anyway, even if I don’t tell them now about it, I will still work in my process of detransition. I need to do this for myself.

What this brave person is going through is so hard, and one more reason why I would like my own child to stop, think, slow down….do you really want to “transition” and have to risk losing so much again if you change your mind? Such courage here.

blackholesandlesbians detransition FTM detransition

mensa-malsano:

Alright Tumblr, I’ve been a lurker for quite some time but it’s time I share part of my own history.

I would be 4.5 years on T today if I hadn’t cut my FTM transition short two years into it and reversed the process.

Why did I do this?

It’s a long story. But I’ll start with my childhood. I had…

detransition FTM detransition gender critical parenting
transgendertrender-deactivated2

Genderist Herd

transgendertrender:

never-obey
replied to your
post
:
It’s the Transgender Day of Visibility and my…
You don’t know if they will think in a few years like they do now. Tumblr genderists are really good at creating a herd mentality. There is also a lot of pressure going on (that’s what I heard from many people).

I know. You’re 100% right but I can’t help the way I feel! I blame part of it on wanting a sense of community with people who share my feelings and the other part on pressure to transition because I don’t look like a stereotypical man. It’s lonely and hard out here, honestly. Not trying to make excuses but it’s like damn, ya know?

There is so little support for detransitioners. Check out transgendertrender. Brave guy.

transgendertrender-deactivated2 detransition gender critical parenting

never-obey asked:

Yesterday I found an interesting reddit post regarding people who transitioned as children: A lesbian (at least she says she is one) had a swedish trans woman lover who transitioned at the age of 14. Now at 26 her lover detransitioned because he now looks at gender in a different way and doesn't identify with being female anymore. He also regrets what he has done. I guess in the future - sadly there will be many people who regret having transitioned as children.

I don’t see why, as a society, we have decided that people understand themselves well enough as young teens to make permanent changes to their bodies. Question for the adults reading this: Do you still feel like the same person you were at 14 or 15? 

The statistic I’ve seen is that most (something like 80%) kids who have gender dysphoria, if left alone, will grow up to be gay or lesbian. I’ll try to find the link, but I think it’s a pretty well known piece of data (which the trans lobby never acknowledges).

detransition teen transition trans kids gender nonconforming kids gender critical parenting
nomoreftm-deactivated20160620

Anonymous asked:

Eagerly awaiting the day when the majority of non-GID suffering, non-transsexual, t-taking females will look back on their "genderqueer" days with eye-rolling embarrassment & a sad self-deprecating laugh. I know I already do, and from the looks of things, I suspect many will be joining me. Hate to make light of these things (bc it's way more painful, dangerous, sad, complex) but "oh yeah I experimented with testosterone back then" is totally going to be a thing. Sigh

answered:

nomoreftm-deactivated20160620 detransition gender critical parenting
twentythreetimes-deactivated201

Long-Term Effect of Testosterone

twentythreetimes:

When I went on testosterone, I experienced anger and a lower frustration threshold that everyone insisted was normal and temporary. These changes began suddenly within the first few weeks on testosterone and have remained ever since. This was an intense shift from my normal mood and behavior. Prior to taking testosterone, I had never felt the sort of burning rage/frustration that became everyday on T. People insisted that this was just part of the “puberty” stage of HRT. I remember talking to two friends who went on testosterone a little while before me and one quoted me about 2 - 3 months and another more like 6 months for how long that stage should last. Everyone has a different opinion, but no one has facts.

A year and a half into HRT - after anger management therapy, a 5-times-a-day short meditation routine, self-medication with depressants like weed, alcohol, and benzos, extensive self-reflection, individual therapy, breathing and grounding techniques, daily exercise, various other coping techniques, etc - the anger and frustration were still unbearable.

Since going off of testosterone, my anger and frustration levels have been much improved but they are not how they were before T. Being as I am over two years off of testosterone, I would call this a long-term effect that testosterone has had on my brain. It’s very depressing to feel frustrated at something random and to flash back to being on T, and to know that this feeling originated in that “medication.” 

My anger is something I can control now, but it still feels almost the same inside as it did on T. It feels incredibly scary. I am much better at not expressing** it like I used to, so others aren’t scared any more but I still have to experience this horrible, consuming feeling on a daily basis and hide it at the same time.

**(I’m referring to anger that is entirely inappropriate. Anger that even I can identify as being irrational in the moment, and yet I feel it. Anger that is mean and hurtful and ugly.)

I’ve worked really hard to be where I am now. Staying in this place takes conscious effort every day. I wish I had known that testosterone could do this, and that it could be something that didn’t stop when I stopped taking it. It wouldn’t have been worth it. I am deeply ashamed of how I changed in this aspect of my personality and I really hope this goes away someday. 

twentythreetimes-deactivated201 detransition FTM testosterone gender critical parenting
butiwasntaboy

Not transphobic

butiwasntaboy:

“Passing” on life

appropriately-inappropriate:

stubborn-string-bones:

4thwavenow:

butiwasntaboy:

I have a friend who recently announced that she is transgender. Now in her early 20s, for several years she was out as a lesbian, but set her sights on straight women who were unattainable and eventually broke her heart. (She is a beautiful girl, and even…

This is stunningly transphobic all over, but I’m going to talk about one specific thing that keeps coming up in these discussions.

Over and over I see lesbians and other women who are middle aged or who otherwise did not grow up in an environment where transition was a possibility saying ‘If transitioning was an option when I was a child I would have chosen it and I would have regretted it.’

And I am very, very tired of hearing it.

Because you didn’t grow up in an environment that allowed you to make a decision to transition. You didn’t face the knowledge that people knowing you are trans would greatly increase your health and safety risks. You did grow up facing the knowledge that people knowing you are not heterosexual would greatly increase your health and safety risks.

And I absolutely understand the impulse to apply your own experience of ‘wanting to be a boy’. It would make everything so much easier than being pressured to conform with girly behavior. It would be so much easier to find intimacy. The circumstance you were in was the wrong one, so the only other alternative seemed like the right one.

But this approach grossly misunderstands the issue. Being trans isn’t about day dreaming about ‘if I was born with a penis I would be more comfortable’. It’s about ‘I am not a woman’, or ‘I am a man’, or ‘I am a woman’, or ‘my gender does not conform to the colonially imposed white binary’ or something else entirely.

Using a non-trans experience of only having friends who were boys and hating dresses and having ‘masculine’ hobbies and liking girls who liked boys is not a valid access point to the experience of real trans people. Lots of trans men aren’t attracted to women. Lots of trans men are not gender conforming. Lots of trans men like dresses and want to have children and share interests with lots of other people, regardless of gender identity.

It is wonderful that the OP has come to accept her body and be grateful for the things it does. I am very happy for her. But I am deeply disturbed by the idea that if everyone else just tried hard enough they too would discover they were women, because it’s not true and it does very real harm.

“Over and over I see lesbians and other women who are middle aged or who otherwise did not grow up in an environment where transition was a possibility saying ‘If transitioning was an option when I was a child I would have chosen it and I would have regretted it.’
And I am very, very tired of hearing it.”

Now imagine how tired they must be of saying it.

That doesn’t negate the fact that they meant it, or that the societal conservativism and hatred of lesbians wouldn’t have pushed them into it.

Since most people with gender dysphoria just end up being GNC gays and lesbians, I’d say they have every right to speak on it.

And after all, you’re saying they don’t understand the trans experience—but that’s awfully presumptuous of you.

How do you know what they’re feeling?

Thanks for your comments. I wasn’t sure if I even wanted to address this accusation of transphobia, because it seems like that word appears whenever someone speaks against transition at all. A phobia is a FEAR, and I am absolutely not speaking from a place of fear. In today’s climate, people like to say that if you don’t jump on the transition bandwagon, you’re afraid. How?? If I was suggesting that people not keep Black Widow spiders as cuddly pets, because it could be dangerous and destructive, would that make me arachnophobic? Would I therefore fear all spiders?? Obviously not. Not even close.
I’m simply saying that I understand and acknowledge body dysphoria from a firsthand perspective, and choose to keep my body as it is. I mean, I could transition tomorrow if I wanted to. WHAT’S STOPPING ME?? Certainly not fear…..
Maybe it’s…..(call me crazy) uh…..wisdom and life experience??
My blog is not about criticism, it’s about CONTEMPLATION. I think I’ve written things in a way that makes that perfectly clear. I want to give others like me something to think about, because I absolutely relate to this experience. Ultimately, decisions about our bodies are ours to make, and when so many voices encourage rapid decision-making, I think there should be many voices like mine offering other perspectives. Not from a place of fear, but from a place of unconditional love.

butiwasntaboy detransition gender critical not transphobic doing woman different gender critical parenting