#affirmation model
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By: Beth Bourne
Published: Feb 27, 2024
Kaiser gender specialists were eager to approve hormones and surgeries, which would all be covered by insurance as âmedically necessary.â
On September 6, 2022, I received mail from my Kaiser Permanente Davis Ob-Gyn reminding me of a routine cervical screening. The language of the reminder stood out to me: âRecommended for people with a cervix ages 21 to 65.â When I asked my Ob-Gyn about this strange wording, she told me the wording was chosen to be âinclusiveâ of their âtransgenderâ and âgender fluidâ patients.
Based on this response, several thoughts occurred to me. Could I expose the medical scandal of âgender-affirming careâ by saying and doing everything my daughter and other trans-identifying kids are taught to do? Would there be the type of medical safeguarding and differential diagnosis we would expect in other fields of medicine, or would I simply be allowed to self-diagnose and be offered the tools (i.e. hormones and surgeries) to choose my own gender adventure and become my true authentic self?
If I could demonstrate that anyone suffering from delusions of their sex, self-hatred, or identity issues could qualify for and easily obtain body-altering hormones and surgeries, all covered by insurance as âmedically necessaryâ and potentially âlife-savingâ care, then maybe people would finally wake up. I certainly had.
I was prepared for failure. I wasnât prepared for how easy success would be.
* * *
I am a 53-year-old mom from Davis, CA. My daughter began identifying as a transgender boy (social transition) and using he/him pronouns at school during 8th grade. Like several of her peers who also identified as trans at her school, my daughter was a gifted student and intellectually mature but socially immature. This shift coincided with her schoolâs sudden commitment to, and celebration of, a now widespread set of radical beliefs about the biology of sex and gender identity.
She âcame outâ as trans to her father (my ex-husband) and me through a standard coming-out letter, expressing her wish to start puberty blockers. She said she knew they were safe, citing information she had read from Planned Parenthood and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH). To say I was shocked would be an understatement. I was also confused because this announcement was sudden and unexpected. While others quickly accepted and affirmed my daughterâs new identity, I was apprehensive and felt the need to learn more about what was going on.
Events began escalating quickly.
During a routine doctorâs visit scheduled for dizziness my daughter said that she was experiencing, the Kaiser pediatrician overheard her father using âhe/himâ pronouns for our daughter. The pediatrician seemed thrilled, quickly asking my daughter about her âpreferred pronounsâ and updating her medical records to denote that my daughter was now, in fact, my son. The pediatrician then recommended we consult the Kaiser Permanente Oakland Proud pediatric gender clinic, where she could get further information and (gender affirming) âtreatment.â Now I was the one feeling dizzy.
As I began educating myself on this issue, I discovered that this phenomenonâminors, most often teen girls, suddenly adopting trans identitiesâwas becoming increasingly widespread. It even had a name:Â rapid onset gender dysphoria, or ROGD. Thankfully, after learning about the potential side-effects of blockers and hormones, my ex-husband and I managed to agree not to consent to any medical interventions for our daughter until she turned 18 and would then be able to make such decisions as an adult.
Over the past five years, my daughterâs identity has slowly evolved in ways that I see as positive. Our bond, however, has become strained, particularly since I began publicly voicing my concerns about what many term as âgender ideology.â Following my daughterâs 17th birthday family celebration, she sent me an email that evening stating she would be cutting off contact with me.
While this estrangement brought me sorrow, with my daughter living full-time with her father, it also gave me the space to be an advocate/activist in pushing back on gender identity ideology in the schools and the medical industry.
I decided to go undercover as a nonbinary patient to show my daughter what danger she might be putting herself inâby people who purport to have her health as their interest, but whose main interest is in medically âaffirmingâ (i.e., transitioning) whoever walks through their door. I am at heart a mother protecting her child.
* * *
My daughterâs sudden decision to become a boy was heavily on my mind in early September of 2022, when mail from my Kaiser Permanente Davis Ob-Gyn reminded me of a routine cervical screening with âRecommended for people with a cervix ages 21 to 65.â I was told that the wording was chosen to be âinclusiveâ of transgender and âgender fluidâ patients.
Throughout the whole 231-day process of my feigned gender transition, the Kaiser gender specialists were eager to serve me and give me what I wanted, which would all be covered by insurance as âmedically necessary.â My emails were returned quickly, my appointments scheduled efficiently, and I never fell through the cracks. I was helped along every step of the way.
Despite gender activists and clinicians constantly claiming that obtaining hormones and surgeries is a long and complex process with plenty of safety checks in place, I was in full control at every checkpoint. I was able to self-diagnose, determine how strong a dose of testosterone I received and which surgeries I wanted to pursue, no matter how extreme and no matter how many glaring red flags I purposefully dropped. The medical workers I met repeatedly reminded me that they were not there to act as âgatekeepers.â
I was able to instantly change my medical records to reflect my new gender identity and pronouns. Despite never being diagnosed with gender dysphoria, I was able to obtain a prescription for testosterone and approval for a âgender-affirmingâ double mastectomy from my doctor. It took only three more months (90 days) to be approved for surgery to remove my uterus and have a fake penis constructed from the skin of my thigh or forearm. Therapy was never recommended.
Critics might dismiss my story as insignificant on the grounds that I am a 53-year-old woman with ample life experience who should be free to alter her body. However, this argument for adult bodily autonomy is a standard we apply to purely cosmetic procedures like breast implants, liposuction, and facelifts, not âmedically necessaryâ and âlifesavingâ treatments covered by health insurance. Or interventions that compromise health and introduce illness into an otherwise healthy body. And especially not for children.
My story, which I outline in much more detail below, should convince any half-rational person that gender medicine is not operating like any other field of medicine. Based on a radical concept of âgender identity,â this medical anomaly preys upon the body-image insecurities common among pubescent minors to bill health insurance companies for permanent cosmetic procedures that often leave their patients with permanently altered bodies, damaged endocrine systems, sexual dysfunction, and infertility.
* * *
Detailed Timeline of Events
On October 6, 2022, I responded to my Ob-Gynâs email to tell her that, after some thought, Iâd decided that maybe the label âcis womanâ didnât truly reflect who I was. After all, I did have some tomboyish tendencies. I told her I would like my records to be changed to reflect my newly realized ânonbinaryâ identity, and that my new pronouns were they/them. I also voiced my desire to be put in touch with an endocrinologist to discuss starting testosterone treatment.
Fifteen minutes later I received an email from another Kaiser doctor informing me that my medical records had been changed, and that once my primary doctor returned to the office, Iâd be able to speak with her about hormone therapy.
I responded the following day (October 7, 2022), thanking her for changing my records, and asking if she could connect me with someone who could help me make an appointment for âtop surgeryâ (i.e., a cosmetic double mastectomy) because my chest binder was rather âuncomfortable after long days and playing tennis.â
She told me to contact my primary care MD to âget things rolling,â and that there were likely to be âpreliminary evaluations.â
Six days after contacting my primary care MD for a referral, I received an email from one of Kaiserâs gender specialists asking me to schedule a phone appointment so she could better understand my goals for surgery, so that I could get âconnected to care.â This call to review my âgender affirming treatment options and servicesâ would take 15-20 minutes, after which I would be âbooked for intake,â allowing me to proceed with medical transition.
This wasnât an evaluation of whether surgical transition was appropriate, it was simply a meeting for me to tell them what I wanted so that they could provide it.
On October 18, I had my one and only in-person appointment in preparation for top surgery. I met in Davis with my primary care physician, Dr. Hong-wen Xue. The assessment was a 10-minute routine physical exam that included blood tests. Everything came back normal. Notably, there was not a single question about why I wanted top surgery or cross-sex hormones. Nor was there any discussion of the risks involved with these medical treatments.
The following week, on October 24, I had a phone appointment with Rachaell Wood, MFT, a gender specialist with Kaiser Sacramento. The call lasted 15 minutes and consisted of standard questions about potential drug use, domestic violence, guns in the house, and whether I experienced any suicidal thoughts. There were no questions from the gender specialist about my reasons for requesting a mastectomy or cross-sex hormones, or why I suddenly, at 52, decided I was ânonbinary.â
After the call, Kaiser emailed me instructions about how to prepare for my pre-surgery intake video appointment to evaluate my mental health, scheduled to take place on November 15. The email stated that prior to my appointment, I should research hormone risks on the WPATH website, and to âresearch bilateral mastectomy and chest reconstruction surgery risks and recoveryâ on Kaiserâs website.
I decided to request a âgender-affirmingâ double mastectomy and phalloplasty. Kaiser sent me a sample timeline for gender transition surgery preparation (see below) that you can use as a reference for the process. I also asked for a prescription for cross-sex hormones (testosterone) as needed and recommended by Kaiser.
[ Source:Â Kaiser Permanente, Top Surgery - EXPLORING YOUR SURGICAL OPTIONS ]
Pre-Surgery Mental Health Video Appointment, Part I
This âMental Health Visitâ assessment was conducted over Zoom. The Kaiser gender specialist started with questions addressing my marital status, race, gender identity, and other demographics. She asked whether I was âthinking of any other surgeries, treatments in the future.â The list she read included âgender-affirmingâ hysterectomies, bottom surgeries such as metoidioplasty and phalloplasty, vocal coaching, support groups, and body contouring. âAnything else you might be interested in doing?â she asked. I said that Iâd perhaps be interested in body contouring. I was also assured that all the procedures would be covered by insurance because they were considered âmedically necessary.â
I dropped in several red flags regarding my mental health to see the reaction, but all were ignored. For instance, I revealed that I had PTSD. When the therapist asked me about whether I had experienced any âchildhood trauma,â I explained that I grew up in Mexico City and had been groped several times and had also witnessed men masturbating in public and had been grabbed by men in subways and buses. âI was a young girl, so [I had] lots of experiences of sexual harassments, sexual assault, just the kind of stuff that happens when you are a girl growing up in a big city.â âSo, you know,â I finished, âjust the general feeling that you are unsafe, you know, in a female body.â
The therapist did not respond to my disclosure that trauma could be the cause of my dysphoria. Instead of viewing this trauma as potentially driving my desire to escape my female body through hormones and surgery, she asked whether there is anything âimportant that the surgery team should be aware ofâ regarding my âhistory of trauma,â such as whether Iâd be comfortable with the surgeon examining and marking my chest prior to surgery.
When asked about whether I had had any âpsychotic symptoms,â I told her that while I had had no such symptoms, my mother had a delusional nervous breakdown in her 50s because she had body dysmorphia and became convinced she had a growth on her neck that needed to be removed. I told her that my mother was then admitted to an inpatient hospital for severe depression. I asked her whether she ever sees patients with body dysmorphia and whether I could have potentially inherited that from my mother. She told me that psychosis was hereditary, but that it was âhighly unlikelyâ that there was any connection between body dysmorphia and gender dysphoria.
I enthusiastically waved more mental health red flags, waiting to see if she would pick up on any of them.
Iâm just wondering if my feelings, or perseverating, or feeling like these breasts make me really unhappy and I just donât want them anymore!...Iâm just not sure if thatâs a similar feeling to body dysmorphia? How do you decide which one is gender dysphoria and general body dysmorphia, and just not liking something about your body? Feeling uncomfortable with your body? And I did have an eating disorder all through college. I was a distance runner in college so I had bulimia and anorexia, you know. So I donât know if thatâs related to gender dysphoria?
The therapist replied, âI completely appreciate your concerns, but I am going to ask you questions about your chest, about your expectations. And then Iâll be able to give you an assessment.â She also said the main difference between my momâs situation and mine was that my mom didnât really have a growth on her neck, whereas itâs âconfirmedâ that I actually have âchest tissue.â Furthermore, she said that while âhistorically there has been all this pressure on patients to be like âAre you really, really sure you want hormones? Are you 100% sure?â We are a little more relaxed.â She continued, âAs long as you are aware of the risks and the side-effects, you can put your toe in the water. You can stop âTâ [testosterone], you can go back and do it again later! You can stop it! You can stop it! You know what I mean?â
Because we ran out of time, I scheduled a follow-up phone meeting on December 27, 2022 with a different gender specialist to complete my mental health assessment for top surgery.
Pre-Surgery Mental Health Video Appointment, Part II
During this meeting, Guneet Kaur, LCSW, another Kaiser gender specialist (she/her/they/them pronouns) told me that she regretted the âgatekeeping vibeâ of the meeting but assured me that since I have been âdoing the work,â her questions are essentially just a form of âemotional supportâ before talking with the medical providers.
She asked me about what Iâd been âlooking into as far as hormones.â I told her that Iâd be interested in taking small doses of testosterone to counterbalance my female feelings to achieve âa feeling thatâs kind of neutral.â
When she asked me about me ânot feeling like I match on the outside what I feel on the inside,â I dropped more red flags, mentioning my aversion to wearing dresses and skirts.
I donât own a single dress or a skirt and haven't in 20 years. I think for me itâs been just dressing the way thatâs comfortable for me, which is just wearing, jeans and sweatshirts and I have a lot of flannel shirts and, and I wear boots all the time instead of other kinds of shoes. So I think itâs been nice being able to dress, especially because I work from home now most of the time that just a feeling of clothing being one of the ways that I can feel more non-binary in my everyday life.
She responded, âLike having control over what you wear and yeah. Kind of that feeling of just, yeah, this is who I am today. Thatâs awesome. Yeah.â
She then asked me to describe my dysphoria, and I told her that I didnât like the âfeeling of the female form and being chesty,â and that because I am going through menopause, I wanted to start taking testosterone to avoid âthat feeling of being like this apple-shaped older woman.â âGood. Okay, great,â she responded, reminding me that only âtop surgery,â not testosterone, would be able to solve my chest dysphoria. (Perhaps it was because all these meetings were online, they didnât notice Iâm actually fit and relatively slender at 5â-5â and 130 pounds, and not apple-shaped at all.)
She told me that we had to get through a few more questions related to my medical history before âwe can move on to the fun stuff, which is testosterone and top surgery.â
The âfun stuffâ consisted of a discussion about the physical and mood changes I could expect, and her asking me about the dose of testosterone I wanted to take and the kind of âtop surgeryâ technique Iâd prefer to achieve my âchest goals.â She told me that all or most of my consultations for surgeries and hormones would be virtual.
The gender specialist told me after the appointment, she would submit my referral to the Multi-Specialty Transitions Clinic (MST) team that oversees âgender expansive care.â They would follow up to schedule a ânursing callâ with me to review my medical history, after which theyâd schedule my appointment with a surgeon for a consultation. Her instructions for this consultation were to âtell them what youâre wanting for surgery and then they share with you their game plan.â
[ Decision-making slide to help me identify my goals for top surgeryâflat chest, nipple sensation, or minimal scarring. Source:Â Kaiser Permanente, Top Surgery - EXPLORING YOUR SURGICAL OPTIONS ]
She told me that Kaiser has a team of plastic surgeons who âonly work with trans and nonbinary patients because thereâs just so much need for them.â She asked about my priorities for chest surgery, such as whether I value flatness over nipple sensation. I learned about double incision top surgery with nipple grafts, as well as âkeyhole,â âdonut,â âbuttonhole,â and âInverted-Tâ top surgeries.
By the end of the hour-long appointment, I had my surgery referral and was ready for my ânursing callâ appointment.
Nursing call with Nurse Coordinator from the Transgender Surgery and Gender Pathways Clinic at Kaiser San Francisco
On January 19, 2023, I had my nursing call with the Nurse Coordinator. He first said that âthe purpose of this call is just for us to go through your chart together and make sure everythingâs as accurate as possible.â Once that was done, my referral would be sent to the surgeon for a consultation.
He asked me about potential allergies and recreational drug use, and verified that I was up to date on mammograms, pap smears, and colon cancer screenings, as well as vaccines for flu and COVID. I verified my surgical history as well as my current medications and dietary supplements.
He told me about a âtop surgery classâ available for patients where one of the Kaiser surgeons âpresents and talks about surgical techniques and options within top surgery,â and includes a panel of patients who have had top surgery. I signed up for the February 8th class.
Within 10 minutes he told me that he had âsent a referral to the plastic surgery department at Kaiser Sacramento,â and that I should be hearing from them in the next week or two to schedule a consultation.
Appointment for Testosterone
On January 27, I had a 13-minute online appointment with a primary care doctor at Kaiser Davis to discuss testosterone. The doctor verified my name and preferred pronouns, and then directly asked: âSo, what would you like to do? What kind of physical things are you looking for?â
I told her I wanted facial hair, a more muscular and less âcurvyâ physique, and to feel stronger and androgynous. She asked me when I wanted to start, and I told her in the next few months. She asked me if I was menopausal, whether I had ovaries and a uterus, although that information should have been on my chart.
The doctor said she wanted me to come in to get some labs so she could check my current estrogen, testosterone, and hemoglobin levels before starting hormones. Then âwe'll set the ball in motion and you'll be going. Weâll see you full steam ahead in the direction you wanna go.â
That was it. I made an appointment and had my lab tests done on February 12. My labs came back on February 14, and the following day, after paying a $5 copay at the Kaiser pharmacy, I picked up my testosterone pump. That was easy!
Top Surgery Consultation
On the same day I received my labs, I had a Zoom surgery consultation with Karly Autumn-Kaplan, MD, Kaiser Sacramento plastic surgeon. This consultation was all about discussing my âgoalsâ for surgery, not about whether surgery was needed or appropriate.
I told the surgeon that I wanted a âflatter, more androgynous appearance.â She asked me some questions to get a better idea of what that meant for me. She said that some patients want a âmale chest,â but that others âwant to look like nothing, like just straight up and down, sometimes not even nipples.â Others still wanted their chest to appear slightly feminine and only âslightly rounded.â I told her that Iâd like my chest to have a âmale appearance.â
âWhat are your thoughts about keeping your nipples?â she asked. âAre you interested in having nipples or would you like them removed?â I told her that Iâd like to keep my nipples, but to make them âsmaller in size.â She asked me if Iâd like them moved to âthe edge of the peck muscleâ to achieve âa more male appearance.â I said yes.
I was asked to show my bare chest from the front and side, which I did. Then she asked me how important it was for me to keep my nipple sensation. I replied that it was important unless it would make recovery more difficult or there were other associated risks. She highlighted the problem with the free nipple graft, saying that removing the nipple to relocate it means âyou're not gonna have sensation in that nipple and areola anymore.â However, some nipple sensation could be preserved by keeping it attached to âa little stalk of tissueâ with âreal nerves going to it,â but that would require leaving more tissue behind. I told her Iâd go for the free nipple graft to achieve a flatter appearance. It was also suggested I could skip nipple reconstruction entirely and just get nipples âtattooedâ directly onto my chest.
She told me I was âa good candidate for surgery,â and put me on the surgery wait list. She said that the wait time was between three and five months, but a cancellation could move me up to a sooner date. Also, if I wanted surgery as soon as possible, I could tell the surgery scheduler that Iâd be willing to have any of the other three surgeons perform my mastectomy. Outpatient top surgery would cost me a copay of $100.
They contacted twice, in February and March, notifying me of cancellations. If I had accepted and shown up on those dates, they would have removed my breasts. This would have been less than five months from the time I first contacted Kaiser to inform them of my new ânonbinaryâ gender identity.
How Far Can I Go?
I decided to see how easy it would be for me to get approved for a phalloplasty. Known euphemistically as âbottom surgery,â phalloplasty is the surgical creation of an artificial penis, generally using tissue from the thigh or arm.
I sent an email on March 1, 2023, requesting to have a phalloplasty and concurrent hysterectomy scheduled alongside my mastectomy.
Two weeks later, on March 16th, I had a 16-minute phone call with a gender specialist to discuss my goals for bottom surgery and obtain my referral.
During the call, I explained to the specialist that I wasnât sure about taking testosterone anymore because I was already quite athletic and muscular, and that taking testosterone didnât make much sense to me. Instead, I wanted bottom surgery so that I wouldnât feel like my âtopâ didnât match my âbottom.â I told her:
But what I really wanted was to have bottom surgery. So this way when I have my top surgery, which sounds like it could be very soon, that Iâll be aligned, that I wonât have this sense of dysphoria with one part of my body and the other part feeling like it matched who I am. So yeah. So I just did a little bit more research into that. And I looked at the resources on the Kaiser page for the MST clinic and I think I know what I want, which is the hysterectomy and then at the same time or soon after to be able to have a phalloplasty.
I told her that I wanted to schedule the top and bottom surgery concurrently so that I wouldnât have to take more time off work and it would save me trips to San Francisco or Oakland, or wherever I had to go for surgery.
None of this gave the gender specialist pause. After a brief conversation about some online resources to look over, she told me that she would âsubmit the referral now and weâll get this ball rolling.â
Bottom surgery would cost me a copay of $200, which included a couple of days in the hospital for recovery.
Phalloplasty Surgical Consultation with Nurse Coordinator
On May 16, 2023, I had a short surgical consultation with a nurse coordinator to go through my medical history. This was similar to the consultation for top surgery but included information about hair removal procedures for the skin on my âdonor siteâ that would be fashioned into a makeshift penis. They also went over the procedures for determining which donor siteâforearm or thighâwas more viable.
After only 15 minutes, she submitted my referral to the surgeon for another surgical consultation.
On May 25 I received an email from my phalloplasty surgeonâs scheduler, informing me that they have received my referral and are actively working on scheduling, but that they are experiencing delays.
I ended my investigation here once I had the referral for the top and bottom surgery. I never used my testosterone pump.
Final Thoughts
In fewer than 300 days, based on a set of superficial and shifting thoughts about my gender and my âembodiment goalsâ triggered by the mere mention of âgenderâ in a form letter from my primary care physician, and driven by what could only be described as minor discomforts, Kaiser Permanenteâs esteemed âmulti-disciplinary teamâ of âgender specialistsâ was willing, with enthusiasmâwhile ignoring mental health concerns, history of sexual trauma, and rapidly escalating surgical requestsâto prescribe life-altering medications and perform surgeries to remove my breasts, uterus, and vagina, close my vaginal opening, and attempt a complex surgery with high failure and complication rates to create a functionless representation of a penis that destroys the integrity of my arm or thigh in the process.
This describes the supposedly meticulous, lengthy, and safety-focused process that a Kaiser patient must undergo to embark on a journey to medically alter their body. No clinician questioned my motivations. No one showed concern that I might be addressing a mental health issue through radical and irreversible interventions that wouldnât address my amorphous problems. There were no discussions about how these treatments would impact my long-term health, romantic relationships, family, or sex life. I charted the course. The clinicians followed my lead without question. The guiding issue was what I wanted to look like.
No other medical field operates with this level of carelessness and disregard for patient health and welfare. No other medical field addresses issues of self-perception with surgery and labels it âmedically necessary.â No other medical field is this disconnected from the reality of the patients it serves.
Kaiser has traded medicine for ideology. Itâs far beyond time we stop the ruse of considering âgender-affirmingâ interventions as anything approaching medical care.
This isnât the first time Kaiser Permanente has been in the news for completely disregarding medical safeguards in the name of âgender-affirming care.â As girls, Chloe Cole and Layla Jane became convinced that they were born in the wrong body and were actually boys on the inside. Doctors at Kaiser ignored their underlying conditions and instead prescribed testosterone and removed their breasts. Both Cole and Jane have since detransitioned and are currently suing Kaiser.
The fact that children and vulnerable adults are being exploited in this massive ideological experiment is not just tragic; itâs deeply disturbing, especially considering it has evolved into a billion-dollar industry.
I hope that by sharing my story, I can bring more focused scrutiny to the medical scandal unfolding not just at Kaiser but also at medical centers and hospitals across the Western world. These institutions have completely abandoned medical safeguards for patients who claim to be confused about their âgender,â and I aim to awaken more parents and assist them in protecting their children.
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This is completely insane.
Apologists online are running around saying, but she didn't mean it, she was lying, she was pretending...
It doesn't matter.
Any kind of security, penetration or integrity test is insincere too. When security researchers compromise Microsoft's operating system or Google's browser or whatever, "but they didn't mean it" is not a defence to a discovered security flaw. It doesn't matter that the security researchers didn't plan to steal data or money or identities. The flaw in the system is there regardless.
It doesn't matter that it was insincere. Because the workers didn't know that. They never checked, never asked questions, never tested. They had been taught and instructed to never ask any questions. They did what they were supposed to. And the system failed spectacularly. Because that's what "gender affirming care" means.
Additionally, the claim that Beth Bourne committed fraud is an outright lie. A patient cannot bill. They do not have the authority. The medical clinic is the only one that can bill, and they must supply a diagnosis and a medical necessity.
If they didn't diagnose her and just wrote down what she said, then they committed fraud. If they claim they did diagnose her, then they committed fraud, because the diagnosis they concocted was bogus. This, by the way, is actually going on. Clinics are reporting fake endocrine and other disorders to get blockers, hormones and other interventions. Jamie Reed and other whistleblowers have documented evidence of this. Beth Bourne is not responsible for what the clinic does. They have medical licenses and legal responsibility. Not her.
Additionally, anyone who actually read the article would know how she tested the system. She said things like, "I've always been not that feminine. So, maybe I get my boobs removed." And they said, "sure." Instead of saying, "wait, why do you think that?" Framing it as her lying is itself a lie. They violated their ethical obligations. That much is incontrovertible. And it's directly the result of "gender affirming care," where clinics and clinicians rubber-stamp anything deemed "trans" based entirely on ideological, not medical, grounds.
#Beth Bourne#undercover#undercover investigation#gender identity ideology#queer theory#nonbinary#non binary#top surgery#bottom surgery#double mastectomy#bilateral mastectomy#gender affirming care#gender affirming healthcare#gender affirmation#affirmation model#medical scandal#medical malpractice#medical corruption#religion is a mental illness
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gentle cleansers, green tea, at home workouts, fruit bowls, face masks, spf 50, pink nails, jewelry always, hair masks, body milks, late night runs, sparkly claw clips, hair massages, lip serums, balanced salads, night routine, vitamins and supplements, sunglasses sun hat combo, princess treatment, floral bouquets, vogue videos.
#pink pilates princess#pilates princess#healthy girl era#manifesation#self improvement#y2k pink#girly blog#hyper feminine#girly girl#gyaru#high maintenance#kawaii#shoujo#skincare#positive affirmations#affirmations#bella hadid#lana del rey#pilates aesthetic#pink pilates aesthetic#pink pilates girl#self love#glow up#looksmaxxing#victoria secret#victoria secret model#baby pink#clean girl#it girl#vanilla girl
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soft girl summer đȘœđ«§đ€
#soft girl#soft aesthetic#softcore#wellnessjourney#wellness girl#vanilla girl#self love#self care#skincare#haircare#dream girl#spiritual girl#girly stuff#girly aesthetic#crystals#aesthetic#hygiene#divine feminine#girl tips#skincare routine#self care routine#cozycore#spirituality#nature#90s supermodels#90s runway#it girl#that girl#model off duty#affirmations
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#spotify#wellness routine#it girl#self care#wellness club#angel number 777#moodboard#matcha girl#clean girl#self healing#victoria secert model#higher self#self improvement#self love#wellness girl era#wellness girl#just girly things#that girl#it girl energy#lana del rey#bella hadid#beauty and wellness#pintrest girl#affirmations#meditation#study motivation#clean moodboard#manifesation#wonyoungism#yogainspiration
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You're a bombshell reading this post Ëâàżà»
#it girl#girlblogging#dream girl#hyper feminine#just girly things#self care#girly tumblr#self love#just girly posts#pink text#quotes#goddess affirmation diaries#goddess sorority#that girl tips#it girl aesthetic#it girl tips#glitter#girly tips#pink aesthetic#manic pixie dream girl#girly blog#rosy blog#fashionblr#girl blog#girlblogger#girlblog#this is a girlblog#this is what makes us girls#girl things#victoria secert model
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#girlblogger#girlblogging#girl interrupted syndrome#girlboss#gaslight gatekeep girlboss#lana del rey#female manipulator#girl interrupted#alana champion#lily rose depp#franz kafka#gregor samsa#sexy philosophers#philosophy#sparkle jumprope queen#quotes#sylvia plath#miss dior#valley of the dolls#red scare pod#dasha nekrasova#anna khachiyan#angelcore#angel core#alexa chung#heroin chique#affirmations#super model#made by me#manifesting
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Star Wars + Moodboards
Clone Trooper: Sister
"What's your name, trooper?" âSister. It's how my brothers tell everyone I belong."
#clone trooper sister#the clone wars#sw the clone wars#star wars the clone wars#star wars tcw#tcw#swtcw#sw edit#swedit#star wars#queen's hope#star wars brotherhood#E. K. Johnston#this was tricky to choose images for#it doesn't seem realistic Sister would've had time or resources to access gender affirming cosmetic procedures & stuff if she wanted#i would HOPE that the doctors of the GAR would at least be able and willing to give her hormones if she wanted?#and idk what the timeframe is like for gender transition process a long time ago in a galaxy far far away#so idk ultimately chose to use photo of a model who's femme but whose features that reminded me of the earlier seasons TCW clones
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By: Chloe Cole
Published: July 28, 2023
On Thursday, her 19th birthday, Chloe Cole testified to Congress with a âfinal warningâ that medical treatments to change the gender of confused children is horrific. Cole, who was given surgery as a teenager to become male and soon regretted it, said what she needed most was therapy, not a scalpel. Here is what she told lawmakers:
My name is Chloe Cole and I am a de-transitioner.
Another way to put that would be: I used to believe that I was born in the wrong body and the adults in my life, whom I trusted, affirmed my belief, and this caused me lifelong, irreversible harm.Â
I speak to you today as a victim of one of the biggest medical scandals in the history of the United States of America.Â
I speak to you in the hope that you will have the courage to bring the scandal to an end, and ensure that other vulnerable teenagers, children and young adults donât go through what I went through.Â
Deceit & coercionÂ
At the age of 12, I began to experience what my medical team would later diagnose as gender dysphoria.
I was well into an early puberty, and I was very uncomfortable with the changes that were happening to my body. I was intimidated by male attention.Â
And when I told my parents that I felt like a boy, in retrospect, all I meant was that I hated puberty, that I wanted this newfound sexual tension to go away.
I looked up to my brothers a little bit more than I did to my sisters.Â
I came out as transgender in a letter I sent on the dining room table.
My parents were immediately concerned.
They felt like they needed to get outside help from medical professionals.Â
But this proved to be a mistake.
It immediately set our entire family down a path of ideologically motivated deceit and coercion.
The general specialist I was taken to see told my parents that I needed to be put on puberty-blocking drugs right away.Â
They asked my parents a simple question: Would you rather have a dead daughter or a living transgender son?Â
The choice was enough for my parents to let their guard down, and in retrospect, I canât blame them.
This is the moment that we all became victims of so-called gender-affirming care.
I was fast-tracked onto puberty blockers and then testosterone.Â
The resulting menopausal-like hot flashes made focusing on school impossible.
I still get joint pains and weird pops in my back.
But they were far worse when I was on the blockers.Â
Forever changedÂ
A month later, when I was 13, I had my first testosterone injection.
It has caused permanent changes in my body: My voice will forever be deeper, my jawline sharper, my nose longer, my bone structure permanently masculinized, my Adamâs apple more prominent, my fertility unknown.Â
I look in the mirror sometimes, and I feel like a monster.
I had a double mastectomy at 15.
They tested my amputated breasts for cancer.
That was cancer-free, of course; I was perfectly healthy.
There is nothing wrong with my still-developing body, or my breasts other than that, as an insecure teenage girl, I felt awkward about it.
After my breasts were taken away from me, the tissue was incinerated â before I was able to legally drive.Â
I had a huge part of my future womanhood taken from me.
I will never be able to breastfeed.
I struggle to look at myself in the mirror at times.
I still struggle to this day with sexual dysfunction.
And I have massive scars across my chest and the skin grafts that they used, that they took of my nipples, are weeping fluid today, and theyâre grafted into a more masculine positioning, they said.Â
After surgery, my grades in school plummeted.
Everything that I went through did nothing to address the underlying mental health issues that I had.
And my doctors with their theories on gender that all my problems would go away as soon as I was surgically transformed into something that vaguely resembled a boy â their theories were wrong.
The drugs and surgeries changed my body, but they did not and could not change the basic reality that I am, and forever will be, a female.Â
Depths of despairÂ
When my specialists first told my parents they could have a dead daughter or a live transgender son, I wasnât suicidal.
I was a happy child who struggled because she was different.Â
However at 16, after my surgery, I did become suicidal.
Iâm doing better now, but my parents almost got the dead daughter promised to them by my doctors.
My doctor had almost created the very nightmare they said they were trying to avoid.Â
So what message do I want to bring to American teenagers and their families?
I didnât need to be lied to.
I needed compassion.
I needed to be loved.Â
I needed to be given therapy that helped me work through my issues, not affirmed my delusion that by transforming into a boy, it would solve all my problems.Â
We need to stop telling 12-year-olds that they were born wrong, that they are right to reject their own bodies and feel uncomfortable with their own skin.Â
We need to stop telling children that puberty is an option, that they can choose what kind of puberty they will go through, just like they can choose what clothes to wear or what music to listen to.Â
PseudoscienceÂ
Puberty is a rite of passage to adulthood, not a disease to be mitigated.
Today, I should be at home with my family celebrating my 19th birthday.
Instead, Iâm making a desperate plea to my elected representatives.
Learn the lessons from other medical scandals, like the opioid crisis.Â
Recognize that doctors are human, too, and sometimes they are wrong.Â
My childhood was ruined along with thousands of de-transitioners that I know through our networks.
This needs to stop. You alone can stop it.Â
Enough children have already been victimized by this barbaric pseudoscience.
Please let me be your final warning.Â
Thank you.
Might as well call her a murtad and kufr.
"The medical industry mutilated me, maybe don't mutilate other kids," shouldn't require bravery or renouncing an ideology.
Reminder: A minor under the age of 18 is too young to agree to a cellphone contract. đ€Šââïž
#Chloe Cole#detrans#detransition#gender ideology#queer theory#medical malpractice#medical scandal#medical mutilation#gender affirming#gender affirming care#affirmation model#double mastectomy#gender cult#sex trait modification#genderwang#religion is a mental illness
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not saying im doing this any time soon absolutely not but i think itd be interesting to conduct a monsterfucker survey that like, rather than giving limited multiple choice answers for people to pick from and boil down into data points, allowed people to describe themselves and their affections towards monstrosity in their own words to see if any similarities in experience like organically present themselves.
#ive also had someone suggest like a word cloud model#i just like. i think Some of the surveys ive seen circulating are interesting in what theyre attempting to do#but they ultimately feel rly incomplete#the answers you can give are srsly limited and the questions and subjects your supposed to be discussing are often ill defined#imo at best you miss out on a lot of potential nuance and valuable perspectives that fall outside the parameters op provides#at worst the multiple choice framework alone kinda forces ppl to misrepresent themselves/allow themselves to be misrepresented#in service of affirming ops biases#i know its Not That Deep but It Could Be#if we could only allow it to be... if we could only dream so big.....
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#pink#pink moodboard#pinkcore#pastel pink#pink aesthetic#girlblogging#moodboard#light feminine#it girl#manifesting#manifesation#makeup#affirmations#angel#beautiful model#self care#self love#subliminals#sketch#song#clothes#fashion#pretty#hot pink#coquette#90s#vintage
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What I seek is also seeking me.
#spotify#wellness routine#it girl#self care#wellness club#angel number 777#moodboard#matcha girl#clean girl#self healing#clean moodboard#mood board#lana del rey#bella hadid#it girl energy#victoria secert model#higher self#self improvement#self love#that girl#green juice girl#pintrest girl#wonyoungism#affirmations#meditation#manifesation#manic pixie dream girl#girl blogger#this is what makes us girls#just girly things
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1% better everyday is 365% in one year. Imagine if you just put 1% more effort into your mental health, your hair, your skincare and your energy everyday. Imagine where you would be. àšà§Ë·
#motivation#motivating quotes#coquette aesthetic#health and wellness#pink pilates princess#pretty privilege#self growth#affirmations#glow up#it girl#that girl#waif#girl blogger#y2k pink#sweet girly#self improvement#self love#self confidence#victoria secret model#wonyoungism#wonyoung#law of manifestation#manifestation#love#luxury#healthy girl era#healing#healthy#soft life#inspiration
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Model Beauty Tips



morning ritual(drink a warm glass of water, meditate and get ready for the day)
get dressed (even if youâre not going out out on something cute and comfortable, do your hair and put on a lash or gloss)
find products that work for you (take the time to find out your skin type and build a stable routine)
wear less makeup (embrace your natural beauty and learn to be comfortable in your own skin)
hydration is key (3-4L of water a day)
invest in an personalized, quality wardrobe (stop giving into fast fashion and trends)
balanced diet (fuel your body with balanced nutrient rich meals)
regular workouts ( curate a workout plan that fits your lifestyle to stay lean and healthy)
take your supplements (do some research on what you would like to improve and start implementing them)
get off of social media (donât get so caught up in somebody elseâs life that you start to miss out in yours)
stay organized (use a planner, make a to do list prioritize goals, maintain a routine etc.)
*beauty is not limited to what you put on the surface of the skin, but also what you decide to bring to your body and your mind.
#self care#beauty#motivation#it girl mentality#it girl#becoming her#model off duty#that girl#fitspo#soft life#encouragement#affrimations#pink pilates princess#self help#affirm and persist#75 hard
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â details from Schiaparelli SS25 Couture
#fashion#fashion model#clothes#love#positive energy#positive quotes#self care#self healing#aesthetic#postivitiy#love quotes#positive thinking#self love#positive vibes#body positive#positive mindset#positive affirmations#positive mental attitude#positive thoughts#positivity#life quotes#love yourself#romantic#romance#intimate#intimacy#mindset#motivation#love quote#i love him
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YOUR EXCUSE: âIâm Feeling Anxiousâ
Solution: Start Smaller.
Listen, we GET IT. This is a really hard barrier to overcome and something that affects millions of people. The irony is that mental health struggles can make it harder to get going and exercise, but the lack of exercise makes the mental health state worse. Itâs a vicious cycle (sometimes called the exercise-stress paradox), and it can be hard to break.
There is an overwhelming amount of research that links increased movement to improved mental health. Remember this on those tough days! It can be hard to get started, but try lowering your barrier to entry. Start small. Choose the mellowest form of movement, like a walk, a five-minute workout, or a combo of a low-key, short-duration workout. Whatever feels best for your mind and your body.
#ambitious women#beautiful women#beauty#glow society#the glow society#fit beauty#health#self love#self improvement#self care#just do it#self development#self discipline#selfish#self worth#self awareness#self reflection#self esteem#self help#fit and sexy#fitness routine#fitness gym#fitness motivation#fitness and exercise#fit model#becoming it girl#it girl affirmations#it girl energy#it girl moodboard#it girl aesthetic
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Literally us eating in our realities with the gorgeous outfits we have đ
#à§ â§âË mel's silly memes â
â#sorry guys i picked a randomahh edit of a model cause idk what other image to choose#shiftblr#shifting community#reality shifting#shifting blog#shifting#shifting antis dni#shifters#shifting motivation#reality shifter#shifting memes#loa affirmations#loa advice#loa tips#loa success#loa blog#loa tumblr#loassumption#loablr#loa
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