I know. My brother worked in a center for them. But all?
Also with high suicide rate, if someone is mistreated by society wouldn’t that alone lead to a higher suicide rate?
Well no, not all, but it does seem like too many. Wasn’t helped by being the war that wasn’t really support at home the way prior and later wars were. I remember WWII vets complaining Vietnam vets were whiny. I remember people in the same age group saying they would take off for Canada before fighting a war for big business or becoming a baby killer. It was extra ugly for these vets. No glory, just nightmares.
Yeah, which makes it a bit circular, in a petitio principii way, to then say that trans folks are mentally ill.
Not really. As noted in my quote in Post #16:
Makes sense to me.
I know that, during the first Gulf War (1990-1991), there was a concerted effort to show support for servicepersons who were involved in the war, particularly after they returned home. I saw a lot of yellow ribbons tied around trees in those days. As that was the U.S.'s first major conflict after Vietnam, there was a lot of sensitivity to how Vietnam vets had been treated upon returning home, and the psychological issues that they faced.
If transgenderism is nothing but a mental illness, so what? Does that mean it isn’t real or something?
A lot of mental illness can’t be treated effectively with medication or talk therapy. What do we tell people with such recalcitrant disorders? CHANGE YOUR LIFESTYLE. Personally, I think a lot of people are miserable because they are living in ways they aren’t suited for. If a depressed, married, high-powered salesman thinks he could find wellness in being single and painting houses for a living, I say let him follow these paths. Maybe he’ll find that he was wrong. But it should still be his right to change his lifestyle, especially in the quest of well-being and happiness.
Similarly, transgendered folks should have the right to do what they want tto find happiness. Maybe individuals will discover that they made a bad choice by switching gender, but that will just be a mistake they have to live with. Just like any other voluntary medical decision a person makes for themselves.
I think the problem is that people treat gender as some sacred thing that should only be fooled around for serious medical reasons. If we treated gender as just another aspect of identity rather than as one’s inherent “essence”, maybe it wouldn’t be such a big deal for someone to experiment with their gender in an attempt to find happiness. But because gender is considered a big deal, we don’t want just anyone dicking (hehehe) around with it. It is like we think that would upset the world order or something.
Well, I certainly don’t think it’s pathological. But then I don’t think any mental or emotional condition is pathological unless the person who has it defines it as pathological.
Una has mentioned in other threads that there are still a lot of shrinks out there who think it’s a mental illness; oddly enough, they also look at the numbers and tend to realize that transition is a near-perfect cure for the suicidal tendencies and therefore are more likely to support transition as the only effect treatment.
Wouldn’t defining it as a mental illness also make treatment (aka hormones, surgery, etc) easier to get? It could be covered by insurance, rather than out of pocket.
I don’t see anything wrong with saying transgenderism is a mental illness, (or at least, some kind of medical condition) and that the way to treat it is, well, transitioning. It’s certainly NOT something a person chooses. But being trans often impacts a person negatively, if they’re not permitted to live as the gender they identify with.
I would submit that many crazy people do not know they are crazy.
For example President Trump’s narcissism is almost certainly pathological but he would never admit to it. Not admitting it does not mean it is not pathological or not damaging.
If we mean “mental illness” in a derogatory or pejoratary sense, then no. If we mean it in the sense of, “this person has some confusion that surely a therapist can talk them out of”, then also no. If we mean it in the sense that, “This person has an atypical brain feature that is causing difficulty for their life”, then yes.
Given that doctors have to be involved to correct the issue, it’s certainly in the realm of “illness”. Also given that the two potential methods for fixing it are either to change the person’s body to match their mental image or to change their mental image, it seems reasonable to say that this is something related to the brain and how it processes information.
This is an excellent response, nicely done!
I didn’t say a person could not be CRAZY without knowing it, but being crazy isn’t a sickness or an illness except where the person suffering from it is… well, you know, suffering from it. People who are happy or comfortable in their loonitudinalities have the right to stay crazy and to designate their difference as ‘differently minded’ or ‘proudly batshit and I vote’ or whatever, and to not be categorized as an illness. (Doesn’t mean we don’t lock them up for crimes they commit, or impeach them for them as need be, or avoid them because we find them egregiously bad company or too much fucking wear and tear — they don’t get special treatment in other words!)
We can get them declared incompetent and put their care in someone else’s hands.
Gender dysphoria is a mental illness that can be treated quite successfully by transitioning to the gender one identifies as. “Being transgender” is the cure, not the disease.
Only if you can prove they’re incompetent. Which isn’t dependent on the presence or absence of craziness per se. And there are protections built in, to keep your greedy-ass nephews from having you declared incompetent and helping themselves to your estate when you’re old.
One person’s “delusions” are another person’s perfectly cromulent conceptual conjurings. Competency tends to revolve around “would you know how to get home if the trains stopped running?” and “any idea what year this is, and who the president is?” and “do you know what this hearing is about?”
Let’s do a survey, called “what’s happening on Una’s Facebook feed today.”
Of the first 25 transgender persons on my feed, 8 of them are posting today about a serious problem in their life that is related to being transgender.
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Wife took both kids to Oklahoma, refuses to follow court order of visitation because transgender woman (former husband) is “a destructive influence on the gender identity of the children.” Doesn’t have the money to hire an attorney because they lost their job coming out and has spent $$$ already. Has posted about “giving up.”
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Sex worker, who is having trouble making rent because she was beaten two weekends ago. Used to have a job paying $50k, now works minimum wage and supplements by sex work).
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Transgender man needs a cheaper way to get hormones because he cannot afford them due to being underemployed (was a retail manager before coming out, now works 20 hours a week selling tires.)
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Transgender teen who is afraid to go to school due to bullying. Has posted about “giving up.”
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Transgender woman who is trying to come to grips with her new church (she had to leave her old church of 30+ years due to discrimination when she came out.)
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Transgender veteran concerned deeply because the VA doctor told her Trump might soon make it illegal for them to give her hormones.
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Transgender woman in the middle of a nasty divorce involving kids. Has posed of emotional and physical abuse from her soon-to-be-ex. Has posted about “giving up.”
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Very lonely gender non-conforming person who hasn’t had a second date in 3 years (since they came out) because when they reveal their gender identity on the first date, the other half heads for the hills. Has posted about “giving up.”
Just 8 people out of 25 in a random sampling. Some days it’s so bad I have to tune out, because otherwise it’s overwhelming.
There are two things at odd with each other. One is the brain’s perception of the body it’s housed in. The other is the body the brain perceives. What causes the least harm to the individual to treat?
According to established medical science and practice since the 1960’s, the body.
But then that question has already been answered about 1,000 times on here, for others also wanting to channel Ms. Steinem.