The Wrong Sex Characteristics
Every two weeks, I stick a needle in my ass (upper outer quadrant of my left cheek, to be exact) and inject myself with 1cc of testosterone. That's because I, like other trans men (Female-to-Male transsexuals, or FTMs), was born with a body that didn't match up with the gender presentation which I felt inside. My proverbial sisters in arms, women who were born with male bodies (Male-to-Female transsexuals, or MTFs), are in similarly dire straits.
Trans people often don’t feel comfortable with the sex organs (penis, vagina) with which they were born or the secondary sex characteristics (facial hair, breasts) which developed at puberty. They therefore choose between a variety of actions, including medical and non-medical options, to change these things. Before any medical treatments or legal changes (e.g., sex change on a birth certificate) can be started, a trans person must meet with a therapist until the therapist feels confident that that medical change will be beneficial to the trans person. The trans person will sometimes be asked to live in the societal role they are adopting temporarily to provide a test run for living in that gender.
While these requirements, called the Harry Benjamin standards, were developed with the intention of protecting trans people from unscrupulous, exploitative physicians, many trans people today feel that they are unfair because of the costs of therapy, absence of trans-friendly therapists and potential dangers of living in the world as one gender while appearing to be another. Nonetheless, the majority of trans people undergo at least a few sessions with a therapist before starting hormone treatment or surgery.
Let’s take a look at the hormonal and surgical options as well as the non-medical alternatives available to trans folks looking to change their body or presentation.
Trans people often don’t feel comfortable with the sex organs (penis, vagina) with which they were born or the secondary sex characteristics (facial hair, breasts) which developed at puberty. They therefore choose between a variety of actions, including medical and non-medical options, to change these things. Before any medical treatments or legal changes (e.g., sex change on a birth certificate) can be started, a trans person must meet with a therapist until the therapist feels confident that that medical change will be beneficial to the trans person. The trans person will sometimes be asked to live in the societal role they are adopting temporarily to provide a test run for living in that gender.
While these requirements, called the Harry Benjamin standards, were developed with the intention of protecting trans people from unscrupulous, exploitative physicians, many trans people today feel that they are unfair because of the costs of therapy, absence of trans-friendly therapists and potential dangers of living in the world as one gender while appearing to be another. Nonetheless, the majority of trans people undergo at least a few sessions with a therapist before starting hormone treatment or surgery.
Let’s take a look at the hormonal and surgical options as well as the non-medical alternatives available to trans folks looking to change their body or presentation.
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