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#51
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Obviously the only reason for the DSM isn't financial, it's a diagnostic manual, but a psychiatrist really only uses the DSM codes to get justification for the treatment and drugs he's going to prescribe. A practicing psychiatrist for example knows that a person with "schizophrenia" is going to fall within an extremely wide spectrum and the DSM is really just a rough way of saying "he's roughly under this category, and people under this category are customarily treated in this way." The DSM doesn't actually define the condition, the condition existed before the DSM was ever created. Quote:
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Homosexuality falling off the DSM isn't necessarily proof that it isn't a mental disorder, but only proof that it is not treated by accepted medical practices as it isn't seen as a problem. Now, I think homosexuality is a problem as many homosexuals have a variety of problems. Namely they clearly have sexual dysfunction and delude themselves that various acts with people of the same sex is a form of sexual intercourse when we've evolved to reproduce by having sexual intercourse with the opposite gender. Homosexuals also often have various emotional and mood problems along with depression. I think we should be looking into treatments and cures for homosexuality or at the very least let's understand what combination of genetic or developmental conditions leads to the affliction so we can eventually eliminate it in future generations. However for political reasons it became unacceptable to try and treat homosexuality, and part of that of course is because the treatments people were using back when it was in the DSM-III were crude, ineffective, and based on grave prejudice. That isn't a reason medical researchers (away from a clinical setting) shouldn't be looking for solutions that could make their way back into medical practice. Quote:
It's simply not a honest position to tell me "well, what I'm asserting might be in one of those articles which are superficially about treatment but not about the definition of GID as a psychiatric disorder, but I'm not going to indicate which ones might hit on that and instead insist you fork over money and read all eighteen articles." I'm sorry but no, you presented those arguments to support a claim before I ever posted in this thread: that Cecil was pessimistic about success rates of treatment for GID. If you now want to say those articles also support another claim, that GID isn't a psychiatric disorder then you need to actually give some justification for that and specify exactly which articles support that assertion. Now further, I have actually not specifically said we should never perform SRS. I have said nothing on that topic in this thread, in the past I've had different opinions on it but basically ultimately have concluded if nothing else works then it should be used. However I don't view it as a "solution" anymore than I view a wheel chair as a solution. A wheel chair provides mobility, absolutely, but I still want people looking into a solution for various afflictions that put people in wheel chairs so that some day they can be fully ambulatory without wheel chairs. What I would actually like to understand is why people do not think it is a psychiatric disorder, what do you think GID is if it is not a psychiatric disorder? Do you think a normally functioning human brain will tend to believe, and truly feel that something about their body is "wrong" and that they are "really" something else? Do you really believe it is more likely that the body is somehow "wrong" (even though its function is perfectly normal) and the brain is right? For virtually every other scenario like that, except when talking about people who believe they are a different biological sex, there is no controversy: the brain is wrong and objective reality is right. Only when people are believing things in contravention to reality about their sex do we say objective reality is wrong and the mind is right. Biological sex is not based on feelings or thoughts, it is based on your genetics and your physical attributes. The whole concept of biological sex exists to describe all the physical differences in species with multiple sexes. These differences are almost entirely all physical and relate to physical capabilities and aptitudes. Humanity is the only species we know of with cognition and rational thought on par to even have issues like this come up, but in human society we have "gender" which isn't quite the same as biological sex. "Gender" is essentially the acceptable roles and behaviors for people of the two sexes in their given society/culture. Since it is defined socially it isn't really a biological feature, although just like in some species the female is more likely to raise the children and etc human societal definitions of gender have mapped to some of the behavioral impulses of the different sexes. (And those behavioral impulses are why I say the differences in the sexes when looking at different species are almost entirely physical the behavioral aspect is obviously not strictly physical.) I think it entirely possible for a healthy human brain to have a gender self-identity in contrast to the social normal. But I do not believe a healthy human brain will insist and believe, against all evidence, that their physical body is of the wrong sex because the whole concept is ludicrous. There isn't a right or wrong sex, you are the sex you were born as. It's weird and strange for a man to dress and act as a woman, but if a man does that because of their gender self-identification, and has no desire or belief that they are "really a woman" then I don't necessarily think that person has a brain abnormality or a disorder. They're weird, a little out of sync with society, but it doesn't "seem" intrinsically abnormal in and of itself. But those people are a far cry from the ones who insist the only way to be normal is to mutilate their genitals. The hallmark of psychiatric disorders is they cause functional problems, and that is why I can see someone who just likes to dress as a woman being fine and someone who wants to have their penis removed and their pubic region mutilated to give the illusion they are women as having a disorder. There is a long history of homosexuals being subjected to cruel treatment, abuse, and even being sent to prison for their actions. That is wrong, homosexuality while I believe it should be considered a sexual disorder in the DSM to this day, does not harm outsiders and appears to be mild enough that people with the disorder can mostly live productive and happy lives if allowed to do so. For that reason mistreatment of homosexuals is wrong, but because of this historical mistreatment homosexuals have formed a "community of the oppressed" and have extended that community to include people with GID. Because homosexuals (understandably) are hyper-sensitive to mistreatment and abuse and discrimination, the ones who are active in "LGBT" issues will be prone to insist that under no circumstances can you think of someone with GID as having something "wrong" with them. These people (and you are obviously one of those people) would probably rationally recognize GID is a psychiatric disorder but you feel that doing so is somehow incompatible with your view on rights for all LGBT people. I have no such bias, I think it is clearly a psychiatric disorder but I also don't feel any of these people should be mistreated or discriminated against. It is not a violation of anyone's rights as an individual to tell them the truth: they are not a woman, they are a man. It isn't a violation of anyone's rights or even immoral to say "I hope we can find a cure for this affliction some day." Especially since I'm not saying "deny them SRS", I'm saying I consider SRS to be like a wheelchair. It works, but it's not ideal. |
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#52
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glbt-xyz-lsmft-wtf
I really don't think they should be considered mentally ill. I just wish that gays and lesbians had a category without all the rest!
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#53
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I spent a decade in the S.F. Bay area, so I saw a fair number of transgendered folks, pre- and post- The ones that were happy were the majority. They talked about being women (just didn't meet many F2M) and how they loved it. They rarely talked about their pre-condition. The unhappy ones almost always talked about being transgendered, even post-op. They were obsessed with being transgendered and I doubt anything could have made them happy. Yes, those folks had a mental problem.
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#54
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That being said, if I as a woman see another person who appears to be a woman, who is acting like a woman (whatever that means!), then I'll accept that person as a woman. I don't know what that person might have in his or her underwear and I don't want to know. Any more than I know whether this female-appearing person has intimate relations with a man or a woman. It's none of my business. Why would I feel threatened unless the other person was holding a weapon and giving me a menacing look? And if that was the case, I'd probably feel threatened regardless of their real or assumed gender. |
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#55
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So on the subject of treatment, I've more than addressed that with my lengthy post. I'm not researched enough to debate the root cause and existence of GID at this juncture. Thus I referred you to the articles because I don't have the time to review all of them again and focus on the cause/validity of GID. That's not dismissal of you, that's saying before I get into that subject I need to do some more legwork, and perhaps you can look into it yourself. I believe the topic is addressed in at least a few of the papers, but it is not a primary focus of them. Quote:
This should clarify things. Last edited by Una Persson; 08-18-2012 at 11:21 AM. |
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#56
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But it's like Cecil said. Someone who undergoes sex reassignment surgery is not harming themselves to the same degree as someone who cuts off their forearms for some loony reason. But here's an analogy for you: Someone who has surgery to change his eyelid shape, or bleaches his skin, out of identification with another ethnicity or race, isn't even doing himself as much physical harm as SRS would. But, there's a difference between saying, metaphorically, "I was a Norwegian trapped in a Vietnamese body," and actually believing that you were always a literal Norwegian trapped in a "false" Vietnamese body. At some point, yeah, there's some break with reality, and that should be acknowledged, even if it makes some people unhappy. |
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#57
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The concepts of "mind" and "brain" have been used interchangeably in this thread and in opposition to the physical. I would point out that the brain is physical, an organ of the body as much as genitalia. If DNA, genitals, breasts, length of femur, circumference of pelvis, etc. can all vary between sexes and within the same sex, why not the brain?
Last edited by don't mind me; 08-18-2012 at 02:22 PM. Reason: one tiny space |
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#58
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosex...and_psychology And the shift in the 70s was due more to activists and protests than the kind hearted nature of psychological associations, I've seen a more in depth article on the declassification and there was considerable pressure from outside the field. I don't think it means much either way what the DSM says as psychology/psychiatry is as subject to social pressure and bias as any field(I don't believe homosexuality or transexuality are mental illnesses). |
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#59
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I think this from Broomstick deserves repeating:
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#60
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Anyone ever find it odd that at least in the USA at the same time a lot of the public freaks out at the idea of genital surgery, they also would wade through a lake of lava to make sure their male infant is circumcised?
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#61
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It's mostly just easier to stick to talking about one because otherwise every post contains a laundry list of every possible procedure in the interest of becoming "inclusive." Also, breast implants are such a common procedure I'm kind of meh about them, they're just not as complicated as severely altering a piece of the body. I didn't know that there was a such thing as face alteration surgery that would make the face more masculine/feminine, however, I always wondered if they did something like that. |
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#62
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You can now, as I'm sure you know, test for down's syndrome and most mothers who receive positive tests choose to abort. This isn't immoral, but a simple recognition that if they are looking at giving birth to a significantly handicapped child it simply makes sense to not allow that child to exist but instead to try again. Mental abnormalities contrary to normal function like GID and homosexuality would quickly disappear if we could test for them, no doubt about it. Quote:
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#63
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If someone had breast enhancement surgery, would you be equally caught up in arguing that they shouldn't be fighting the biological reality of their smaller breasts?
Frankly, I have no opinion either way on whether gender dysphoria is a mental illness or not. Studies appear to show that the best treatment (in terms of reduced suicide rates & depression) is gender reassignment surgery, and really that's all that matters. I really don't see why "biological reality" is such a bugbear for people. Gender is a very complicated topic, and I don't find it wholly unreasonable that someone could have a more "female" brain in a more "male" body. Just as intersex people aren't binary male/female in that their reproductive organs don't fall within a clearly defined male/female boundary, it seems reasonable enough that brains could fall on a similar spectrum. I think Broomstick hit the nail on the head, in that peoples instinctive reaction to surgery on the genitals seems to be disgust for whatever reason. Breast enhancement or a nose job is more accepted, but just as the thought of height increasing surgery (which involves breaking the knees and inserting a wedge which is increased in width gradually) triggers my wince reflex, so too does the thought of genital surgery for many people. |
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#64
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I certainly don't agree that homosexuaity would disappear if it could be "tested for" nor that it is "undesirable." And in case it matters I am not homosexual.
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#65
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#66
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Whether it's a "psychiatric disorder" or a "birth defect" I think the end goal here is to alleviate suffering to the extent we are able to do so. It's all very well to go on about how, as an analogy, a wheelchair isn't an ideal solution to the problem of spinal cord injury but the fact remains it's the best solution we currently have and to deny that to people is needlessly cruel. At present what do we have to offer a transsexual? Endless therapy which won't cure, only give them "coping skills" which may or may not be adequate? Sexual reassignment treatment which is admittedly imperfect? Really, what else is there? Those are the two choices open to them at present, those are likely to be the only choices for the foreseeable future. Nattering on about how great a "real cure" in the brain (or whatever) would be is pointless when you're faced with a human being suffering right now, today, this minute.
Sure, discussing genital surgery is disturbing. So is the notion of taking a liver out of a dead person and stitching it into a live person but we now do that routinely. A LOT of medicine, when you really think about it, is creepy/disgusting/unnerving... even horrifying. Again, I say what is most important here is taking dysfunctional, suffering people and making them as happy and functional as possible. It doesn't matter how that state came to be, whether genetic, psychiatric, hormonal, or whatever. If that entails something I, personally, might find disturbing or disgusting, well, maybe I should just suck it up a little for the sake of my fellow human being. After all, I only have to deal with it for the brief period of time I am with that person - they have to deal with and suffer their condition 24/7, 365, with no time off, forever. I don't have to understand their mental state, or even be particularly happy with their situation or how they handle it, but I do owe them, as a fellow human being, some effort to not make their lives harder. |
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#67
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I'm hesitant to judge or make generalizations here; transsexuals are struggling with a problem I don't have and it's difficult for me to relate. I've known quite a few over the years, though, and a few things about them really stand out:
--The transsexuals I've known, I've met through my involvement in theater and comic books. They are drawn to fabulism and fantasy to a much greater degree than other people. --They are, on an individual level, incredibly disorganized. This could explain why, despite their high representation in literary and creative fields, there is no organized movement or school of transsexual artists or writers. --This is the one that gets me: They are not attracted to each other. M-to-F transsexuals I've met tend to be attracted to women, but only to those of the born and bred variety. There's evidence of a problem here, but just not quite enough to do much about it. Last edited by Krokodil; 08-19-2012 at 03:18 AM. |
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#68
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Let me respond to some of these things in a way which is not meant to be argumentative, but to provide a different viewpoint. And give me a convenient excuse to editorialize.
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And that may be desirable for the individual, but it's a big problem for the community and activism, when its most successful and well-adjusted members who do transition fully are steadily dropping out. Quote:
One can then say "well, lesbians and gays are an oppressed group," but the problem is the level of oppression which lesbians and gays face pales next to that which transsexuals face. Transsexuals live in a world where they are placed in the lowest caste of society. They can be made fun, parodied, and abused in ways which few would ever think to do to any other minority group. I've seen polls where 6 of 10 American adults have said they feel "unsafe" around transsexuals, and 9 of 10 would be too terrified to let their children be taught by a trans teacher. I've also seen polls where fully 1/3 of LGB folks say they would not ever want to be associated with that embarrassing "T," and even locally here in my parochial city, it's not hard to find such things as lesbian women's activities to which no, transwomen, no matter how well they may or may not pass, are not welcome. And some gay men are very hostile towards transmen, resorting even to physical abuse. On this message board on the 12 years I've been here I've seen several prominent posters who otherwise seem intelligent and reasonable people curl their electronic lip in open disgust at transsexuals, usually to the silent approval of the majority of members here. Those sorts of shared painful life experiences create a very tight (yet sadly temporary) bond which makes you tend to see other transsexuals as part of your family, rather than dating material. That having been said, I have known transsexuals who have dated each other, and had successful relationships, it's just very rare. |
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#69
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Una, do you think that early sexual abuse has a potential to cause transexuality?
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#70
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A significant number of children and teens are raped or sexually abused, and yet the prevalence of transsexuals in the United States is still somewhat rare, between 1 in 3,000 to 1 in 10,000 for transwomen, and between 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 30,000 for transmen (it's very difficult to get solid numbers due to the fear of exposure and the desire for "deep stealth"). Most transwomen I speak to have had their sexual assaults happen in their mid-late teens, when they started expressing a different gender identity and someone decided to take advantage of that, or punish them for it (and on an aside, one really has to wonder about the extremely crippled mental state of a homophobic male who is so homophobic they resort to committing homosexual rape to punish a transwoman.) Most transwomen speak of having their gender dysphoria manifest well below that age, typically from age 4-8). And although I haven't looked into that topic specifically, from what I can recall of the research I've read on the subject, I'm not recalling that as being strongly pushed as a cause. I have seen editorializing that because transpeople behave outside of gender norms for their birth sex, they could attract the attention of pedophiles and sexual predators, who may be more likely to molest or rape a willowy boy with long hair, than a pumped-up testosterone-laden soccer jock. In addition, transgendered youth may give off body-language and verbal signals of submissiveness, confusion, and uncertainty, which may then paint a giant virtual target on them of "this is someone I can molest and they're less likely to fight back and definitely won't tell anyone." So I'm not dismissing that it could be a cause in some cases, or a trigger, but I'm not thinking it's likely. |
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#71
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I agree with Una. Besides all else, I've seen a few studies that prove we can reliably cause transexedness in rats and mice by manipulating a mother's hormones during pregnancy. Although no such experiments have been done on humans, I think that we're looking at a very similar cause.
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#72
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I recall seeing studies that girls who were born late in their mother's lives (and thus exposed to a different that usual ratio of hormones in utero) are likely to be androgynous or butch, if not necessarily transgendered.
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#73
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I will note that "birth defect" and "psychiatric disorder" are not necessarily mutually exclusive. |
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#74
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#75
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We "assume" the mental one is right because a) we can change the physical more effectively than we can change the mental, and b) because one's mental state is a key component of self-perception. In most cases, someone who views himself as a man would not want to be made to view himself as a woman. It would completely change the way he see himself, and probably would make him feel like he was discarding a part of himself. Conversely, such people tend to see sex reassignment surgery as corrective. With depression, there is nothing physical to change; the only way to treat it is by changing the way someone thinks -- either via therapy or chemistry. Powers &8^] |
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#76
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In the statement, "I am a woman trapped in the body of a man", who or what is the "I"? Doesn't the statement imply a separate but indwelling identity? A "soul", then? Was this being "there" at birth, as we typically think of a soul? How separate is this being?
When philosophy and/or metaphysics and/or spirituality rub up against science, it generally works to the disadvantage of both. When we cannot "know" the answer, it is important that we accept that and stop looking, due to threat of finding the "answer", when we know there isn't one. Let it be, and judge not. For myself, the notion that one has an identity that is at variance with one's body is an absurdity. But if someone cannot live, cannot function, cannot partake in life because they believe that this is so, let's just do what we can. We can surely counsel caution, we can warn that once you go down the Road of the Scalpel, there is no turning back. But if they are already miserable, and sincerely believe that this form of mutilation will render them capable of a reasonable life, well, why the hell not? If they don't have a life now, what are they risking? Out of billions and billions of people, just about every possibility is realized. There simply has to be some people who will have the surgery, and have a near miraculous experience. There also has to be people who will have it and be worse off than they were. We can improve our surgical techniques. We can improve our understanding of sexuality and brain functions. We may find that there is a malfuncton in some of these case that is treatable and reversible by non-drastic means. All of his we can do. But we cannot ever know if there is a soul with an identity within a body. The "I" that Descartes talks about. Let it be. Not our call to make. |
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#77
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On castration anxiety: that has to play a big role. There are very good evolutionary reasons for men to protect their genitalia, so it's not surprising that these inclinations would bleed off into other attitudes. Quote:
Nice presentation of the research, btw. |
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#78
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[quote=Krokodil;15399623]I'm hesitant to judge or make generalizations here; transsexuals are struggling with a problem I don't have and it's difficult for me to relate. I've known quite a few over the years, though, and a few things about them really stand out:
--The transsexuals I've known, I've met through my involvement in theater and comic books. They are drawn to fabulism and fantasy to a much greater degree than other people. QUOTE] I'd like to add to Una's response to this point. I've attended quite a few Star Trek conventions and one of the things I've noticed is that the con audiences seem to have a much higher percentage than the population at large of folks I would characterize as "outcasts." Many are severely overweight, socially maladapted, or at least just generally geeky. (I'm not casting aspersions. I most definitely count myself in this group.) Sci fi cons appeal to us on a couple of different levels -- they are set in a different reality, not the one that judges us and finds us wanting, and thus, as mostly outcasts from the rest of society, we tend to be more accepting of each other's flaws, issues, and shortcomings. In other words, transsexuals may not be drawn to these venues because of something about their makeup, they may be drawn to them because they find a greater degree of acceptance among kindred souls. |
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#79
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One challenging question just might be if identity stands apart from something like schizophrenia, or bipolar disorder, where we acknowledge the brain chemistry is significant but also disfunctional. If we're willing to call brain chemistry disfunctional in one case, why not in another case? Whether that is transgenderedness, or homosexuality? Quote:
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Or are you trying to argue that the only sex we should be having is for reproduction, and nothing else? Does that include masturbation?Okay, I will grant you that masturbation isn't really sexual intercourse, mostly because if fails on the grounds of "inter" and "course". Quote:
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But suppose for a moment we did find some biochemical system that could account for the condition, something that could be treated by meds. Then it becomes a real issue to discuss whether a person is ill and should try treatment for the biochemical state, or if they should be preserved how they feel and the body changed to fit. Quote:
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You know how there's always someone in your social group who calls you by the nickname you had in elementary school, even though you've tried to dump it? Or always brings up stuff that happened in the past? That can be rough when those elements are all about things you want to put behind you and not constantly deal with. And also, once you're trying to pass, you don't want your new friends and acquaintances aware of your old you. You don't want them asking why you are friends with so many trans people, because it puts your identity in question. When you are trying to live as a woman, the last thing you want is people still reacting to you like a man, or a freak. |
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#81
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There is no need to bring metaphysics into this. The I you speak of resides in the brain- a brain at odds with chromosomes and genitalia. |
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#82
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That's a good point about self-perception, and it cuts straight to the part that I find interesting. With disorders that we do have therapeutic and chemical treatments for, it seems standard to accept that the patient's perception is not normal and needs to be corrected. That doesn't appear to be the case here, and I find that intriguing. |
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#83
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#84
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Now it is true in all the aforementioned cases there will be some people who may be close enough to straight or cisgendered on the respective sexual preference and gender spectrums that they can cope and lead a "normal" life. But generally speaking, the efficacy of psychotherapy for transsexuals is via coping strategies, not a cure. I mean, it filters down like this: * Start with a group of transgendered persons of size A. * Some portion of A are close enough to central on the gender spectrum that they can cope, if they want to, with forcing their birth and mental genders to be the same. call that group "B". This group seems to be very small. * Of the remaining group (A-B), some portion, called C, will be able to cope with their transsexuality via counseling, group therapy, and coping strategies. This group is modest in size. * Of the remaining group (A-B-C), some portion, called D, will be able to cope with their transsexuality via hormone treatments. In some cases only anti-androgens are used. In other cases low-dose estrogen is used. But in most cases, anti-androgens and high-dose estrogen is used. This group is fairly large in size, I believe it is the largest group. * Of the remaining group, (A-B-C-D), some portion, called E, will be able to cope with their transsexuality via SRS. This group is also fairly large in size. * Finally, a small number of the remaining group (A-B-C-D-E), called F, will still be unable to cope, and will require some serious psychological intervention. This group appears to be very small. If one wanted to be as cautious as possible, proceeding to anti-androgens alone appears to be a fairly "safe" process. While anti-androgens may lead to gynecomastia and could result in prostate disorders, they will not radically change the body like high-dose estrogen will. And some transsexuals are quite happy on anti-androgens alone. The rest...need to walk further down that hard road. |
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#85
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Males also find the Candiru fish to be the stuff of nightmares and instinctively feel inclined to protect their groin when it is described. Quote:
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#86
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The answer to the question is simple, elegant, and carries the weight of law. Secular and religious law. And of course the bylaws of the medical profession. Yes, a transgendered person in any area of their journey are by definition mentally ill. We are now only speaking of those humans born XX or Xy as the vast majority of humans are. For the record we are aware that there are others who are born with conditions leaving them somewhere in between. Those who through no fault of their own, as accidents of birth, were given both sexual organs of each of the sexes. Leaving these people truly trapped and faced with certain choices, or non-choices to be made. But right here, right now, we are speaking of transponders. Who were given one body, male or female. One otherwise healthy body through which to go through life. There are some people, transponders , who are unhappy with their bodies sexual equipment, and subsequent hormones. They look like men, but feel like women in their hearts, and brains. The question was, is this way of feeling mentally ill or normal for certain people. The question clearly has an answer in the DSM IV. Which classifies this belief and thinking as a mental illness. There are those, to be sure, who will argue that the publication has been wrong before and could be again? I'll save you the suspense they are right. It's been wrong many times and no doubt will be again, just not today! Today, wanting to mutilate your body in order to match a misguided vision in your head of what you should look like is wrong. So wrong that it is a decease.I know, it's not that simple. Michael Jackson had many mutilating surgeries to look more like the one gloved picture in his head. And so did his whole family evidently. I myself just spent $17500 getting my teeth capped to fool the world into thinking that I have young beautiful teeth. We all do it a bit. Rogaine, steroids, spin classes, botox, lasic surgery, face lifts, breast augmentations, it's a $200 billion a year business. Making the best of what we have. But transgendered is different for one really big reason. The afore mentioned treatments are to accentuate, or make the best of what has been given to us naturally. Transgendered Fails the sanity tests because the sufferers wish to have a mulligan on their whole body. The want a do over with all new equipment. That's not just neurotic, not just vain, not just narcissistic, but crosses over to mentally I'll. But why? Scream the tree hugging,liberals? Because no matter what you do the change will never be complete. You can lop off body parts, add them, or reform them. And with a butt load of hormones you maybe can get to a passing familiarity to the sex you are going for. But no matter how many surgeries, no matter how many collagen shots, no matter how many make up tricks you learn, your chromosomes are fighting you and winning every single day. Chanell#5 doesn't change the XY chromosome pairs in every cell in your body. And one day, when there are no more surgeries, no more Botox shots, no more $ for hormones, you are still a man. The coroner will describe you as a post op woman, but a genetic man. Therefore he checks the male box. A whole life of pain, shame, surgeries, botox, collagen, waxings, and god knows what else, you are either a man or a woman, and you aren't fooling a soul except for yourself. So IMHO if you have thoughts that make your appearance as a male or female repugnant to you. And you find it necessary to spend all of your time, money, and goodwill, getting your sexual assignment changed, cuz it doesn't jive with your view of yourself. You have a mental illness and you should explore all the treatments avaiable in that vein before you begin lopping off body parts and going to silicone parties. Just my humble opinion.
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#87
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Transsexualism as a mental disorder
Greetings. I am a male in a relationship with a MtF transgender. We have been together for 12 years, so suffice it to say I have had more contact with the TG population than most. First, we have to understand what we are speaking of is a taboo in the West. It is a threat to "reality" as perceived by many, but part of the reason for science is to challenge our assumptions. What has been found is that the hypothalamus, which supports and drives the endocrine system (something quite important to sex and gender) has been shown to act as the gender TG's feel they really are. In the end, what is in your brain trumps the body parts. Most people have mind-body agreement, but about one in thirty thousand do not. The problem is, because of societal pressures such as acceptance and "false positives" i.e. people that are more transvestites than transgender, it makes the understanding of the situation difficult. Most TG's don't want to be TG's, and many take on (oh, we'll keep this to MtF's which seem to be the ones that grab attention) super masculine roles almost in the attempt to prove to themselves their own masculinity, but come to terms with themselves later in life though many admit to feeling "different" at an early age.
It always fascinates me that society acts as though the male gender is the default gender. I go to restaurants where the waitresses wear ties as part of their uniform and no one views it strange. A woman in a commercial can wear her husband's clothes and it's considered "cute" she's thinking of her man. Men wearing feminine clothing is constantly used as a comic effect. It is my assertion that the hostility towards transgenders is twofold: xenophobia, and the fear of emasculation. See for reference http://www.gender.org/remember/about/core.html. The sad part is many men want to have sexual relations with TG's, this just don't want to be seen with one. I know escorts that make in two days what it takes me two weeks to make. People that make $600 then go to lunch. But the same people will slam TG's to go along with the group rather than admit their attraction. It's rarer to find me willing to state it publicly than to find transgenders themselves. The "mental illness" portion is a bit loaded. It conjures people that do not function in society, have a complete lack of mores etc. and from first hand experience that is a perception that simply is not true. Is there something happening that is very rare in their brains? Yes. Is it something that is totally debilitating that should make people go on full panic alert? No- but that's what is going to happen. We hold no illusions because it is a very tough pill to swallow. Of all things, gender should be simple and clear, right? Unfortunately, things are more muddled than we ever suspected. |
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#88
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Also, thanks for the breakdown. I guess what I really wonder about is whether we'll be able to devise more effective treatments in the future and affect the respective size of those groups. I suppose the question of whether this is a physical or mental problem can be revisited if we do. I'm also wondering, what do we currently do for that last group who don't even feel better after surgery? |
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#89
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Incidentally I just finished watching "Becoming Chaz", the story of Sonny & Cher Bono's kid's transitional experience. It's something you should all consider seeing.
What do people mean when they say "mentally ill"? If anyone in this thread who is responding "yeah they're mentally ill" would care to elaborate, are you asserting that "holding this belief about themselves is a reliable indicator that there is a chemical or neurological brain dysfunction at the biological level"? (That is what psychiatry touts as the definition of "mental illness") That doesn't seem like a defensible hypothesis without a shitload of data that no one is citing but I'd like to hear your evidence on that. Or perhaps you mean it metaphorically / less literally, e.g., "holding this belief about themselves means that the things they believe can be discredited as nutty thoughts". If that's what you mean, that doesn't sound like legitimate discussion tactics to me. How is that different from "If you believe this, you are WRONG because that's just so wrong it's WRONG so you're WRONG"? Last edited by AHunter3; 08-20-2012 at 08:06 AM. |
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#90
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One of the things I find irritating in such discussions as these are people like vikinghorn6 who seem almost gleeful to point out just how sick and delusional transsexuals are. Funny thing, though - I have never met a transsexual, in real life or on the internet, who ever denied the at-birth configuration of their genitalia, or had the notion that SRT would somehow change their chromosomes, or that it would perfectly replicate a particular gender's body. In that sense, at least, they are NOT delusional. They are very aware that their physical bodies are NOT want their mental genders are, that is in fact the source of their distress.
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For that reason, the criteria for whether or not someone needs treatment isn't "do they have a problem/delusion/issue?" but does it interfere with their ability to function in life? Some with a severe phobia in regards to flying in an airplane doesn't require treatment unless that phobia in some way impairs their ability to function. If the person has no need or desire to fly somewhere then no treatment is necessary. On the other hand, someone who flies as a necessary part of their job might seek treatment for a mild anxiety about flying. Given the extraordinarily high rate of self-harm and suicide among the transgendered, this would seem to be an area where treatment is needed. As already noted multiple times, our options are limited. We can't change their brains/minds. We can change their bodies, albeit imperfectly. Right now, the question is does SRT actually improve their situations or not? No one, including transsexuals, is denying that their situation is unusual or dysfunctional. No one is happy to be a transsexual. There really is something wrong. That's why transsexuals seek treatment and often times spend enormous amounts of money on treatments they know won't "cure" them, only, if they're fortunate, relieve some of their suffering and distress. Quote:
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Second: no one is suggesting that transsexuality is "normal". It's not. Transsexual people are painfully aware they are not normal. The issue isn't whether or not they're normal, it's what to do about their condition. I'd argue that their condition does not in any way justify the abuse they all too routinely suffer, it does not justify discrimination in housing, employment, or access to medical care, and it doesn't justify other humans treating them as shit. They are human beings and deserve to be treated as such, and not as second-class (or worse) citizens. Quote:
Yes, there are a lot of instances where dentistry and cosmetic surgery is used to enhance or alter rather than restore function, but BOTH of those categories of medicine originated in restoring function, not changing appearance. You might have gotten your teeth capped to make them more beautiful. A former co-worker of mine got hers capped to repair the damage done by an abusive former husband. I've known several people who got extensive dental work not for vanity but to repair the damage caused by accidents, by jaw cancer, and other things. Steroids have a role in helping burn patients heal. Spin classes aren't "fake", they're real exercise that really improve health. Botox is used to treat cerebral palsy and was originally approved to treat eyelid muscle spasms that caused functional blindness. The techniques used in face lifts were pioneered to treat burn victims and facial deformities. Breast implants are used to restore a more normal contour after cancer surgery. Everything you mention is used not just for vanity but also for real medical problems that cause real suffering. So, once again, the situation is not as binary as some people would like. The categories smear together. The world is more complex than small minds would like. Quote:
But, by that rationale, we shouldn't allow women who've undergone mastectomies to have breast reconstruction surgery because the new breasts will never be "complete", they will always be obviously fake once the clothes come off, with visible scarring, in many cases with either no aureola or nipple (unless a crude approximation is tattooed on). They aren't real, those women are just fooling themselves, and when they wear clothes they're trying to deceive everyone else. We shouldn't fix cleft palates because, you know, 80 years later when an autopsy is performed the person doing it will be able to see the surgical scars and know this person has lived a "lie" of having a normal, functional mouth all their life instead of an approximated restoration. ![]() Quote:
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When I worked at a clinic, way back in the dark ages of the late 20th Century, all of the MtF transsexual files were kept with the other women's files, their records were marked as "female", they used the female facilities when they need to pee or poo, they were addressed as women by the staff, and the only time it came up was either during gynecological exams or when asked "when was the last time you menstruated?", the answer being "I don't, being a transsexual". Yes, some medical people - far too many if you ask me - will snigger in private at the sad transsexuals under their care, but it would HIGHLY unusual for medical people to go around telling transsexuals they're "really" this or that to their face. They may not agree with how it's treated, but then, medical people face stuff far, far worse than what transsexuals do to their bodies. Genital surgery under a competent doctor is pretty damn tame compared to what some people will do in the way of self-harm. If you don't know what I'm talking about consider yourself blessed. Quote:
They DO "fool" a lot of other people. I've met transsexuals that completely pass as their chosen gender. I'm certain I've met a lot more of them who I didn't know were such, because it's not a topic for casual conversation. I'm certain that YOU have met women who were born in male bodies that you'll never know underwent transition. I think you, and a lot of other people, fear that you will be "fooled". Sure, we all see the middle-aged transitioning men-into-women who, unfortunately, will always look like a man in a dress to one degree or another. You don't see the one that transitioned in her early 20's, before a lifetime of testosterone exposure, who looks more authentically female than many women who were born as women. And, by the way, thanks for lumping in every woman who uses botox, collagen, waxes her legs, shaves, or "god knows what else" into the mix. You do realize you just called about 95% of women delusional and attempting to fool, right? What next? Make up is the practice of witchcraft? Or do you think the average woman doesn't have body hair and doesn't use make up? Quote:
You say they should "explore" all treatments available - how do you know they DON'T? Other than they make, in the end, a choice you find repugnant? No one gets SRT on a whim. No one. It's a multi-year process at best. |
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#91
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But if I had to place numbers on it...going from my gut, not citations....I'd say 95%+ are very happy and see serious improvements on hormones, and are still taking them. |
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#92
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#93
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Just want to say thanks to Broomstick and Una Persson for the wonderful job of fighting ignorance here. I hope those who badly need this information are still reading.
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#94
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Powers &8^] |
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#95
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For a mental disorder like schizophrenia, on the other hand, we can see that it's clear the person's thought processes are not human-typical. His or her mind is operating in such a way as to be a danger to him- or herself and to others. Powers &8^] |
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#96
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2) Describing the delicate and typically highly effective procedure of SRS as "lopping off body parts" pretty much is the code words for "transsexuals are icky." And silicone parties have little to do with transsexualism. I don't even know where to start with that one. Really, Broomstick rebutted most of your points better than I. |
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#97
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Thank you, Una.
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*I know that schizophrenia is so much more than just auditory hallucinations and that they aren't always violent. |
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#98
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So, I have a question as a bisexual, intersex, transwoman. When do I have the right, assuming I had the audacity, to publically debate the validity of anyone else's identity and their right to live their lives in an authentic manner? Now, with all due thanks to theose who are supportive and work hard to Quixotically bludgeon the trolls with things like facts, and I do thank you from the bottom of my heart, but placing us under some public microscope is unwanted, unnecessary, and insulting.
I have no idea what it is to be a straight male, despite the conditioning that my parents duly imposed upon me. I cannot presume to make decisions for or parse the motivations, intentions, and decisions of them, because I am not one. Nor can I assume that they are monolithic in any way. And yet they stand all around me, pointing, debating, insulting as if I were not there much the same as happens to women and people of colour and other so-called minorities. Go away already! Debate things which pertain to you, and leave me and my ilk well out of your judgements. Now, try that with the rest of the world, and throw in some fuzzy-warm feelings of fairness and equality, and BOOM!, there's world peace. Back to reality, though, for those who cannot believe in a reality any different than what they can experience, try seeing in the infra-red with your naked eye, try smelling a danish from a mile away - underwater, try unaided flight and navigation by feeling the subtle variations of our planet's magnetic field. What? Can't be done? No, because it is not within your ability to. I am not suggesting that we are different species, but that there are aspects of the greater reality that you can not experience, and may seem wildly impossible, but are nevertheless very real for those who do experience them. Just accept it and move on. Nobody wants to take YOUR penis off (but if you keep talking like a fool it might not sound like a bad idea), so be happy for that, and move on. Last edited by Mellifluous; 08-20-2012 at 12:54 PM. |
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#99
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I second this.
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#100
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A Few Thought Experiments
If you woke up tomorrow in the body of the opposite sex, how would you feel? What would you be?
If I took your brain out and kept it alive in a jar, what would you be then? If I removed all grey and white matter from your skull except for enough brain stem to keep your lungs breathing and your heart beating, would you be alive or dead? |
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