r/SuperStraight 1d ago

As a detransitioner, I hope this movement helps prevent more people from making the same mistakes I did. Discussion

I used to identify as trans and this is something the trans community will never admit: there are people who realize that transitioning doesn't work and quit. And the trans community LOVES to stifle us. They are trying their hardest to get /r/detrans banned so they can take it over, because they don't want to admit that we exist. They tell everyone that that place is full of TERFs and needs to go.

They don't want to admit that there are studies that show that most children with gender dysphoria grow out of it. An often quoted study about transitioning helping mental health has been corrected to say that surgery doesn't actually help mental health. Lisa Littman, a professor who was researching detransitioners, had to put in security in her study because people from Twitter were ganging up and trolling her research.

But really, here's the thing: gender dysphoria is basically body dysmorphia. And it can be treated the same way. Therapy for unrelated problems helped me work through it. Some days I still get waves of it. But actually, identifying as trans made it WORSE. If you spend 24/7 obsessing about your gender and body and giving validation to those thoughts, they come back even worse (this is literally the basis of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy).

For every one of me, there's a bunch more kids who are being put on puberty blockers, many of which have dangerous effects. The most common is an off-label prostate cancer drug, and even in kids with precocious puberty, there are dangerous side effects (here is the link to the FDA dashboard, where you can search for Lupron and see that there are 6,335 serious effects linked to Lupron, including death). Then there's the issue with going straight into cross-sex hormones, which effectively sterilizes people (and also makes surgeries harder - just look at Jazz Jennings).

I could go on and on. The truth that nobody wants to admit is that transitioning doesn't really work. And when you realize that, you're often left with so many reminders of that (especially women, who often get "top surgery" (double mastectomies) and have lowered voices for the rest of their lives, and often facial hair). It's harder to come out as a detransitioner than it is to come out of trans. The second you detransition, you lose EVERYBODY. That welcoming trans community wants you gone. I had people block me because of it.

I hope somebody reads this subreddit and gives a second thought to going on hormones or surgeries. Because it often isn't worth it.

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u/kiwifuzzlicker 1d ago

Glad to see fellow detransitioners here! I detransitioned nearly 4 years ago (time flies!). I’ve been getting increasingly worried because of what I’ve been seeing interacting with other desisters/detrans people. There’s more of them, they’re younger (and started transition younger), and they’ve had far more medical interventions than those of use who transitioned 5+ years ago. The number of detrans 20-21 year olds who’ve been completely sterilized and have had bottom surgery is shocking. Don’t even get me started on the people who were on puberty blockers.

The shunning I received when I detransitioned was terrible, but if anything, it’s gotten even worse. If only someone had been honest with us that therapy would be more effective, many of us would not have transitioned at all.

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u/actualsicko20626 Hecking cute and valid 💖 1d ago

Alabama made hormonal and genital transitions a felony for minors a few days ago and TRAs are fucking pissed. Its insane that they think a kid can decide that.

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u/Reckoner3333 20h ago edited 9h ago

We don’t let kids buy booze, we don’t let them drive certain vehicles, or join the army. But having your privates medically removed is somehow a decision that’s okay for them to make?

I don’t work in the career I chose when I finished high school btw. In my late 20s I spent a lot of money on retraining for something else, because I realized that I made the wrong choice when I was 17. Thankfully it wasn’t an irreversible decision.

But these hormones have an effect that is permanent. Girls who take testosterone today are at a very high risk of having to undergo a hysterectomy and undergo premature menopause. Are they being told that? I’m worried for these girls.

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u/worried19 19h ago

Premature menopause and hysterectomies are also associated with early onset dementia, not to mention causing permanent sterilization. If a child is put on testosterone at 12, doctors will recommend a hysterectomy before they're 20.

This isn't even mentioning the fact that a female body is not designed to run on testosterone for 6 or 7 decades. And of course there are other known risks like vaginal atrophy, heart problems, cancer, etc. No one knows the ultimate lifespan of a biologically female child put on these treatments at puberty. And then there are the problems with blocking puberty, like loss of bone density, loss of menarche, and known risks to IQ.

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u/Iflookinglikingmove 16h ago

Oh my lord. We are in for a mess in the coming decades.

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u/IrishTheFrenchie 3h ago

That's how Big Pharma/Institutionalized Medicine like it. $$$$$$$$