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Re: DeTransitioners Flood Social Media With Testimony, Photos: "The Darkest Time In My Life"

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KWills

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Mar 14, 2022, 8:54:05 PM3/14/22
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On Mon, 14 Mar 2022 18:49:23 -0400, "Barb May"
<bar...@nonofyourbusinessx.tv> wrote:

>People who formerly began gender transition procedures flooded social media with
>their de-transition stories on “DeTrans Awareness Day,” sharing stories of
>depression, anxiety, and fear.
>
>The testimonies come amidst national controversy over whether children should be
>able to obtain such procedures. In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has drawn
>fire for calling transgender treatments for children “child abuse.”
>
>Twitter users who spoke out Saturday said that they began taking testosterone as
>soon as they turned 18. These users, many of whom are biological women, describe
>how they did not feel that they “fit in” in high school or middle school and
>sought to find answers on the internet.
>
>“I started taking testosterone at 18 because i was tired of not fitting in with
>other girls so thought i’d make a better man instead,” tweeted user Allie. “An
>autism diagnosis later and it all makes sense now.”
>
>Allie, who does not use her last name to preserve her privacy, told The Daily
>Wire that “there’s a big problem right now with how hormonal therapy is being
>given as a rushed treatment for gender dysphoria in young people.”
>
>That hormonal therapy “takes precedence over explorative therapy that might help
>dysphoric people understand why they want to be the opposite sex,” she added.
>
>Detransitioner Michelle, a biological woman who told The Daily Wire that she
>sought to transition to a man, shared that she began transitioning in 2010 at
>age 22 and detransitioned in 2020.
>
>“I grew up as a tomboy who didn’t fit in,” tweeted Michelle. “I was keenly aware
>of this by the time I was 7. I was too loud, too bossy, too impulsive, too
>emotional. The girls I made friends with felt conditional, like they would leave
>me the moment I did something wrong (and they did).”
>
>“For years, I struggled with this,” Michelle continued. “I might have been set
>in my ways, but I certainly wasn’t mean. I had no idea why it felt like so many
>people just immediately didn’t like me. My parents enrolled me in social skills
>group therapy when I was 10.”
>
>Michelle said she began to discover activist gender conversations on the
>internet, how her mental health was suffering, and how she became suicidal.
>
>“I was vulnerable, desperate, and young,” tweeted Michelle. “On top of that, I
>had people online telling me ‘if you think you’re trans, you are’ and ‘cis
>people don’t think about gender this much.’ I heard the ‘only 1% regret it’
>statistic, and I thought I’d be fine. That could never be me.”
>
>She continued: “What reasons did I have to not trust them? Why would so many
>people tell me things that weren’t true? Why would my doctors go along with it
>if I weren’t really a man? Why would therapists risk my mental health if they
>weren’t sure whether I would benefit from transition?”
>
>“That is the state of activist-controlled health care,” said Michelle. “There is
>one narrative that is acceptable, and every person who does not fit that
>narrative — who regrets transitioning, who returns to living as their sex, who
>talks about the potential for issues — is told to shut up.”
>
>De-transitioner Helena Kerschner shared that when she was 15-years-old,
>“lonely,” and hated her body, she got “sucked into gender ideology online.”
>
>“My school encouraged me and i was easily prescribed a high dose of testosterone
>at 18, and it was very damaging,” she continued, adding the hashtag
>“DetransAwareness Day” alongside two photos showing her at 19 after attempting
>to transition to a man, and her at 23.
>
>“This is not rare,” Kerschner added.
>
>“Why are we doing this? Why are we talking about detransition,” detransitioner
>Twitter user “Watson” asked.
>
>“Because it is important,” Watson continued. “Because it is *happening.* The
>stories will not be easy to accept – medical scandals never are. But that
>doesn’t mean they should be ignored. Quite the contrary, actually.”
>
>Watson cited a 2021 study by Dr. Lisa Littman, physician-scientist whose
>research is focused on gender dysphoria, showing that out of 100 detransitioners
>who participated in the study, 60% detransitioned after they became more
>comfortable identifying as their biological sex.
>
>The peer reviewed study also found that 49% of that group detransitioned over
>“concerns about potential medical complications from transitioning,” and 38%
>detransitioned after “coming to the view that their gender dysphoria was caused
>by something specific such as trauma, abuse, or a mental health condition.”
>
>“The majority (55.0%) felt that they did not receive an adequate evaluation from
>a doctor or mental health professional before starting transition and only 24.0%
>of respondents informed their clinicians that they had detransitioned,” the
>study’s abstract says.
>
>“There are many different reasons and experiences leading to detransition,” the
>abstract continues. “More research is needed to understand this population,
>determine the prevalence of detransition as an outcome of transition, meet the
>medical and psychological needs of this population, and better inform the
>process of evaluation and counseling prior to transition.”
>
>Another detransitioner and outspoken commentator Grace Lidinsky-Smith shared
>photos on Twitter depicting her transformation.
>
>“On the left: me shortly after top surgery, 2017,” tweeted Grace. “This was the
>darkest time in my life. On the right: me recently. Life goes on, life gets
>better.”
>
>In a February 2021 SubStack piece, Lidinsky-Smith shared that no other decision
>in her life has impacted her “so indelibly, or caused as profound regret, as my
>2017 decision to transition FTM: female-to-male.”
>
>“As I write this, the mastectomy scars are twinging on my chest,” she continued.
>“4 years later, I’ve grown older, wiser, and way more cautious. But the scars
>remain.”
>
>“When I realized that being a trans man wasn’t what I wanted anymore, I fell
>into despair,” Lidinsky-Smith wrote. “My body was permanently changed. The
>surgery was the hardest thing to deal with. The scars hurt. I missed the feeling
>of having an intact, unscarred body. I was convinced my life had been ruined.”
>
>Regret can be crushing for detransitioners, Lidinsky-Smith wrote.
>
>“But somehow, eventually, even after the most catastrophic of mistakes, life
>goes on,” she said. “It’s still your only life, and you still have to figure out
>how to survive. It took me a while, and I learned I could survive.”
>
>“Above all, I just want to say: you can come back from this,” she continued.
>“People have lived through a lot more. I am not a guide, I have no special
>wisdom, but I come to you humbled, scarred, and holding out my hand. You can get
>through this, and build a life.”
>
>
>https://thepostmillennial.com/revealed-activist-chappelle-history-racist-tweets

How can you 'detransition' when it's physically impossible to
'transition' in the first place without a full DNA transplant???

This 'gender' horseshit is a redundant m/f distinction...biological
sex gives the only valid m/f determination.
--
KWills
Strategic Writer, Psychotronic World Dominator and FEMA camp
counselor.
https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3618/5747904676_1e202191d3_b.jpg
All hail the taco! http://www.taconati.org/

Scientific (she/her) ⚧

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Mar 30, 2022, 6:33:00 PM3/30/22
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Detransitioning is transitioning back to be cisgender. Of course if you
went beyond social transition and have taken hormones, then some of the
effects are not reversible (like breast development in MtFs), and if
you've got surgeries, then you're out of luck.

You can be socially seen as a male if you ever decide to go back. There
is a small chance I might regret my transition, but that was calculated
against several years of trans feelings and certainty about irreversible
changes.

Blue Lives Matter

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Mar 30, 2022, 7:17:13 PM3/30/22
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It was your choice to become a social reject. As such, I doubt you'll
ever have any social relationships beyond other loony toon trans
freaks, who are few and far between.
Message has been deleted

Scientific (she/her) ⚧

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Mar 31, 2022, 1:08:03 PM3/31/22
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Well, trans people are accepted if you are in a decent part of America.
If you are trans and live in deep South, you probably won't survive
long. There are a lot of jobs you can find in trans-friendly states but
if you're that ignorant, stay in your red shithole, please.

Blue Lives Matter

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Mar 31, 2022, 2:28:31 PM3/31/22
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On Thu, 31 Mar 2022 17:08:00 +0000, Scientific (she/her) ?
It depends on what you mean by "accepted." Most people, myself
included, have no desire to interfere or object if some guy wants to
cut off his dick and balls and walk down the street in high heels and
lipstick. If, on the other hand, you expect me to see you, or treat
you as the clownish personae you try to project, you are mistaken.

Women who pretend they are male are not quite a clownish, but I still
want nothing to do with them.

KWills

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Mar 31, 2022, 5:17:05 PM3/31/22
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Horseshit on both counts. There are no 'trans' people, only male and
female impersonators. What you call 'decent' parts of America pander
to such delusions. The rest of America (the truly decent part)
doesn't. And nor should it.

> There are a lot of jobs you can find in trans-friendly states but
>if you're that ignorant, stay in your red shithole, please.

You're not even immune from abuse, ridicule and worse in your
degenerate 'trans'-friendly state, faggot.
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