blogcutter ([personal profile] blogcutter) wrote2018-07-27 08:57 pm

Mags and Fags and Trans-sisters and De-sisters

Browsing at a newsstand recently, I couldn't help noticing the cover story of the July/August issue of The Atlantic. "Your child says she's trans. She wants hormones and surgery. She's 13." To make a long story short, I ended up buying the magazine. And reading the article in its entirety - 16 pages of text, double columns, so quite long as magazine articles go. I found it fair and balanced, thorough and thought-provoking. But don't take my word for it - read it for yourself, if you are so inclined:

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/07/when-a-child-says-shes-trans/561749/

I was floored by some of the vitriolic responses I saw, even on sites where I normally find the commentators' arguments well-reasoned and quite often am in agreement with them too - here are a few examples:

https://jezebel.com/whats-jesse-singals-fucking-deal-1826930495

https://boingboing.net/2018/06/19/the-atlantic-again-concern-tro.html

https://slate.com/human-interest/2018/06/desistance-and-detransitioning-stories-value-cis-anxiety-over-trans-lives.html

You'll notice that Singal does say that a majority of people who transition during their adult years are happy with their decisions; he also says that many youth are too, and that if the gender dysphoria is very pervasive and originated very early in life, it's highly likely that the transition will be a success and that the transitioned will have no regrets. His main "sins" in the eyes of his critics, it seems to me, are (1) He's a cis-gender male; (2) He publicizes the fact that some children and teens do either regret irreversible or difficult-to-reverse procedures and treatments at a later date, or explore some of the possibilities of transitioning and gender reassignment but ultimately decide that it's not the route they want to go. Is caution really such a terrible thing to advocate, particularly given that these kids are minors and it can be pretty hard to understand what's going on in a kid's head and heart, even if it's your own child?

I don't know what Jesse Singal's family situation is, nor do I recall reading anything else he's written (though that may soon change). I do know, though, as a cisgender person in a family and community with a number of transfolk in it that families too are very much affected by the decisions of the transpeople themselves. Shouldn't we be allowed to weigh in on these questions too?