RE: Transexuals
April 21, 2016 at 12:11 am
(This post was last modified: April 21, 2016 at 12:12 am by Losty.)
(April 21, 2016 at 12:05 am)Sterben Wrote:(April 20, 2016 at 11:33 pm)SteelCurtain Wrote: Jibbers Crabst, no. Crossing stupid gender stereotypes has nothing to do with Gender Dysphoria. A girl who hates dresses or a boy who hates sports and wants to play with dolls is not what being transgender is, at all. That is just society's stupid 'rules' that we try and push our kids into believing. You're not a real boy unless you love sports and learn to objectify women at a shockingly young age, or if you play with dolls you're a sissy.Learning and understand a issue always should be considered in the matter of policy, if your making public policy you need to consult professionals who deal with the issues on a everyday basis. As a child I hated sports and still do, that's cause I was taught it was a unneeded venue for men and woman to demonstrate there superiority over others. I still hold the same opinion to this day. As a society we do need to respect woman more and get rid of terms like "Sissy,nancyboy, and no-homo". These words probably will never go away, and terms like faggot, cunt, fag, and gay will never be able be uses properly again cause of society's twists on the words. As a child I was also taught to have the up most respect people who deserve respect. My parents raised quite differently, I was not allowed to play sports either my sister, and to this day I thank them to this day for not letting me.
No.
Gender dysphoria is the physical and mental feeling of being in the wrong body. Your brain's gender makeup doesn't match your body's sexual expression. It is a constant, unrelenting mental gulf that a person has, until science has caught up with explaining it better, had to just try and cross in some way. I cannot even imagine how unrelenting it must be. Probably similar to phantom limbs with amputees. There's supposed to be something there, and your brain thinks there's something there, but there just isn't, and you're glad for the 3 or 4 minutes a day when you aren't thinking of it because you're occupied with something else.
The problem lies in people creating these opinions about what to do, having clearly no understanding of the issue before forming those opinions. I don't understand why people do this. When these issues started to come to light, the first thing I googled was "what is it like to be trans" and learned about what it really is, from the mouths of people who experience it. Before anyone is allowed to make policy opinions, I think they should at the very least have the human decency learn what it's like (as much as it's possible) from the people who are affected by the policies they are considering.
That's really nice but a bit off topic. What's it got to do with gender dysphoria?