Posted on 11/11/2014 12:37:05 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o
Transgender people who regret their sex changes typically get buried in venom rather than loved.
Everyone has regrets. Some of us have big regrets. Most everyone has some place to go to get help dealing with them.
Except for, say, a guy who had sex-change surgery and now would like to have his penis back. (The one God gave him.)
Our culture seems pretty much to each his own when it comes to elective bodily mutilation and the regret thereof. And theres a lot of regret out there. According to a British poll, a whopping 65 percent of those whove had various cosmetic surgeries regret it. People who regret their tattoos, plastic surgery, or more extreme body modifications (heres a sad Buzzfeed pictorial on the effects of ear gauges) can read up on the Internet and find an open array of remedies. Plastic surgeons make money both puttin it in and takin it out.
Hollywood stars can speak openly about misgivings over their boob jobs and whatnot. Regarding her lip enhancement surgery, Courtney Love said: I just want the mouth God gave me back.
But the difference between Love and the guy with phantom penis syndrome is that the guy isnt allowed to talk about his regret. Not openly. The transgender lobby actively polices and suppresses discussion of sex-change regret, and claims its rare (no more than 5 percent.) However, if you do decide to de-transition to once again identify with the sex in your DNA, talking about it will get you targeted by trans activists. So its a challenge to understand the scope of regret for sex change surgery. Its out there, but Its Genital Mutilation
Lets start with Alan Finch, a resident of Australia who decided when he was 19 to transition from male to female, and in his 20s had genital surgery. But then, at age 36, Finch told the Guardian newspaper in 2004:
. . . transsexualism was invented by psychiatrists. . . .You fundamentally cant change sex the surgery doesnt alter you genetically. Its genital mutilation. My vagina was just the bag of my scrotum. Its like a pouch, like a kangaroo. Whats scary is you still feel like you have a penis when youre sexually aroused. Its like phantom limb syndrome. Its all been a terrible misadventure. Ive never been a woman, just Alan . . . the analogy I use about giving surgery to someone desperate to change sex is its a bit like offering liposuction to an anorexic.
Finch went on to sue the Australian gender identity clinic at Melbournes Monash Medical Center for misdiagnosis. He also was involved in starting an outreach to others called Gender Menders. The reaction from the transgender community was fast, furious, and abusive, particularly in the Susans.org discussion forum as described in Sheila Jeffreys book, Gender Hurts.
Since then, Finchs outreach website has been archived and there is no further information online. In fact, Finchs subsequent silence is the norm for those who change their minds. This is perhaps not surprising, given the vigor and vindictiveness of the transgender community in persecuting those who have the temerity to suggest that all is not well in sexual La-La Land. But if you look you can find rogue headlines every now and then that even Hollywoods fawning over all things trans cant quite control. Theres much evidence that the carefully crafted pictures of transgender authenticity and happiness are more fiction than fact. Buried Stories of High-Profile Regret
Rene Richards and Mike Penner remain fairly well known as male-to-female transgenders, the former from the 1970s and the latter recently. Both have stories of misgivings and sorrows that cannot be explained away through the old standard its-societys-fault routinely trotted out by the transgender lobby.
Tennis champion Rene Richards was one of the first to go through sex-change surgery and was something of a sensation in the 1970s. As such, you might expect Richards to be a tower of strength, offering encouragement to those in similar circumstances today. Well, not so much. This is what Richards had to say in an excerpt from a March 1999 interview attributed to Tennis Magazine (unavailable in full online):
If there was a drug that I could have taken that would have reduced the pressure, I would have been better off staying the way I wasa totally intact person. I know deep down that Im a second-class woman. I get a lot of inquiries from would-be transsexuals, but I dont want anyone to hold me out as an example to follow. Today there are better choices, including medication, for dealing with the compulsion to cross dress and the depression that comes from gender confusion. As far as being fulfilled as a woman, Im not as fulfilled as I dreamed of being. I get a lot of letters from people who are considering having this operation and I discourage them all. Rene Richards, The Liaison Legacy, Tennis Magazine, March 1999.
A 2007 New York Times interview, The Lady Regrets, describes Richards temperament this way: as she wearies of the interview, her body language seems to become more traditionally male, suggesting an athlete who is wearying of the game.
Penners story is even more tragic. In April 2007, Penner, a Los Angeles Times sportswriter for 24 years, announced in a stunning column that he would come back from vacation as Christine Daniels. He then wrote a blog, Woman in Progress, as he lived as a woman and served as a spokesperson for transgender activism.
But then, with no explanation, Penner decided in 2008 to de-transition. He readopted his byline, Mike Penner, and lived again as a man. All blog posts and bylines by Christine Daniels were mysteriously scrubbed from the LA Times website. Penner discussed none of it. But according to one report, he was devastated over not being able to save his marriage. Then tragically, in November 2009, Penner killed himself. The funeral for Penner was strictly private to keep out media. The LGBT community had their own memorial service, but only for Christine Daniels, not Mike Penner.
Another heart-wrenching story, of a female-to-male transgender, is that of Nancy Verhelst in Belgium. She was aghast after her surgery, saying she felt more like a monster than a man. She also spoke of her sad childhood, in which her mother rejected her in favor of her brothers, and isolated little Nancy in a room over the garage. Nancy was so distraught that she asked doctors to put her to death under Belgiums lax euthanasia laws. They coldly complied. Trying to Drown the Iceberg
These stories may be the tip of the proverbial iceberg. There are many such scattered about, and you can see my blog for supplementation. No doubt theyre not widely reported because they dont fit the transgender-as-paragon-of-personal-courage narrative so popular in the media today. But theres also that element of active suppression by the trans activists.
Take, for example, one Reddit thread entitled Grieving from m2f2m (male-to-female-to-male) which generated a readers friendly warning to let him know that his subreddit was reported to the transphobia project which has a habit of invading linked threads with its own method of education which includes name-calling and downvotes. In fact, it looks like thats been deleted. But heres a poignant excerpt from m2f2ms painfully honest blog:
I am grieving at how I have mutilated my body. . . . In the case of my surgeon, he seemed all too happy to cut off my testicles, as soon as he had a couple of glowing letters from my doctor and former therapist, saying what a nice lady I had become, how well I had assimilated etc. Fuckin crazy. Anyway, Ive been cryin.
See also this Reddit conversation that seems to confirm both how common trans doubts and regrets are, and how threatened transgender activists are by them:
[]PrairieFlame 3 points 3 months ago
Thanks for the links. This sub has been pretty dead, but /r/gender_critical has got a lot of activity.
[]Guyrl[S] 2 points 3 months ago
It has been, and thats too bad. The perspectives of people who have detransitioned has been the most helpful thing for me right now.
[]thirdwaytrans 2 points 3 months ago
Im so glad you find my perspectives helpful. It makes them worth writing!
[]grvsmth 0 points 7 days ago
Too bad /r/gender_critical is so intolerant of any non-essentialist critiques of gender, huh?
[]Guyrl[S] 0 points 3 months ago
I linked to this post in r/asktransgender in a post by someone wondering if they should detransition and asking for advice, and it got me banned.
[]thirdwaytrans 0 points 3 months ago
Welcome to the banned club! I really worry about all of the people that are questioning and then people are actively censoring any alternate information.
[]Guyrl[S] 0 points 3 months ago
Haha thanks I suppose. I dont understand how anyone would want to limit their perspective so militantly. Especially given the severity and permanence of decisions concerning transitioning. I myself am terrified of the thoughts and feelings Ive been having about my gender identity and want to consider all possible aspects and angles before making a decision. I didnt think detransition was such a threat to people in that community.
Reddit censorship is also discussed on this blog called Third Way Trans. A Survivors Mission to Reach Out to Regretters
While conversations like the above go onand are suppressedsome brave souls push to get the word out about the potential for regret and other consequences far more severe. A national survey of more than 6,500 transgenders asked the question, Have you tried to commit suicide? Forty-one percent answered, Yes.
Walt Heyer is perhaps the most active among the survivors out there, and possibly the most vilified by transgender activists. He is a clear-eyed and gentle man, now in his 70s, who had sex reassignment surgery and lived as a woman for many years. Because of the devastation sown by the gender confusion, Heyer offers information and support in blogs called sexchangeregret.com and transdetransition.
Heyer has also authored three relevant books: Paper Genders, Gender, Lies and Suicide, and Trading My Sorrows that provide resources to understand the destructive effects of gender confusion. He cites, for example, a national survey of more than 6,500 transgenders that asked the question, Have you tried to commit suicide? Forty-one percent answered, Yes. One need look no further for compelling evidence of widespread transgender and sex change regret. A Bit of Honesty from Sweden
A Swedish study from 2003 found that post-operative mortality and suicide rates for transsexuals are many times higher than the general population. And thats in Sweden, probably the friendliest environment on the planet for transgender individuals. He explains how he cried and would have likely changed his mind if the doctor simply asked him just before the surgery if he was certain about it.
Also out of Sweden is a 2010 documentary entitled Regretters in which two older Swedish men who each lived as a woman for many years decided to go back to their male identities. (The film has made the rounds at various LGBT events, interesting given its controversial nature.) I recently watched Regretters on YouTube with English subtitles, but that option is no longer available. I hope you can still watch a subtitled trailer here. A few more subtitled excerpts are available in this three-minute discussion with the director.
In Regretters, one of the men, Mikael, describes how he felt immediately upon seeing the results of the surgery and his penis gone. He rues aloud: I was devastated. What have I done? What on earth have I done? In the full version he explains how he cried and would have likely changed his mind if the doctor simply asked him just before the surgery if he was certain about it. Mikael also explained that he was always painfully shy towards women and never felt he could find someone who would date him or marry him. Sostarved for a woman and fearful of rejectionhe concluded that he needed to be a woman.
The other man, Orlando, who still looks and dresses androgynously, stated he was shocked to see his penis gone after the surgery. Absolutely shocked. Orlando passed very nicely as a woman and managed to trick a man who wanted children into marrying him. Orlando describes his many machinations in covering up, but after a decade the truth came out and the marriage ended. A Coming Wave of Regret?
Thanks to the courage of the people who speak out, these regrets have been getting more attention in recent years. A British man who regrets his surgery recently claimed that there has not been enough psychiatric counseling of patients. He is now pressing the National Health Service to reverse his surgery. Britains youngest patient much touted in the press for his courage in changing to a femalehas also spoken out. Bradley Cooper begged his family for years, then finally got the go-ahead to switch at age 17. But after a year of living as a woman, he found the whole thing overwhelming and cancelled the surgery. Another story appeared on Huffington Post here. Radical feminist Julie Bindel wrote an article, The Operation that Can Ruin Your Life.
A few voices within the transgender community seem to expect a coming wave of regretters. Consider this excerpt from a March 2014 report by an Australian transgender activist, entitled: Coming Trend within the Trans Community, including Doubts and Regrets:
Yes, there are several well documented cases of regret or de-transition. . . . Most however, hide their dissatisfaction and de-transition in stealth, with the outcome that the true numbers will never be known. This is most unfortunate, as we need to understand these problems that they face and why it is happening more over time. I am not just alluding to Australia, but the World at large if we are to understand what causes us to have doubts and regrets.
Finally, Sundog Pictures, a well-known UK documentary production house, seems to have been exploring the possibility of a documentary on the phenomenon of sex change regret. But chances are you wont be hearing about it.
Consider this October 2014 blog post at TransActivist.com: No I will not Help Sundog Make a Documentary about Trans Regret which reacts to a letter of inquiry about the project from a Sundog representative. NotRightRuth scolded and lashed out against Sundog Pictures for its interest and stated that such a documentary would be harmful to the trans-agenda. A number of followers retweeted it here.
If Sundog Pictures is indeed interested, thats yet another indication that sex-change regret is far deeper and broader than reported. But with or without a new documentary, murmurs of regret are liable to get louder. Biological truth has a way of outing itself. The hard reality of it is written right into our DNA as male or female. In the end, transgender activists and their media enablers wont be able to drown that massive iceberg.
Follow Stella on Twitter. She blogs at stellamorabito.net.
Doc... uh... that thing you cut off...
Did you perhaps keep it in a jar or somethin... cuz... I think I want it back.
Mr. Limbaugh is going to have a field day with this article tomorrow.
Now we have (usually homosexual) parents convincing kids to be transgender, some on hormone therapy before they even reach their teens. I bet they refuse to let these kids change their minds.
It is sickening.
Mrs. Garrison: Hello doctor, looks like I need an abortion. [sits on the chair and puts his feet on the stirrups]
Doctor: ...an abortion?
Mrs. Garrison: Yeah, I’ve got one growing inside me. Now, are you gonna scramble its brains or just vacuum it out? [a nurse arrives and her jaw drops] ...If you want you can just scramble it and I’ll queef it out myself.
Doctor: Mmister Garrison-
Mrs. Garrison: [correcting him] Mrs. Garrison.
Doctor: Mmrs. Garrison, you can’t have an abortion.
Mrs. Garrison: Don’t you tell me what I can and can’t do with my body! [gets up, goes to the nurse, and hugs her] A woman has a right to choose!
Doctor: No, I mean you’re physically unable to have an abortion, because you can’t get pregnant.
Mrs. Garrison: But I missed my period.
Doctor: You can’t have periods either. [Mrs. Garrison looks surprised] You had a sex change, Mr. Garrison, but you don’t have ovaries or a womb. You don’t produce eggs.
Mrs. Garrison: [sits down] You mean, I’ll never know what it feels like to have a baby growing inside me and then scramble its brains and vacuum it out?
Doctor: N-that’s right.
Mrs. Garrison: But I paid five thousand dollars to be a woman. This would mean I I’m not really a woman. Ih, I’m just a... a I’m just a guy with a mutilated penis!
Doctor: Basically, yes.
Mrs. Garrison: ...Oh boy, do I feel like a jackass.
Probably not even homosexual. Likely very liberal heterosexual parents.
It is tragic, but not surprising. Study after study shows that changes in people’s condition do not have a long-term impact on their happiness. No reason to think a sex change operation works any differently.
If you can’t accept the body you were born with, what are the odds you’re going to be comfortable in a new one?
Why did this guy shut up? What does he have left to lose? Go back at them monkeystyle. And never, ever give up. Fight to regain your integrity and your manhood, figuratively if not surgically. And I’m not cracking wise saying that. I’m serious.
People are held back by fear of losing their material things. Material things can be replaced. Do what’s right.
There is no undo.
I would add one more yes at the end.
In the 60’s and 70’s, if you wanted to shock people, you became a hippy.
Then it was Wiccan.
Then it was Goth.
Now you become a sexual deviant.
Johns Hopkins...the pioneer in “sex change” “operations” stopped doing them when they found that there were no successful mental adjustments....being made...
why others didnt pick up that clear signal I cant understand
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Mutilation was never the answer for a mental illness.
^Z
True story conversation with the 3 year old granddaughter from last Friday:
“Why does Grandpa need to get a new hip? Did he break the old one?”, she asked.
“No, it is just kind of worn out and hurting him. Remember how Nana got a new shoulder, and Papa got a new knee? And before you were born, Daddy got new bones in his neck after a car accident,” I replied.
“Oh”, she said, “so it is just body parts, right?”
Maybe she should talk to the guy who is wishing he had his part back.
The case I was thinking of was lesbians in Kalipornia raising a son as a daughter, on sex-change drugs before puberty.
sick
If you are XY then you’re a guy!
I think that to ask such a question might have been an illegal act.
Dayum.
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