Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

What A Pain


Colleen Henderson

Recommended Posts

It's hard for me to believe that Walt Heyer, who - at 82 - is a year older than I am, is still getting publicity as some sort of expert on transgender issues.

 

Today, there's an article that quotes him as saying that a person struggling with gender dysphoria almost always has an underlying issue. "People who identify this way are struggling with either bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, body dysmorphia, depression, or some underlying comorbid issue," says the doofus who de-transitioned back in the 80s and hasn't shut up about it since. "The truth is transgenders don't exist. There is no such thing as a transgender." The ultra-conservative news outlets swoon over this guy.

 

He goes on to intone that, "We need to stop using the word gender dysphoria, stop using the word transgender, and stop saying transitioning, because I haven't found one person that actually has gender dysphoria."

 

Gee, Walt... Where ya been?  I just looked in the mirror, and there one was!

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator
41 minutes ago, Colleen Henderson said:

Gee, Walt... Where ya been?  I just looked in the mirror, and there one was!

I agree Colleen, 

the religious right is doing everything they can to bury us under negative press. Taking every opportunity to book detransitioning people, or miss quoting others. Right now they’re really editing and twisting Chief Beck’s words to suit their narrative. While Chief Beck is detransitioning they’re not leaving the LGBTQA community. Chief Beck has told me directly that they will always be nonbinary and gender fluid. I love and support Chief Beck we just need to be aware that they are being misquoted. 
 

Hugs,

 

Mindy🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋

Link to comment

I've posted the following quote on several social media platforms (ones that I've come out on), hoping to educate others.
"When you debate a person about something that affects them more than it affects you, remember that it will take a much greater toll on them than you. For you it may feel like an academic exercise. For them, it feels like revealing their pain only to have you dismiss their experience and sometimes their humanity. The fact that you might remain calm under these circumstances is a consequence of your privilege, not increased objectivity on your part. Stay humble."

Link to comment
2 hours ago, Colleen Henderson said:

...a person struggling with gender dysphoria almost always has an underlying issue...says the doofus who de-transitioned back in the 80s and hasn't shut up about it since.

 

Well then, sounds like Walt's not dealing with his own underlying issues. Walt, heal thyself instead of lashing out at others. 

 

41 minutes ago, Trans22 said:

"When you debate a person about something that affects them more than it affects you, remember that it will take a much greater toll on them than you. For you it may feel like an academic exercise. For them, it feels like revealing their pain only to have you dismiss their experience and sometimes their humanity. The fact that you might remain calm under these circumstances is a consequence of your privilege, not increased objectivity on your part. Stay humble."

 

Yesss

Link to comment

Okay, I'm not defending Mr. Heyer for his opinionated views of those of us who are trans, but clearly, his transition had a profoundly negative impact on his life, so consequently, I can understand his bitterness (I understand but don't agree).  But like so many people tend to do, Mr. Heyer is trying to blame his woes on others.  He blames the surgeons that performed his SRS, which I find ludicrous.  He ultimately made the decision to proceed; nobody held a gun to his head and forced him to commit.  Like so many others in our current society, Mr. Heyer is looking for someone else to blame for the decisions he made.  He needs to take responsibility for his actions.

 

Clearly, he didn't realize how much of an impact his decision to transition was going to have on his life.  I guess he imagined that after transitioning, his wife and the rest of his family would be 100% supportive and that the life he knew previously would continue just as it always had.  Unfortunately, things didn't go as he imagined they would and after a while, he realized the life he knew previously, had been completely upended.  Had his wife and kids supported him and had life as a woman been as easy and comfortable as life as a man had been, he probably wouldn't have detransitioned or sought to disparage others that wish to. 

 

Transition is hard.  Those of us who haven't transitioned fulltime know this and those that have fully transitioned aren't naïve enough to think life is going to be rosy afterwards.  Obviously, I wish it wasn't true.  I wish each of us could live life in the gender we choose, without fear of the inevitable life changes that might result, but that unfortunately, this is not reality in our binary oriented world.  But to try and hold others accountable because your transition didn't go as planned, like Mr. Heyer has done, is childish and petty.  His bitterness and his opinions are misdirected.  He would have us believe all trans people are flawed simply because his decision resulted in an outcome he, personally, couldn't live with. 

 

Those of us who are trans already see his disparaging motivations for what they are; I only wish others could see through Mr. Heyer's smoke screen.

Link to comment

The anti-trans movement is all about emotions - no rational thought visible, no citations, conflicts within their emotional arguments, etc.  I have often seen logic (rational thought) disappear from my own conversations when I get emotional.
The "bathroom debate" offers up a really good example of conflict within the argument.  Proposing that rans-men must use Women's spaces is going to make it far easier for a cis-males to enter their spaces.  The anti-trans people simply aren't thinking rationally or completely.

Link to comment

Never heard of Walt until today.  But it sounds like he probably has an underlying issue if he's done the same thing for decades. I don't begrudge him the right to his perspective, but it doesn't match the experiences of lots of others.

 

I imagine that there are some folks who transition, realizing later that it didn't match their expectations or that they mis-identified the source of their discomfort.  But like buying a car, there are far more satisfied customers than those with buyer's remorse.   

Link to comment
2 hours ago, awkward-yet-sweet said:

Never heard of Walt until today.  But it sounds like he probably has an underlying issue if he's done the same thing for decades.

 

I did a search and turned up one of his videos. He sits with a bookmarked Bible and twists several carefully selected verses to prove his point that claiming to be transgender is to turn away from God.

 

That's what I loathe about the guy. It's not enough for him to express genuine regret for his own choices and add that information to the overall discussion. Instead, he decided to become proactive and make a name for himself constantly attacking the entire concept of gender dysphoria, using his simplistic religious beliefs as a weapon to cause untold pain for others over the years.

 

The last straw was seeing him described in the article as a "transgender pioneer".  Pioneer? In the 1980s? Give me a break.

 

The younger me would have gone at him like a buzzsaw. Hey, Walt... Wanna see my debate trophy?

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

It's crazy how every argument against what is not "normal" in society always somehow involves the Bible. The Bible is a powerful work, but it should never be used to spew hatred or cause harm to another person. Didn't those who wrote it go in with a vision to respect their fellow human, regardless of their condition? Whatever happened to "love thy neighbor?" It's like people lift their morals briefly so they can unreasonably hate on others without repercussion.

 

I can't speak for every person, but it's reasonable to say while a person may suffer from one illness, it's possible they may be suffering from others that have yet to come to light. Phobias, depression, anxiety, how one feels about themselves and others... it's pretty common. And if one is a minority, whether racially or sexually, it's no surprise co-morbidity can exist, no matter a person's station.

 

I've never heard of Walt Heyer up until this point but they're not the only person I've heard of who has de-transitioned or has gone back to heteronormativity, only to put down people they once identified with. It's sad and sick to me. The wrong person might stumble upon their hateful rhetoric and fall into a dark pkace that might be hard to get out of. Some individuals with the gift of rhetoric clearly abuse it.

 

I really enjoy how clear and raw your message is @Trans22. I've felt this before in the past and even now. It's really hard to understand someone if they are not themselves dealing with the same issue. One can try and sympathize, but understanding can only go so far.

 

I'd like to share one of my favorite quotes from Anatole France when hateful people like Walt become part of the limelight:

 

"Teach men to laugh at the stupid and the angry lest we fall prey to the weakness of hating them."

 

I stumbled across it by accident when reading a dystopian novel and it is so insightful.

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Russ Fenrisson said:

It's crazy how every argument against what is not "normal" in society always somehow involves the Bible.

I have a real problem with people who deride the transgender condition as not being "normal".

 

Red hair and favoring the left hand are not the norm, either. If you point that simple fact out, you're likely to elicit some response along the lines of "They don't affect other people". Come back with "Neither does being transgender and that's also an immutable characteristic" and you get a barrage of misinformation regarding grooming, agenda, perversion, threat to marriage, etc., etc., etc. Cut through that clutter and it's finally down to "Well, it's just wrong."

 

And then out comes the Bible again.

Link to comment
9 hours ago, Colleen Henderson said:

I have a real problem with people who deride the transgender condition as not being "normal".

 

Red hair and favoring the left hand are not the norm, either. If you point that simple fact out, you're likely to elicit some response along the lines of "They don't affect other people". Come back with "Neither does being transgender and that's also an immutable characteristic" and you get a barrage of misinformation regarding grooming, agenda, perversion, threat to marriage, etc., etc., etc. Cut through that clutter and it's finally down to "Well, it's just wrong."

 

And then out comes the Bible again.

Personally, I don't see myself as normal... unlike how I would see red hair or left-handedness.  I see my intersex body and gender issues as something more like autism.  It isn't ideal, but it isn't something I had a choice in. 

 

Biblically this stuff is a gray area.  When the Scripture was written,  it was in a world of gender specific dress and a world prior to chemicals that alter our essential bodily functions without consent.  The situation has changed over 2000 years.  Fundamenalists don't seem to be able to maintain general principles without getting caught up in attempting to apply very specific details.  

Link to comment

@Colleen Henderson It's like a never-ending conga line. Instead of using religion to put people on the "right path," it should be people helping other people regardless of their position. I wish it were more like this, but clearly, society at large has a lot of growing room. There's this strange desire for normalcy when this idea of being normal is strict and rigid. It doesn't exactly work for everyone.

 

@awkward-yet-sweetLife was simpler back then, too, often relying on elders to guide them in an otherwise inhospitable environment. Since then, humanity has succeeded in survival. Definitely by very simple means: eat, sleep, work, survive. That's a normal life to me. But lately, this normalcy seems to have come to apply with how people live their lives and how they feel about those around them. Whatever happened to letting a person live their life however they want to without feeling one has the moral responsibility to mold them to what is "normal?"

Link to comment

@Russ Fenrisson I'm not sure that the baseline of existence has really changed all that much.  To me at least, the world is still very inhospitable.  Sleep, eat, work, survive, defend yourself... being small and gentle and overly inquisitive still makes a person a target just as much as it did 2,000 years ago.  Our tech has changed which gives the illusion of progress, but human nature is the same as the day Cain killed his brother Abel.  Unfortunately, that's our human heritage.  That's normal.  Join the tribe, do exactly as told, slaughter those who step out of line.  That's normal.  Normal sucks.  🤮

 

Freedom is abnormal.  For all their flaws, the USA's Founding Fathers were very abnormal people, in a good way.  The created something that has (so far) been relatively unique in world history.  But now we have two sides who seek to control the state to coerce everybody else into their view....to the point of desiring to dictate how we dress, what we eat, what stoves we have in our homes, and all manner of other crazy things even the Kings of England and the Roman Caesars would have thought despicable.   Orwell's 1984 pales in comparison to the storm that is coming globally, and all Federal (and most state) politicians no matter what party are complicit.  If we ever get justice for what they've done so far (and continue to plan), the Nuremberg trials will seem tiny in comparison. 

Link to comment

It's amazing how the original Founding Fathers were able to beat colonialism, risk the odds, and create a government that was essentially untried before except in very small communities. I wonder if change like that can happen again.

 

It definitely is a cruel world out there. Since time began, people have fought and sought for justice and even if things seemed to have changed on the surface, it always feels like something is off. A person can enjoy something for so long before the rug is pulled from under them, revealing what had been there all along.

 

Definitely, the world at large is strange.

Link to comment

I know I'm diverging from the original subject of this thread, but in my humble opinion, I think the primary reason the world has become more inhospitable is due mainly to the common view that "it is all about me."  In almost every context, people are only concerned about themselves and generally don't give a damn about others.  I honestly believe that if we could get people to actually think about how how their actions or views affect others, the world would be a lot more hospitable. 

 

I could site hundreds of examples, but suffice it to say, people only care about themselves and never consider how their actions or thoughts affects others.  They lack any measure of empathy, which is sad and problematic. 

Link to comment

I think that might be part of it. Everyone has their own points of views, morals, and goals, they sometimes leave others out of the equation. It seems to be a general lack of empathy, across all boards. That's good to note, Sally.

 

This seems to be especially prevalent in politics. Those in charge are so far removed from their constiuents and try to vote according to some moral compass, but who's compass is it? Surely the majority of people don't share the same ideas as the person they put in office.

Link to comment
6 hours ago, Russ Fenrisson said:

Those in charge are so far removed from their constiuents and try to vote according to some moral compass, but who's compass is it? Surely the majority of people don't share the same ideas as the person they put in office.

 

This is almost certainly true.  Also, the majority of politicians are much wealthier than those they represent.  50% of Congress are millionaires compared to 1% of the general population.  Class differences definitely mean different ideas about what matters.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   9 Members, 0 Anonymous, 86 Guests (See full list)

    • KathyLauren
    • AllieJ
    • Heather Shay
    • MirandaB
    • Ashley0616
    • Riya
    • Lydia_R
    • Petra Jane
    • April Marie
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,044
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Ladypcnj
    Newest Member
    Ladypcnj
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. AlanaTG
      AlanaTG
    2. Alicia
      Alicia
      (35 years old)
    3. brianna051
      brianna051
      (39 years old)
    4. canofworms
      canofworms
    5. delmori
      delmori
  • Posts

    • Heather Shay
      @Mealainithank you for joining and let me applaud you on surviving and growing into the true YOU. Based on your recommendation I just ordered thebook you mention. I came to stop lying to myself and started embracing myself at the ripe young age of y68 and again applaud you. Well done.I'm so glad you are here and healing.  
    • Lydia_R
    • Lydia_R
      I played that Herbie Hancock Sextant recording I posted yesterday for my roommate and his first response to it was that it sounded like music from a porn flick.  I've heard that before, but I don't make that association at all.  I get a very mystic feeling from it.   I've been digging this now:     The lazy feel of it.  I enjoy improvising melodies and chords over it on the piano.  I get this vision of a lazy dystopian future of rustic decaying cities.  I'll sit on my mexican yoga blanket on the floor with my 5 gallon water bottle, simple pine board, coffee cup and nice pair of 747 drum sticks with a wood tip that I've had for 20-30 years.  I've been wearing my flowy long Indian patterned skirts again instead of the pencil skirts so that I can easily sit down on the blanket.   "Now there's 3 of them laughing 'round the radio."
    • Lydia_R
      Most jobs in and out of the military have a physical aspect to them.  As a musician in the Navy, I have moved gear all over the world.  I almost got killed from an anvil amp rack case falling off the side of a Navy destroyer at night, in the rain, falling on the small boat we were on in rough water.  It fell right on the plexiglass windshield of the boat.   I got a lot of crap from members of the band for being such a lightweight.  I weighed 120 pounds until I was 35 and I still only weigh 132 pounds.  They interpreted that as being weak, but with my strong will, strong cardiovascular system, and strong legs from being a bicycle commuter, I was able to do almost anything the bigger people could.  And I'm probably in much better shape than they are now.  I've been going on 5 hour bicycle rides lately.   One point is though that the military is a job, much like any other job.
    • April Marie
      Hey there, Beautiful. Wait!!! That's me!!!
    • April Marie
      Good morning, everyone!   Back to a semi-normal routine after the short vacay. We picked up our dog at the "spa" yesterday so she was very attentive last night. And, awake early but I managed to get her back to sleep for a few more hours.   I have an appointment at 8 to have the damage to my truck appraised after yesterday's accident. Hopefully, it's just cosmetic and there was no damage to the frame.   And, I've got a session with my therapist later this morning, too.   This afternoon will just be some small projects I need to catch up on.    Have a wonderful day, everyone!!
    • Willow
      Good morning      it’s Wednesday morning 3AM. Which reminds me of a Simon and Garfunkel song. But I won’t go there.  I have a lot on my plate this morning.  Waffles - check, OJ - check, morning meds - check, coffee - double check, lunch made -check.  But the real work is yet to come that starts at 4:15.  I’ve got a lot going on today over and above the usual 4:15 shift.  And somehow, I have to get the Asst Mgr to do some of the work for me.  That’s never fun, she and I don’t always see eye to eye.  She’d rather tell me what I did wrong or didn’t do verses help or show me the correct way.  Her status could be a topic for the May 23 meeting since I know the manager was pretty upset with her yesterday and she had a talk with the District manager about it.   well I had a Snoopy picture I tried to copy here but it got lost in the bits and bytes somewhere.  Time to shower and get dressed. Long day ahead likely greater than 8 hours but I’ve got time available in my hours per week.
    • KayC
      Braised short-ribs with all the fixin's (potatoes, onions, garlic, and celery) and homemade brown gravy - Leftovers from 2-nights ago, but even better 2nd time around (I wonder why that is?)
    • KayC
      I saw this on Erin's blog post too.  I definitely think this a BIG positive, but you're right @Carolyn Marie.  Now-a-days you never know how the World will get turned upside-down.
    • KayC
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I have never been in the military, but my husband was in the National Guard.  Sometimes I wonder, based on the few things he tells me, how some of the "demands of military service" might be somewhat artificial.  For example, the military won't allow a man who is missing a testicle (like from an accident) to serve.  Even though a man with only one testicle still has all functions and plenty of testosterone.  So, why that requirement?  Seems like banning trans folks is similar, in that there's no particular physical reason.    Also, some requirements are detrimental to the physical health of many people in the services.  Soldiers end up with back issues from carrying too much.  My husband has a bad disc in his back, primarily from service.  Even military medical personnel and researchers have talked about this sort of preventable injury for a long time.    Not everybody is in the special forces, or even in the infantry.  Even if trans folks have some sort of physical weakness compared to others, surely there are still plenty of duties they can perform?  I would be interested to know the experiences of some of our military members on this forum - how much physical exertion and risk was actually necessary for fulfilling your duties?  How much difference is there in exertion/risk between one MOS and another?
    • Sally Stone
      Post 9 “The Jersey Years”   If it wasn’t for the property taxes, I’d still be living in New Jersey.  The state gets such a bad rap but it is actually a beautiful place, with lots to do, and it is extremely trans friendly.  Moving to New Jersey was quite uplifting from a trans perspective.    Because of my new and very flexible work schedule, I was suddenly getting a lot more time to express my feminine side, and I took every opportunity to do so.  Additionally, I became a member of a trans dinner group.  It was the perfect way to meet other trans women, and I made quite a few friends.   The dinner group was actually a throwback from a time when going out dressed as a woman was still something of a novelty, and it was created as a safe haven for girls that still weren’t comfortable being out in the world by themselves.  When the group was formed, it was a necessary resource, but that need waned over the years, and it morphed into more of a social group.  It still occasionally served its designed purpose as we often had newcomers just emerging from the closet, but for most of us it was an opportunity to get together and catch up.   The move to New Jersey also coincided with an important trans milestone for me.  I made the decision to keep my legs shaved.  This wasn’t a decision I came to easily.  It meant I was going against my wife’s wishes.  While she had always been supportive of me, shaving my legs was just a “bridge to far” for her.  I honestly believe, that in her mind, dressing like a woman was always a temporary thing, but shaving my legs, well, that was more of a permanent condition, and I think it scared her.    To me, shaving was a rite of passage.  I had made the decision to be a woman part time, but I wanted something exclusively feminine to signify my inner woman, even when I wasn’t presenting as a woman.  Finally, I decided not to wait any longer, and in deference to my wife’s concerns, I started shaving my legs regularly.  For the longest time, she remained unhappy about my decision, and while there were times, I thought about giving in just to keep the peace, I stayed the course I had plotted.  Over time, my smooth legs became less and less of an issue, and now it’s been ten-years since I last had hair on my legs.  Thankfully, my smooth legs are no longer much of a concern for my wife, and now, I can’t imagine ever going back.   So, how does a part-time woman who isn’t stealthy by most measures, get along so well in the world?  In two words it’s attitude and mannerisms.  At one of the Keystone Conferences, I kept noticing another trans woman always staring at me.  At the time, I didn’t know her but the attention she was paying me was becoming borderline creepy.  Later, while I was sitting at the hotel bar enjoying a cocktail, this same woman took the empty seat next to me.  Before I could decide whether to stay or leave, she turned to me, introduced herself, and then apologized for her stares.  She went on to tell me she was staring at me because I intrigued her.  She told me that of all the people she had met or observed during the conference, I was the most “girly” (her words, not mine).  She said if it wasn’t for my height, she’d never have guessed that I was trans, because I had the poise, attitude and mannerisms of a very feminine woman.       I met another girl through the dinner group, who was living fulltime and preparing for GRS.  She and I became the best of friends, a bond I believe was formed over us both serving in the military.  Often, she would comment on how authentic I was.  She would always tell me I was so feminine and womanly; I could easily go fulltime.    There have been other acquaintances who made similar comments, and the truth is I could probably live my life as a woman without too much trouble.  The thing is, I don’t want to.  Yes, I thoroughly enjoy being a woman, and when I am, I am quite convincing, but that doesn’t mean I’d be truly happy.  If I had never met my wife, and didn’t have two super great kids, and I didn’t enjoy being a guy, perhaps I would have given serious consideration to transitioning.  Maybe I’m just selfish, but I want to walk in both worlds, male and female, and I see nothing that should prevent me from doing so. Does my part-time life make me any less a woman.  If how much of a woman I am was measured by how much time I spend expressing that part of my personality, then yes, I probably could be considered less of a woman.  But it wouldn’t change at all how much of a woman my feminine half is.  Her time for self-expression is limited yes, but when she’s out, she’s every bit the woman anyone else is.   Hugs,   Sally
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Meeting up with a therapist I seen back in 2001.Seen I am better,saw her after being honorable discharged from the Army.I was beaten up and sexually assaulted by a fellow soldier.Nothing was done about it and did report it.It put a toll on me.Was 22 at the time and we did not get along at times,bullied me too.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Army doing 4 years,I ended up be discharged after my 4 years were up.Another guy in the same unit I was in beat the crap out of me including sexual assaulting me.Nothing was done about it,reported it and it put a toll on me.Had anxiety issues which I did get help and did recover from it
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Ash! You’ll find lots of information and resources here to help with your journey. Jump in where you feel comfortable.  I look forward to learning more about you.

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...