(17-04-2014, 02:43 AM)ClaraKay Wrote: It is caused by being deprived of a means to express one's innate gender identity. Once that restriction is removed, the dysphoria disappears.
Pretty much what I've been trying to say, and been attacked for, all along.
Scientifically speaking, since GD is conditional on a social framework rather than being metabolic or vectored, it's not a disease.
Let's go a step further. Since GD is not a disease, and what we are describing as GD comes from social restrictions, shouldn't we be "treating" the cause, rather than the symptoms? In other words, GD is the symptom, not the cause. Treating symptoms, while it is the forte of modern western medicine, is not the correct approach.
Much of the discussion I've read on the subject over the years is much akin to beating your head on the wall continuously and wondering why you have a headache, no matter how much ibuprofen you take. Stop hitting your head on the wall! is my message.
(17-04-2014, 02:43 AM)ClaraKay Wrote: That is why most bio-females with a strong male gender identity do not suffer from gender dysphoria. In our society they are given ample opportunity to express their male gender identities, by the way they act, dress, and pursue traditional male professions.
In a way, yes... women have a slightly easier time with it, but I wouldn't call it "ample opportunity". The difference is hardly night & day. If I look at the extended family that still live within the religious context of my youth, there's really no room for gender variance with the girls, either. I really feel bad for them, because to compare them with the other girls of their own age, it's even worse than it is for the boys.
It's hard to explain exactly what I mean by that... suffice it to say that I'll stipulate girls (in the First World, generally) have a slightly easier time swimming cross-current, but there's a way to go yet.
(17-04-2014, 02:43 AM)ClaraKay Wrote: How many members here who have found a way to express their inner woman are still dysphoric? I submit that dysphoria only exists to the extent that his/her expression is still limited, or he/she has not yet fully found self-acceptance.
Very good way to say it.
I've been reading the experiences of others like us now since the days of dial-up. One thing remarkable in its repeatability... is the more closeted or hen-pecked the individual, the denser will be the "pink fog" and the stronger the desire for the "transition". (Quite a euphemism for surgically altering one's junk there...)
I have learned that a woman can make her man either very glad, or very sad, to be a man... depending on her attitude.
On the other end of that scale are a few of my dear friends who are so far out of the closet, they couldn't find their way back with GPS. They are also open and enthusiastic about sex -- maybe that relates somehow. The enthusiasm for sex, of course, means they wouldn't do anything to jeopardize their ability to enjoy it.
Perhaps I need to do some further study.