• @Gullible
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    51 year ago

    Generally, that’s how they transition; they get therapy and consult medical professionals to see whether it’s dysphoria or another issue. It isn’t taken lightly by anyone involved, and the dysphoria generally improves on treatment, as do their associated syndromes. They’re unwell, so they seek out the best treatment we currently have for the illness they’re diagnosed with.

    The human brain is still far from being understood well enough to affect the incredibly complex feeling of dysphoria in the way you’re seeking. To compare medications and therapy to the tools of a carpenter, we currently have hammers and nails, and some crude saws. We’re on the cusp of creating chisels, and decades from grinders. Treating dysphoria would require a router, which is a decade past that. There aren’t any other solutions for this rare, often fatal, condition.

    If you’re interested in helping those unfortunate enough to have it, and aren’t interested in standing back for medical professionals to do their thing, working in medical research to expedite the creation of other treatment options would be your best bet.

    TLDR: you’ve overestimated current medical and psychological science to be able to have said any of this, but may be able to create your vision of a cure within your lifetime.

    • @ZodiacSF1969
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      11 year ago

      I’m well aware of the current limitations of our understanding of the brain, and I don’t see how I’ve overestimated nor how the same argument shouldn’t apply to the current treatments for transgenderism.

      I agree that our current methods are basic, which is why I think that allowing people to mutilate themselves to masquerade as the opposite sex is a blunt way to try and treat the problem. I think that I’m the future we will look back and acknowledge how crude our current methods are, and hopefully have a better way to treat it.

      I feel for them, but I won’t ever buy into the idea that drugs and surgery can turn you into the opposite sex. The only thing it can do is turn you into a rudimentary approximation. Believing you are something you are not is a delusion, and hopefully one day we can treat the underlying mechanism that causes it.

      • @Gullible
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        11 year ago

        It’s not internally consistent to accept the limitations of modern medicine, and disregard them seconds later. The reality of the situation is that while people entirely irrelevant to the conversation suggest improving treatment and plead for delays, those experiencing dysphoria suffer. As republicans love to say, 42%. Don’t miss the forest for the trees, preferring death to what you’ve been told to perceive as disfigurement.

        • @ZodiacSF1969
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          11 year ago

          It’s not internally consistent to accept the limitations of modern medicine, and disregard them seconds later.

          How am I disregarding them? I’m saying we should stay within our limits rather than creating a Frankenstein’s monster that is a caricature of the opposite sex.

          Also I’m taking so long to reply becawthe Lemmy hack fucked up my account.

          • @Gullible
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            01 year ago

            Because if any other disease had a 42% fatality rate, this conversation wouldn’t be happening. It’s currently our best, and only, treatment even if it seems icky. Therapy for actual dysphoria is about as effective as praying is for getting rid of homosexuality.

            And I thought you immediately downvoted and moved on, as this is a dead post. My b