Transfem
A community for transfeminine people and experiences.
This is a supportive community for all transfeminine or questioning people. Anyone is welcome to participate in this community but disrupting the safety of this space for trans feminine people is unacceptable and will result in moderator action.
Debate surrounding transgender rights or acceptance will result in an immediate ban.
- Please follow the rules of the lemmy.blahaj.zone instance.
- Bigotry of any kind will not be tolerated.
- Gatekeeping will not be tolerated.
- Please be kind and respectful to all.
- Please tag NSFW topics.
- No NSFW image posts.
- Please provide content warnings where appropriate.
- Please do not repost bigoted content here.
This community is supportive of DIY HRT. Unsolicited medical advice or caution being given to people on DIY will result in moderator action.
Posters may express that they are looking for responses and support from groups with certain experiences (eg. trans people, trans people with supportive parents, trans parents.). Please respect those requests and be mindful that your experience may differ from others here.
Some helpful links:
- The Gender Dysphoria Bible // In depth explanation of the different types of gender dysphoria.
- Trans Voice Help // A community here on blahaj.zone for voice training.
- LGBTQ+ Healthcare Directory // A directory of LGBTQ+ accepting Healthcare providers.
- Trans Resistance Network // A US-based mutual aid organization to help trans people facing state violence and legal discrimination.
- TLDEF's Trans Health Project // Advice about insurance claims for gender affirming healthcare and procedures.
- TransLifeLine's ID change Library // A comprehensive guide to changing your name on any US legal document.
Support Hotlines:
- The Trevor Project // Web chat, phone call, and text message LGBTQ+ support hotline.
- TransLifeLine // A US/Canada LGBTQ+ phone support hotline service. The US line has Spanish support.
- LGBT Youthline.ca // A Canadian LGBT hotline support service with phone call and web chat support. (4pm - 9:30pm EST)
- 988lifeline // A US only Crisis hotline with phone call, text and web chat support. Dedicated staff for LGBTQIA+ youth 24/7 on phone service, 3pm to 2am EST for text and web chat.
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unfortunately not true. or well, it's probably not so easy to compare actually. technically any doctor can prescribe hrt, and any doctor can give you a diagnosis and sign off on surgery. an issue we face in scandinavia is that few doctors actually do this and you're forced to go to certain transmedicalist hospitals that do all they can to do as little as possible for as few as possible. Unless you find an alternative ofc
yes, and I assume in the 1960s there were even fewer doctors and a less permissive / supportive healthcare culture
gender transition is the gold standard of care for gender dysphoria across the world where evidence based medicine is practiced, and that just wasn't true in the 1960s - I still think Sweden in the 1960s was a worse place for trans patients than the (admittedly dismal) situation now
Something I feel many don't realise, is that while being trans and having gender dysphoria/euphoria is something that has occurred across cultures and times, the medical means to treat dysphoria and/or give euphoria are pretty new.
We have the Indian hijra, the Roman gallī priests, heathen tale of crossdressing and masculine pregnancy, as well Hawai'i mahu. But before the 1920s, if you wanted HRT, your best bet would bet castration through removal of your ovaries, and consuming filtered pregnant horse piss (estrogen) or bull/dog testes extract (testosterone). Or food with higher natural rates of those hormones, but that's nowhere near as effective.
It's only by the 1920s that modern HRT became a thing. People often think of Stonewall as being the cataclyst for modern sexual liberation, and they wouldn't be wrong, but there was a lot of progress even before that, and people who fought for our rights.
There are earlier queer examples and activists, like Rolandina Roncaglia, a Venetian woman who was murdered in 1354. She was likely a transgender woman, and was largely accepted in Venice, but got ratted out on after 7 years. Or take Katherina Hetzeldorfer, murdered 1477, for being a crossdressing lesbian. And Jan Egberts, in 1731, who together with like a dozen people, was murdered at 19 for sodomy. He corrected his age when the judge incorrectly listed it in the sentence, and bowed saying, "It's all right, sir", before leaving. Madlad. Queer activists are awesome.
And yes, by 1831, there was Heinrich Hössli, who spoke out favourably for consensual same-sex love, while Karl Heinrich Ulrichs spoke out for his own gayness in the 1860s. He managed to convince some people for his cause.
But I feel that Hirschfield had affected the world for the better the most. Thanks to him, people like Karl M. Baer, got the first modern gender-affirming change surgery in 1906(!), and Alan L. Hart, could be the first to undergo masculinising HRT by the 1920s. Or take Toni Ebel, Charlotte Charlaque and Dora Richter. They were the first to undergo feminising surgery, and Christine Jorgensen, although not the first, is the most widely early example of feminising HRT, in 1950.
His incredible work for queers began in 1896. He'd visited Chicago in 1892, and noticed how their homosexual subculture was similar to that of Berlin. He got reading about those. In 1894, he had established a naturopathic practice, and was struck by how many gay patients were depressed due to the repression, and wanted to give them a reason to live. He was affected by Oscar Wilde's trial, and in 1896, a gay lieutenant he was treating for depression, took his life and wrote an extensive note to him. That kickstarted his activism.
He introduced transvestite passes so people wouldn't get punished for crossdressing, started research for HRT, fought for intersex rights and everything. If I could travel back into time and speak to anyone, I would choose Hirschfield everytime and tell him how advanced society has become for us, and thank him. Such a great man. I know he would be tearful with joy.
There should be a statue for this man. The archives should be restored.