Posted on 06/28/2003 3:50:21 PM PDT by tgslTakoma
Kade Collins, 18, was a girl who felt like a boy. Samantha Lease, 19, was a boy who felt like a girl. Then each came out as transgender and felt much better
as told to Stephanie Booth
Kade's story:
Growing up in Tucson, I was way more masculine than other girls. As early as four, I wanted my hair cut short like a boy's. When I was five, my mom made me wear a dress on Christmas, and I cried so much that she promised I'd never have to wear another. By age six, I'd only wear boys' clothes. People would scream when I went into a girls' bathroom and think a boy had sneaked in. I was mistaken for a boy a lot, but it didn't bother me. I wanted to be a boy: I dressed like one, and I liked girls.
When I was 11, I told my parents I was a lesbian. They're former hippies and really open-minded, so they were totally supportive. They encouraged me to attend a gay-lesbian support group at the local community center. At meetings I learned a lot, but being the youngest person there, I was too intimidated to ask the one question I really wanted to ask: Did other lesbians want to be boys too? Then one day I noticed the word "transgender" on a flyer at the center. I didn't know what it meant, so I looked it up in a book. I was blown away! Finally, a word that perfectly expressed what I was feeling. For the first time I could picture myself having the life I actually wanted to lead.
I started talking about how I felt with family and closest friends first. Luckily, they were accepting and respected my wishes by referring to me as "he" or "him." But at 13, when I got my period, I had to do something more concrete. I think I'd been in denial about being born into a girl's body, but suddenly it seemed official. And scary. When I became so depressed that I considered killing myself, my parents took me to a psychiatrist. He diagnosed me with gender identity disorder. I found it really insulting that he said I had a "disorder," but you have to get the diagnosis to go ahead with becoming a boy, and we all agreed that's what I would do. My doctor prescribed a synthetic hormone called Lupron to stave off my puberty and, to my huge relief, my breasts regressed and my period stopped. To become even more boyish, I'd have to take testosterone shots. My mom was ready for me to start, but my dad was more cautious. He came around, though, and most of my friends were cool with it too.
When I was a sophomore in high school, I started the testosterone. Before long my vooice started cracking, my muscles felt bulkier and I got facial hair. Then I got an elective mastectomy. During the surgery, doctors removed fat and tissue from my breasts to make them look more masculine. I'm not considering genital surgery, though. The results aren't that great, and right now, I'm happy with the body I have. Before hormones and surgery, I hated my body and didn't want to look at it at all. But after, I was admiring myself in the mirror. Other people started scrutinizing me too. My transition became the hot topic of conversation at school. I didn't mind the questions, but the stares and some of the comments were annoying. Most people lost interest after about a month or so, but a few kids couldn't let it go. At our winter formal, my older sister, Elliott, overheard some kid say, "That boy used to be a girl." Elliott said, "No, that's my brother. He's a boy." Having her stick up for me meant a lot. My transition was hard for her to understand at first, and I felt like this was her way of reassuring me that she loved me, no matter what.
You'd think all this stuff would make dating more difficult, but it's actually gotten easier - maybe because I'm more confident now. Just three months after I began taking the testosterone, I started dating a girl from school, Anna. We kept things quiet at first because she worried what other people would think. But she got over it quickly and was very supportive of me. We dated seriously for more than a year. Since our breakup I've had relationships with other girls, but I wouldn't rule out dating a guy, either. While I'm primarily attracted to girls, I focus more on each individual person and less on his or her gender.
It's kind of funny: When I first started "transitioning," I overcompensated by acting macho. I was trying desperately not to be seen as a girl, and I tried too hard to act like a boy. I was really into skateboarding and playing competitive sports. Now, I'm happy just reading and writing poetry. In a way, I don't identify myself as either male or female anymore. I'm just Kade.
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Samantha's story:
As far back as elementary school, I identified more with girls than with other little boys. I always chose to play house with the girls instead of rough-and-tumble games with the boys. But what I was feeling was more than just wanting to play with girls - I actually wished I was one.
I was brutally teased in school. One time my mom took me over to a bully's house to show his parents the welts I had on my back - a result of his beatings. By the time I was eight, things had gotten so bad that my parents pulled me out of school and taught me at our home in Arlington, Mass. Still, whenever I was around other kids, like at my community theater group, someone always goofed on me for being different and said I was gay. But I knew I wasn't gay: I actually had huge crushes on girls.
Puberty threw me into an enormous depression. Becoming more masculine felt so wrong. Sometimes I'd secretly pray to God to make me into a girl. Other times I'd worry that I was a bad person because I couldn't just turn off those thoughts. It wasn't until I was 17 that I learned that there was an explanation for what I was going through: I was "transgender" and didn't identify with the sex I'd been born with. Although it was good to realize there were other people who had these feelings too, it didn't really solve anything.
Finally, when I enrolled at a small college in Iowa last year, I became involved with the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) community. It gave me both a better understanding of what being transgender was all about and the courage to tell my parents. They hadn't ever been alarmed by my femininity, but when I called them to tell them that I wanted to become a girl, they were more supportive than I'd imagined. It was a weight off my shoulders. With that, telling my college friends was no problem.
Not long after, I attended my regular GLBT support group dressed in women's clothing for the first time. Even though I was wearing a binder around my waist and false breasts, I felt so liberated. I started indetifying myself not as Spencer, my given name, but as Samantha.
The full transition to becoming a woman is going to be difficult. I'm starting vocal therapy to help make my voice more feminine. When I can afford it, I want to get sex reassignment surgery. If I had webbed toes or an ugly birthmark, no one would think less of me for repairing them. So why shouldn't I fix my misleading anatomy?
Still, it can be nerve-racking. I've never really dated, and I'm scared I might wind up alone. It's also unnerving to imagine how strangers will react. Once, when my friends and I were at a restaurant, a few cops asked where we were from. I was so anxious about how they'd respond to my male voice that I didn't say anything.
Even so, I don't feel that living as a woman is a choice for me. It's a necessity. In February, I arranged a rebirthing ceremony - sort of a "christening" for my new identity - in our campus chapel. The chaplain presided and 25 people, including professors, showed up. My friends read a few poems and took a vow to protect me. My mom announced how much she loved me. Afterward, a lot of people told me how strong I am to become a woman. All I know is, I have to be true to myself.
This line sums it up for me.
My argument was a reductio ad absurdum, which is a valid method of proving an argument invalid.
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Maybe you will when you stand before Him and be asked to explain why you openly mocked Him like that.
God doesn't make mistakes. You did.
You said that the disorder of confused sexual identity does not exist because "God does not make mistakes." I pointed out that this is an invalid argument, because if "God does not make mistakes" is proof that one disorder does not exist, then it proves that no disorder exists. But clearly some disorders do exist.
Rather than assert gratuitously that there is no such thing as confusion about sexual identity, it would be more fruitful to try to understand the causes of the disorder. I do think that those who perceive themselves to be trapped in a body of the wrong sex have a disorder, and I do not think that surgically mutilating the body is a legitimate "treatment" for the disorder.
It is helpful to nobody to tell people that they are morally corrupt, when they clearly have a psychological condition for which they are blameless. (There is no way that a six-year-old is to blame for experiencing sexual confusion.)
There's the problem. Took a typical tomboyish girl who was perfectly normal and turned her into a pervert.
What a shame.
Sure, these things happen. But we don't celebrate them as the transgendered folks want us to celebrate their perversion. (And by the way, these things are generally caused by actions of people somewhere along the way - pollution, inappropriate actions by the doctor, alcohol abuse by the mother during pregnancy and so forth.)
By the way, if someone is born with female genitalia and has the appropriate hormones coursing through their body but they wish they were a boy, they are not a "man in a woman's body." They are a woman who got mentally messed up somewhere along the way. (The same goes for boys who "wish" they were girls.)
God didn't do this to these 'transgendered' people. Other people did things to them, and they allowed the actions of others to pervert them.
Conservatives, and most parents for that matter, are concerned by the moral decay of our society, as evidenced by the TEEN PEOPLE article that I posted here. We are concerned that (our) children are being bombarded from all sides by the messages that aberrant behavior and self mutilation is somehow normal. We are concerned that (our) children are being targeted by sick and twisted (and evil) people who have no love of children, except as objects of their perverted fantasies. We are concerned that these adult perverts are in professions where they have access to our children, and can (and do) try to imprint their perversions on (our) children.
I see that you haven't been here long - that you apparently just joined FR to respond to our commentary on the TEEN PEOPLE article in which you say you are (if you truly are) Samantha Lease, a subject of the article. In answer to the second part of your comment above, at FR we post articles that we feel may be of interest to other FR members. We discuss articles. Sometimes we argue over points made in articles. This is not a "stalking" site, especially as regards someone who has already been victimized as profoundly as you have been by a perverted subsect of our society; and while you may not see it as such right now, I do believe that you are a victim. I hope you can find your way in this world, and that the damage (that I believe has been) already done to your soul will be healed.
So am I, darling, so am I.
I must say I expected better from a troll, but, what the hey, you tried, right?
Right up there in the WGAS category.
Should we also be more accepting of child abuse, rape, necrophilia, beastiality, murder, cannibalism?
Why can't we have (and voice) a negative opinion of aberrant behavior and of those "professionals" and other perverts who wish to indoctrinate our children in an attempt to normalize this aberrant behavior?
BlackCanary, if he/she is to be believed, claims to be Samantha Lease; and he's all upset because nobody here bothered to find his email address via an internet search of his name... he's upset because we didn't bother to contact him.
Now, if we are, as you assert, "persecuting" him, doesn't that require some contact with him? If we haven't communicated with him, how are we persecuting him? What? Voicing our opinions in this online forum... that he had to have done his own internet search on his name in order to have found it in the first place... is persecuting him?
Sorry, kiddo. That dog won't hunt. But thanks for sharing.
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