Neuroplasticity: the gaping logic hole in the transgender house of cards

One of the key discoveries of neuroscience in the late 20th and early 21st centuries is the extraordinary malleability of the human brain throughout the life span.  Neuroplasticity—the ability of even an adult brain to change firing patterns and regenerate neurons in response to experience—is yet another aspect of settled human knowledge that is being ignored in the rush to diagnose children and adolescents as transgender and in need of medical intervention.

But you don’t even need the latest findings in neuroscience to poke a giant hole in transactivist logic. Long before scientists established that adult brains are so malleable, it has been known that kids’ brains are far more neuroplastic than those of adults. It’s why a child can recover near total function after a brain injury or stroke in a way an adult cannot. It’s why kids become fluent in multiple languages with no “foreign” accent. Their brains have to be plastic–how else could they learn and change throughout childhood?

Those involved in transgender activism and pediatric treatment—who say they have science on their side—have a standard line about puberty blockers, the use of “preferred pronouns,”  and all the rest of the childhood gender dysphoria dogma: “It won’t harm the child.  Only the truly transgendered will choose medical transition after puberty. The rest (the majority) will choose their natal sex.” (Of course there are no published studies on this, although there is plenty of data showing that most gender dysphoric kids grow up to be gay, lesbian, or bisexual if simply left alone by “gender specialists” and scared parents.)

But the assertion that pediatric gender therapists and MDs are doing no harm (like the rest of the flimsy rationalizations they use) flies in the face of basic, settled neuroscience.

Because of neuroplasticity, those kids who have been “identified as” transgender and treated as the opposite sex throughout childhood will be influenced and molded by that experience (as they are molded by all the other experiences they have). In effect, they will learn the idea that their bodies “don’t match” their gender via their childhood experiences. Unlike any other transient childhood fantasy (e.g., that they are actually Batman), they will be repeatedly validated in the idea that biological reality–their actual bodies–is mistaken, and must eventually be changed to match their subjective feelings. What they think, even how their brains are wired, will be influenced by what they are told, and how they are treated by everyone around them. What would happen if a child with body integrity identity disorder (BIID) was repeatedly validated in the idea that (say) their left leg was “wrong” and should eventually be amputated?

Every other field of science has taken neuroplasticity into account in decisions about best treatment. For the current treatments for gender dysphoric kids to make any sense at all, you have to believe that the brain is fixed, unchangeable from birth, and completely impervious to life experience. In other words—the exact opposite of what reams of brain research and clinical experience have taught us in the last several decades.

This antiquated notion of a static brain creates such a huge logical hole in the pediatric transgender rationale, the entire flimsy edifice should eventually collapse if scientists and clinicians ever get the courage to base their treatments and recommendations on actual evidence and science.

                                         *******

Postscript: Think I’m wrong? I’d love to see some researchers step up to do a longitudinal study comparing two groups of adults who were: (1.) Dysphoric kids who were sent to gender therapists and called by their preferred pronouns, given puberty blockers, and otherwise validated in their idea that they are “trapped in the wrong body”  and (2.) Dysphoric kids who were supported for just being themselves, regardless of gender stereotypes, as the sex and in the bodies they were born with, with no messaging or validation from “specialists” or parents that they are the opposite sex. How many remain dysphoric as adults and move on to medical transition after childhood?

Who’s recruiting? (Hint: no one.) Time to get started!

gnc kids gnc teens trans kids trans teens gender critical neuroplasticity transgender gender dysphoria neuroscience transgender research transgender guinea pigs gender nonconforming teens gender nonconforming children

“Last month, in a program specifically addressed to medical students, Dr. Johanna Olson, director of the LA Children’s Hospital transgender children clinic, admitted that she has been “skipping the blockers” and placing children as young as twelve directly on cross-sex hormones, starting with her very first patient…

Prior to her work transgendering children Dr. Olson …used her medical credentials to testify against a …platform to lower the voting age. Dr. Olson testified that the brains of those under eighteen were not yet competent for the complex decision making involved in choosing a political candidate. “

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A 17-year-old is too immature to vote, but has the wisdom to make a medical decision that will require lifetime treatment, and permanently alter the brain and body. 

Ok….

gender critical medical transition transgender Inc.

This article was published in 1925. I’m working on another, longer post on the subject of medical fads, but for now:

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Fashions in medicine we have, and shall continue to have. But it requires a lens tinted with humour to recognize them and examine them with the proper degree of detachment…

…Once they get started, however, one can see how they keep going. The chief factor is the herd instinct, the desire to be in the swim, to be “up to date. ” Further, the public demand for a treatment that has become fashionable, helps to keep it alive. 

Fashions are also maintained by the cures which they effect at the outset of their career, for there can be no doubt that every fashion does effect some cures. It does so, we know, through the power of faith and suggestion, which is the meaning of Trousseau’s well known advice to a patient, ‘Take this while it is still curing.’ But by and by when the novelty has worn off, the cures cease. “ …The history of medicine is full of the growth and decline of fashions,…

One should not envy the fashionable doctor, rather should one wonder at him. He leads a life of slavery … His position, too, on a pinnacle is always precarious. He has, it is true, his little day, but he is apt to wake up one morning to find that his worshippers have stampeded en masse overnight to some newer shrine of the fickle goddess Fashion. 

gender critical medical transition
eve-made-the-right-choice
krismichelle429:
“transcynical:
“notyourqueertheoryposterchild:
“incorrectusage:
“explosives-b:
“ urls-areoverrated:
“ Can we talk about this
”
This is why gender compass type talk is bullcrap and hurtful. If you struggle living with a female body...

krismichelle429:

transcynical:

notyourqueertheoryposterchild:

incorrectusage:

explosives-b:

urls-areoverrated:

Can we talk about this

This is why gender compass type talk is bullcrap and hurtful. If you struggle living with a female body day to day, but have no issue with engaging with femininity and crap, you shouldn’t have to live with that struggle when transitioning would give you a significantly better quality of life. This is why “cis” cannot mean “conforms to stereotypes of one’s birth sex.”

we’ve done it kids the trans umbrella no longer contains people with sex dysphoria

What the actual fuck is this shit

This just in: trans people aren’t really trans. Any problems you have with the configuration of your body are your problem. Medical transition is only useful as a correction for gender non conforming people. What the actual fuck? This is the exact opposite of progress.

Every time I’ve read a post like this it’s the same thing: people twisting themselves into cognitive-semantic pretzels trying to “explain” or prescribe or justify some identity that must be claimed or denied. And the means always justify the ends: Trans=good! Often, the thread starts with some 13-year-old asking the Tumblr experts who and what to identify as.

I just don’t understand what happened in the last few decades. Poisoning of the water supply seems as likely an explanation as any.

I recommend reading all the added notes on the thread for full effect. There’s even one that says, with no sarcasm, “This is why I’m still confused about gender identities.” Ya think?

eve-made-the-right-choice gender police thought police mindfuckery who poisoned the water supply gender critical
radwitchescauldron

Physical dysphoria: a journey

radwitchescauldron:

radwitchescauldron:

First of all, I want to thank some folks who have been talking to me behind the scenes, redressalert, twentythreetimes and especially atranspaige, who encouraged this specific post.

I’m demographically old for Tumblr, so my outlook on gender issues is somewhat different. But I want to make a few things clear: I have experienced fairly severe dysphoria - to the point where I asked to have “everything cut off” when I was 17 and discovered breast reduction surgery was even a thing. That’s coming up.

I was raised in an intensely Christian community. I knew the word, “Faggot” well before I knew what it meant - and had heard it linked with atheism. I frequently wished I could somehow trade lives with my brother - and frequently took things he was given to indoctrinate him into masculinity. His barbells? Mine now. I whined and fussed to go on Boy Scout hikes and turned my nose up at FHA and Girl Scouts alike.

And around about 5th grade, my world came crashing down. Suddenly, I had hips, breasts, stretch marks, cellulite, a rounded tummy (but still a slim waist - I was shaped like Mae West when I was barely recovered from my obsession with dinosaurs.) I BLED. It felt like I was living in somebody else’s body -and I hated that body and hated myself.

Any woman can tell you what came next -public harassment - even rape threats. From grown men. Strangers, even. At 10 years old. And school went from a struggle - most of my teachers already considered me too “forward” for a girl, especially an Appalachian girl - to a nightmare. I still remember the rape threat from a classmate who included graphic detail of what tortures he wanted to inflict. I remember the names they called me for daring to be the first girl to hit puberty. And worse, for developing into such an exaggerated shape.

Reporting was useless. Teachers told me to ignore it, to be more modest, to be quieter, more proper. By seventh grade, my anxiety was so bad that my parents took me from doctor to doctor looking for a cure. But nobody asked me about the hatred that curled within for my body. By 8th grade, I convinced my school to require very few classes of me -I spent most of my time, including recess and often half of lunch in the library where I felt safe.

In high school, despite my dearest hopes, it didn’t get better. I was frequently suicidal, and when I tried talking to a preacher about it, he blew me off. Then - remember how I felt “safe” in libraries? Yeah, right up until a classmate sexually assaulted me in the stacks. I had been taught well - I knew exactly what to blame - that horrible body. It had to go. Boys pinched, shoved, grabbed, ignored every boundary but one. The girls restroom was safe. Until a pedophillic coach invaded while we were changing. And every indignity only further encouraged my body hatred.

I would wake up at night, unable to understand why these slabs of meat were attached to my chest. I fantasized about stealing my father’s chainsaw to cut them off. I wished I could get rid of my hips as well, remold my body into a different silhouette. As I was considering college (and being told by the same preacher who blew off my suicidal ideation that I should avoid secular colleges as they would make me an atheist) my parents told me about a surgeon they had heard about who could make breasts smaller.

I was so incredibly excited. I wanted them gone and this surgeon would do it in a way that my religious community wouldn’t object to - from the moment I entered the surgical area, there would be no men. (When you think about preserving safe spaces for women, remember that many women are religiously required to be modestly separated from men, and when you allow male bodied persons into those spaces, you exclude many, many women.) I would be allowed to do this! And then I could be modest and men would stop wanting to rape me! Hallelujah!! Even if I still had hips and stretch marks and small hands and feet, at least one of the things I hated would go away!

I went to talk to the surgeon (with my mother in the room, of course.) And I got up my courage. I asked her (even with my mother in the room!) to cut everything off. All of it. Gone. Please. She acted like she hadn’t heard anything, but told me that some people had unrealistic expectations of surgery and were a bad risk. She went on to tell me that her method, which was brand new would mean I could probably breast feed my babies and my husband would still be happy with my breasts, though part and possibly all of them would be numb.

After my first request, I didn’t have the courage to tell her I wanted neither husband nor babies.

I went through surgery, and she removed over 2 liters of tissue, but had to stop when my body betrayed me once more by going into shock on the surgical table. I was still a D cup. I recovered from the surgery and went to a secular college, where I discovered that men still wanted to rape me. I attempted suicide a couple times, rescued only by my own ineptitude. I went to make another attempt, this time by a more definitive method, only to have what I can only describe as a moment of spiritual epiphany at the last minute. I turned myself in to the student health center and informed them I was suicidal.

I wound up going back home and spending a couple years working and getting mental health care. During that time, I “discovered” feminism was more than a curse word in the mouths of the preachers. I went to community college. I realized I was bi, and my first friends in the community were lesbians. I left the church and left off calling myself a Christian. I eventually tried college again. I shaved my head. I gave up on female expectations for clothing and behavior. I learned martial arts: karate, judo, fencing. I learned to ground myself during depressive and dysphoric episodes. I accepted that no matter what I did to my body, none of it was changing the problem of males feeling entitled to my body. So I decided to fight the problem instead of my body.

I learned that I could be a woman who likes math and science. I could be a woman who is not submissive. I could be a woman who is strong, with broad shoulders and muscular arms from weightlifting and martial arts. And that womanhood was going to have to accommodate me. Because people will never stop assigning me to that category.

Which is why I find the concept of calling myself ‘cis’ ridiculous. Of course I don’t identify with the idea of womanhood as presented by our culture. It is absolutely toxic. But neither am I ‘trans’. I have not transitioned. Could not when I wanted to. Feel that it only encourages my body hatred to dwell on it. I am me.

4thwavenow
this is something more of my story if it will help your anon. I utterly empathize with being unable to transition. To the anon: feel free to hit up my ask box if you have questions for me.

Thank you so very much for sharing your story, radwitchescauldron.

radwitchescauldron anon question physical dysphoria gender critical alternatives to medical transition FTM alternatives to transition
roslynholcomb-deactivated201803

roslynholcomb:

mumtears:

4thwavenow:

twentythreetimes:

I feel bad for your situation. I hear what you’re saying when you tell me that you’re worried about your daughter and you don’t know what to do. I hear that you care and that you’re searching for answers.

I don’t really have anything more to offer you than what is already on my blog. I have my…

THANK YOU so much for writing this. You have really helped me learn and realize some things I was blind to. Of COURSE this would hurt. How could I not see that before?

I would like to delete the probably hurtful reblog you refer to in your eloquent post, but perhaps it’s best I leave it to serve as an example of what NOT to do as a gender-critical parent? I very much appreciate you taking the time to write this post.

The reason mothers like us reach out to you is because we are seriously worried about our young, confused, brainwashed, gender dysphoric daughters and we have difficulties finding resources for them which won’t continue to push them in this direction. We want our daughters to hear from BOTH sides, even though the one that reports ‘all positive’ ftm information is currently the loudest.  While we are sad that you went through this, we want our daughters to LEARN FROM your experiences (much like the Mayday TV show does re airplane crashes). You are amazing, courageous womyn who have been through and are going through a lot and sharing your stories is important.

23xx brings up a good point that I don’t see raised enough, what about the clueless therapist and the negligent doctors? I’m astonished and appalled by the (sub)standard care trans folk receive. It’s one thing when you’re talking about a 45 year old man who if he doesn’t know better that’s on him, but these are kids. And it’s a misnomer to say they’re being experimented on, because experiments, even ones done on animals have stringent protocols. I remember even ten years ago, doctors were reluctant to diagnose young people with mental disorders because of their youth and the way so many disorders mimic one another in young people. For instance, ADHD and bi-polar disorder can look very much alike in kids. Just yesterday I saw an article in npr touting the efficacy of puberty blockers. Puberty blockers FFS! So not only are they happy to diagnose kids these days they’re willing to prescribe something that will shut down their natural body processes as treatment for a mental disorder. 

And could someone please explain to me why, in this litigious climate these doctors aren’t being sued to hell and back? What the hell is up with that? 

In the Orwellian world that we currently live in, it’s almost considered malpractice NOT to supply these treatments. The recent teen suicides are widely attributed to the fact that these kids were not allowed to medically transition right away.

We need to keep talking about all of this the way we are here and try to expand the discussion into other forums so that more people will feel able to speak out. That’s the only way anything is going to change. I’d be interested in hearing opinions from others about ways to be more proactive. The only way the course of history changes is when a large enough group of people forces it to shift in a new direction.

roslynholcomb-deactivated201803 gender critical
daybeams

daybeams:

words-have-meaning:

evilfeminist:

appropriately-inappropriate:

the-fly-on-fire:

appropriately-inappropriate:

flannelvandal:

plansfornigel:

FTM- The truth about hormones

Really important discussion of some seldom talked about side effects of HRT

really good look at the bits of hormone therapy that aren’t mentioned a lot.

And even so, he’s short-sighted. He’s worried about thirty years down the road—so, fifty. What’s going to happen in sixty years down the road?

It’s a scary, scary thought.

hopefully 50-60 years there will be a better treatment of the side effects if they follow him that long

I really hope so. This scares me. They’re untested hormones being given off-label to young females that mutate their bodies into those of post-menopausal females thirty or fourty years ahead of schedule.

After two years. Say the average FTM takes T at eighteen. By the time they’re 20, their bodies have started to fail. After five years, what then? Fifteen?

I think of trans men like Buck Angel and I cringe, because that’s years and years of hormone therapy there. If two years does so much damage, I can’t imagine twenty.

And the risk of cancers is so so high. And trans men—females—already have some of the shiftiest health-care stats. It’s like playing Russian roulette with your health, and I’m deeply concerned about this community in the future.

My estimate? Cancers, early-onset osteoporosis, the works. It’s gonna be really awful. And I don’t even want to think about the kids who are put on puberty blockers, too. Their bodies will have never known natural hormones, and that’s REALLY not good.

Well hell, look at what happened to Buck Angel

Until I got an infection in my uterus! What happened was that the use of the testosterone over 15 years started to make my cervix and uterus atrophy. The cervix basically closed and so anything inside my uterus could not get out. Who knows how long this was going on for, but one day I just got so sick that I had to be rushed to the emergency room. They had no idea what was wrong and did exploratory laparascopic surgery. They did an emergency appendectomy and they saw the infection in my fallopian tube and uterus and found that my cervix fused closed. I was really, really sick and spent 4 nights in the hospital. I needed tons of antibiotics to get over the infection.

They said I would have to now have a hysterectomy because now that I have had that infection it will always have the ability to come back.

So here I am now going into surgery because of the fact that the doctors basically had no idea what long term use of testosterone does to the reproductive system! DUH!! But I listened to my doctors. Well, that is why I am documenting this procedure for the benefit of others. So they do not have to go through this horrible experience as well.

I always said that there was no reason to get a hysterectomy. Well now I am saying something different. I don’t think you need to do it right away, but if you plan on staying on testosterone longer than 5 years, I would recommend looking into getting this done just to eliminate the chance of this happening to you.

One other thing, they found some lesions on my cervix, so now they have to do a biopsy during the surgery. If the lesions are malignant then they cannot do a laparoscopy to remove the uterus through my Vagina—they would have to do an open procedure.

Trans people like to talk about the “violence” of being misgendered.

What about the violence of having your body chemically mutilated because your concept of gender won’t allow you to simply dress and behave against stereotype?


Be who you want to be but don’t put yourself at risk. There’s nothing wrong with you. You’re beautiful/handsome and healthy the way you are. Let people’s concept of gender catch up to you, the way you are; you don’t need to mutilate yourself to keep up with people’s concept of gender!

SO important. People who take hormones and have difficulties and people who choose to detransition are silenced in the trans community, particularly ftm people. We need to listen to their experiences and learn. That’s honestly the least we can do.

daybeams gender critical testosterone effects FTM testosterone
radicallyhaley

Anonymous asked:

Lmao what are y'all going to do to stop us scary trans and nb people ? Yell at us about chromosomes until we're like 'oh lol jk this thing I have believed in and sacrificed normal life and have no choice in actually isn't real bc someone on the internet said so'? You feel sorry for us? Bc tbh I feel sorry for TERFS being so close minded and set in their ways that they can't even consider out point of view and the struggles and oppression we face for something we can't choose. Sound familiar?

radicallyhaley answered:

oh i consider them. i just don’t think that means males can be women.

and yes, i feel sorry for nonbinary women who feel like they have to identify that way because post modern gender theory makes them feel like they aren’t “female enough” to be women.

i always love these anon criticisms because it shows you don’t care about your beliefs enough to put a face to them. i 100% believe what i say which is why i have no problem writing posts and tagging them.

The Anon keeps talking about “choice.” We don’t choose our feelings. But we do have a choice as to what we do about them.  And if we apply some critical thinking to those feelings, they might just change.

Dysphoria is a feeling. The only choice for dealing with the feeling of dysphoria isn’t testosterone and surgery.

radicallyhaley gender critical
4thwavenow

4thwavenow:

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…

twentythreetimes said: why would you think doctors care?

I misspoke. All therapists and doctors don’t care, I’m sure, but I know some do. I’ve talked to a few, and I’m acquainted with one MD sociallly who is a “gender” specialist. She is, in general, a kind person and believes she is doing the right thing. In your experience, would you say that most of these professionals actually don’t care? It’s not a rhetorical question–I’d really like to know your thoughts. 

I have talked to one psychotherapist who is very gender critical, but feels she has to hide it because every other therapist she knows has bought into the narrative, and to openly challenge the current paradigm could put her career in jeopardy.

4thwavenow gender critical detransition