These spaces framed being trans and transitioning as forms of self-destruction and something like an addiction. Supporting someone's trans identity would be seen as encouraging self-harm.
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When I started having doubts about my detransition, I didn't feel safe discussing them with other detrans women because of such community norms. I didn't feel like people ever considered that these "alternative treatments" could not work or even be harmful.
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I don't think all "alternative treatments for gender dysphoria" are necessarily bullshit or harmful. Some seem to work for some people but there's no research into how effective they are, how they compare to medical transition, what the long term effects are, possible risks, etc.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans
I find the conflation that goes on between social and medical transition a pretty weird thing in all of this. E.g. the references you made to pronouns - trans people were using alternate gender pronouns and appearance and living cross gender lives in the middle ages.
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Replying to @Chican3ry @reclaimingtrans
Medicine didn't invent that, people with gender dysphoria choose to take the course of their life in a direction that suited their own needs. But it becomes pathologised by the idea of it being "treatment" and being colonised by the psychiatric estate.
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Replying to @Chican3ry
People in my old scene would argue that trans people in the past were only doing that to survive living in a homophobic sexist society. Like people can never just be trans, it always has to result from some kind of outside influence.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans @Chican3ry
And just identifying as trans was seen as harmful. There are a lot of people who never transitioned but consider themselves "reidentified" women and act like just thinking they were trans at some point is something harmful to recover from.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans
Yeah, this mystifies me. A lot of people used to think they might be gay and then tried it and found it wasn't for them too. Seems like a thing to be chill about.
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Replying to @Chican3ry
One of the detrans women I knew introduced the concept of reidentified because she was afraid people would transition and detransition just to join the detrans women's community. She wanted to give people a way to join the community w/o having a history of transition.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans @Chican3ry
She also really believes identifying as trans is inherently harmful. I never saw large numbers of people frame temporarily identifying as trans as being harmful and something to heal from until that concept was introduced.
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It can be a way to pathologize experimenting with gender. "Reidentification" is also similar to terms and concepts that ex-gay people use, though detrans women didn't know this. I only found out years later when I started researching conversion therapy.
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