😔😔😔
Very pertinent words from the woman who invited him to speak:
“Who are we as therapists if we cannot tolerate and be open to divergent points of view? How can we truly attend to the Other in the therapy room if we need them to agree with us to feel ‘safe’? What does it mean to offer a therapeutic space where our clients can express their deepest, darkest thoughts and feelings if ‘words are literal violence’?
One thing for me (I accept that there are many who disagree with me) is that I won't use the word "ideology" to describe a belief in gender identity. In exactly the same way I wouldn't describe a belief in God as Christian ideology. It inherently has a negative and othering connotation IMO. So if I had a gender identity belief, and was experiencing gender dysphoria, I wouldn't want my therapist to have any implicit bias within their explorations with me. If a therapist calls it an ideology, this might be a red flag. It would be unethical for a therapist to bring any atheist bias in to their work with a Christian client (e.g. unpicking and challenging their beliefs), so the same would be true of a gender identity belief.
However, facts are facts. There are two sexes. Some people have a gender identity belief, some people don't. For those that do have a belief in gender identity, some will experience gender incongruence or the even more distressing end of gender dysphoria.
The fact that the author can't advocate for the delivery of therapy that assumes a neutral position on this belief is abhorrent. Gender dysphoria is a mental illness - regardless of belief, the idea that the physical body needs to be changed to match a belief must surely be a mental illness. In the most extreme of cases, after all therapy to accept the reality of the physical body is exhausted, medical transition may be the right answer. Anyone for whom this is the case deserves access to care and compassion without judgement throughout their mental health support. However, this will be the right outcome for an incredibly small number of people, from what would be an already incredibly small number of people.
Because gender identity is baked in to the psychotherapy world as fact, this important nuance is lost and patients will inevitably get poor, but well-meaning, care. If the profession was delivering therapy through a Christian belief lens I'm sure there would be uproar - imagine a therapist discussing a pregnant rape victim's trauma with them through a Christian affirmation lens that will "help" her see why it's so important that she allows the child a right to life, no matter how she herself feels about that. That would be considered coercion, surely. I can't see how this is any different.