((sorry, with all the health issues and stuff I have gotten away from posting parts of the interview on my struggles with transitioning. Here we go with question 17--alexis))
17) How were the doctors that took care of you? Did they try to talk you
out of it?
My doctors have all been able to accept my decision. I am certain that some
were skeptical of the idea when they first received one of those 250
information letters prior to my initial transition from living as a male to
living full-time as a female. And, as I mentioned earlier, I was able to get several
letters of support for my decision to have the surgery from various physicians
to present to my SRS surgeon. I think
that my doctors, like many others, are interacting with a transgender person
for the first time in their lives, and are learning from it. One doctor had known about my situation
previously, and had prescribed a low dosage of estrogen, but when I sought
additional and higher dosages, he was not willing to do that, and so I then had
to find a doctor who would do that. I was referred to a certain gynecologist by
a friend at work (your mother, actually, Amber), and I was able to work well
with this new physician. Ironically, this choice of doctors has been very
beneficial, as I now actually have a need to see a gynecologist from time to
time. None of my doctors have ever tried to talk me out of it, and I believe
that they have been able to see that I am quite comfortable in my new gender, and
sex.
While we are on the subject of doctors, let’s talk about a few other
things. When I go to see one of my
doctors, they have to decide how to have any tests analyzed, particularly the
sex-specific tests. For example, though
I have had the surgery, I still have the same lungs, so when I go in for
pulmonary function tests, they still need to be analyzed buy the computer as if
I were still a male. If the test is run
with me listed as a female, the results look so much better, but not
realistic. I also think it’s going to be
interesting if I ever develop prostate problems, as I am sure the computer at
the insurance company will reject the claim simply because women do not have
prostates (or at least not many). There
are also some gynecological tests that I do not need, or require as often,
simply because the current SRS capabilities do not allow the successful
transplantation of the female sexual reproductive organs into another
person-----which I regret so much. I
would love to be able to have those dreaded monthly periods, and to get
pregnant, but that’s another story in itself.
I know a lot of girls will say I am crazy for wanting the periods, but
for myself, and others like me………………we truly want to be able to be 100%
female---in all ways. It has been a wish
and hope we have held for so many years, and currently all we can do is come
close, but not quite be what we truly aspire to achieve. Though I have had the operation, in some
respects I still can not escape my male past………………which I can understand, but
still consider unfortunate. But, on the
other hand, where I am now is a major improvement on where I was even say 10
years ago.
No comments:
Post a Comment