Posted on 04/25/2017 11:24:08 AM PDT by simpson96
In her 30s, Sophie Marat, now 42, used to record herself reading poetry aloud, then play it back to hear if she sounded like a woman. Ms. Marat, who is transgender, had spent years trying to remake her voice in private by speaking in a higher pitch but ultimately felt that her efforts were hopeless.
I was feeling like changing my voice to match my gender identity was almost impossible, she said. It was terrible.
Ms. Marats transition from male to female has been a gradual evolution. She had come out to friends and family back home in Mexico, then began to wear skirts to work as a software engineer in Manhattan. Still, her confidence would falter with everyday tasks like ordering takeout. It was really painful to speak on the phone, she said, because they would reply, O.K., sir.
That was before she started her weekly sessions with a voice therapist at New York Universitys speech-language-hearing clinic, one of a growing number of programs that cater to transgender clients seeking to retrain their voices.
Just as some transgender women and men choose to take hormones or have surgery, or choose neither, some seek to feminize or masculinize their voices. Many say they want a voice that matches their appearance or that the change allows them to escape unwanted attention. Theres also a growing recognition among health professionals who have transgender patients that altering ones voice can improve quality of life and reduce distress.
After eight months, she had raised her pitch, worked on moving her resonance forward and finishing phrases with an open ending, rather than bluntly.
This isnt just a sidebar, said Sandy Hirsch, a Seattle-based speech language pathologist who was a co-author of the pioneering textbook on transgender voice and communication therapy. Its
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Oh, well, those people have real medical conditions. The others have mental issues.
I seem to remember reading about a man, with a brain injury, who thought his wife was a hat. He could sit and talk with her, and she would converse with him, but he thought she was a hat.
You’re thinking of California in the 60s-70s. State nut houses were closed down by governors, not by presidents.
That’s not a homosexual, but a transgender. Two different things. Homosexuals know whether they’re men/women, but are just attracted to the same sex. Trannies don’t feel comfortable in their own bodies. Bruce Jenner, for instance, says he’s still attracted to women, so he’s not homosexual. He just wants to BE a woman.
That said, this guy is going to destroy his voice if he keeps trying to change how he talks. Then he’ll have some REAL problems, aside from the current mental ones.
It’s a honky Moo Obama with the boot belt and whitey wig.
I’m not sure that they are “sexual deviants” ( some probably are, but perhaps not all ), but they all are attention seeking “whores” and mentally ill.
Oh come on....women in the ‘50s didn’t behave that way; that’s just NOT “normal”!
EXACTLY!
Did Reagans Crazy Mental Health Policies Cause Todays Homelessness?
Over 30 years ago, when Reagan was elected President in 1980, he discarded a law proposed by his predecessor that would have continued funding federal community mental health centers. This basically eliminated services for people struggling with mental illness.
He made similar decisions while he was the governor of California, releasing more than half of the states mental hospital patients and passing a law that abolished involuntary hospitalization of people struggling with mental illness. This started a national trend of de-institutionalization.
In other words, if you are struggling with mental illness, we can only help you if you ask for it.
But, wait. Isnt one of the characteristics of severe mental illness not having an accurate sense of reality? Doesnt that mean a person may not even realize he or she is mentally ill?
I think it is obvious to all that the order taker should be jailed.
You know, to ease the pain.
In NYC and then in N.Y. state, this happened in the late '70s.
This thread lacks the proper eye bleach!
Unwanted, I am not so sure any attention is unwanted. Otherwise all this drama and travail wouldn't see the light of day.
Most of humanity perceives [and is intuitively repelled by] the abject fakery and perversion. Seems more like these sorts of issues (it's always something) are a depraved soul's desperate cries for help under the blustering, bullying guise of, "Do you know who I am?! [Because I sure don't.]"
Sadness and confusion reign.
Society's increased level of tolerance for this nonsense is only enabling them and giving them false hope.
Now with an army of cosmetologists at your disposal, a man might make himself passable as a female for about a day. Such as Bruce Jenner and that Vanity Fare cover shoot. But for him to look like that everyday, he'd have to spend hours and hours a day maintaining it. He apparently has the leisure time and the money to do so but that voice! He was on Tucker Carlson last night and that voice instantly outed him as "male in woman's clothing." Poor guy. He wouldn't be able to fool anybody, not even in an Irish bar on St. Patrick's Day.
And those big hands and feet. There's nothing a man can do with his hands and feet to look feminine.
Sorry Brucie, you should have accepted the male body you were born with.
In 1971 many patients were committed against their will, without any semblance of due process, given custodial care only, with no definable release date. Mental patients, in other words, were denied rights commonly given to criminals upon incarceration.
The Court correctly ruled this was an unconstitutional denial of their rights, and it was upheld by the circuit court.
States were strapped for funds and, unable to provide the standards of treatment required, began to release patients into the community. At this time the Community Mental Health Center system was operating, to a degree, and was expected to pick up the treatment of patients as outpatients. It had been initiated under Kennedy and was federally funded, but was never fully or adequately staffed up in most cases.
Reagan turned the program over to the states, which were the appropriate governmental entity to take the responsibility, but the states were no more interested in providing treatment in 1980 than they were in 1970.
As governor, Reagan did only what was required under the ruling of the courts. Involuntary commitments continued but required due process, not merely a doctor's order. The law is pretty clear, being mentally ill does not deprive one of his rights except through a legal process of establishing incompetence, and the provision of a guardian.
Reagan had nothing to do with any of these decisions, he only carried out the law, as he should have.
bkmk
Actually one can get one's larynx altered to push the register up a bit, or one can change one's name to Tallulah.
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