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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Scott Newgent's experience with transition regret

12 replies

JFDIYOLO · 17/12/2023 00:41

DALLAS MORNING NEWS EXCLUSIVE:

"THE KINDNESS OF OTHERS.

Full Piece Copied Below.

https://archive.ph/mUYLz

"You're the transman Scott Newgent, from the ‘What Is a Woman’ documentary, right? Don’t we know each other?”

I immediately look down to avoid eye contact. It's one thing to be remembered for a great success in life. It’s quite another to be recognized for the single most significant regret you have, one that never releases its grip, leading to a life mirroring the Biblical Job: unending physical and mental health trials as well as financial tribulations. And I say that as an agnostic.

The woman refuses to leave my table at a coffee shop where I am desperately looking for a work-from-home job, as I’m now without the finances for a car. Her insistence forces me to look up and I recognize her. I have, indeed, met this woman and her husband and children — the type of meeting that only happens once but leaves a soul forever changed.

Years prior, I had visited them in their home in an effort to sell them vinyl windows. Due to complications from gender-affirming medical transition, I was struggling with urinary infections that were nonstop for 17 months. I’d had a phalloplasty, otherwise known as “bottom surgery.” That’s the last, most drastic, and least successful type of gender-affirming surgery available, but the number of people undergoing it is skyrocketing. According to a study published this summer by JAMA Network Open, gender-affirming surgeries almost tripled between 2016 and 2019. Most of those were “top surgeries” — removal or changes to breasts — but 16,871 of them were genital surgeries, including hundreds of minors.

For me, gender transition was and continues to be dangerous, causing massive and recurring health issues. It cured nothing. It gave me PTSD. My left arm, from which the skin was taken to create a faux phallus, has essentially left me disabled. My right arm — my good arm — recently was diagnosed with hairline fractures because I stopped taking testosterone a little while ago. I basically now have brittle bones decades too soon.

I needed that job selling windows for the health insurance, which would cover a procedure out of state. My own state didn’t have a qualified surgeon willing to take on the complications from my surgery. So I fluttered from one ER to the next, weekend after weekend, working five days in between. I had to endure three months of ring-around-the-ER-posey. This game I was forced to play left me with lasting financial debt that I will never be able to repay — yet another regret.

The insistent infections had taken their toll on my health, both physically and emotionally. A month prior, a doctor insisted I get a PICC line. This tube traveled up my arm and ended right at the entrance of my heart, remaining for over 30 days. Each day, I would wake up, go to the hospital and receive IV antibiotics before I headed off to sell windows in people's homes.

I distinctly recall the pain I had felt as an infection pulled on my bladder like daggers. I was giving my presentation, saying "Here is the latch that opens the windows," when the woman interrupted me: "Scott, sweetie, you have blood running down your legs.”

The kindness and genuine concern I felt from this couple, despite being strangers at the time, created a sense of comfort I will never forget. Their rare empathy hit a nerve, and I could not stop the tears I knew were coming. Once they started to flow, they didn't stop. I could not catch my breath, hyperventilating into the embrace of this woman and her husband. It was in his strong grasp I lost the ability to stand, yet I stayed upright because he held me along with his wife as his mammoth arms encircled us both.

It was this nurturing man who began to comfort me in a whisper, "Shhh, it's ok, Scott, it's gonna be ok, you're ok, let it out." He reminded me of my father, who’d passed away a decade prior. Even though we were the same age, I felt from him a fatherly love I clearly must have needed. I was so grateful.

The woman in the coffee shop is still there, smiling at me, oblivious to the regrets that flash through my mind. "Oh my, Scott, how are you? We saw you in the documentary and were so thankful to see you alive; we have been worried about you for years. How are you now? Scott, what powerful testimony you have and are giving to so many."

I look up at the expectant woman to give her my answer. “How am I? I’m still alive. And I live for my three kids.” When I was at my lowest, I thought about giving up entirely. But my kids’ faces came before and I made a promise: to live and to tell others about what happened to me. I’m far from perfect, as a person and as a parent. But I try. I try to help others so they don’t have the regrets that I have.

My most major regret — having experimental bottom surgery — led to a cascade of others.

About five years ago, I began a fight to stop childhood medical transition. I started by helping write the first bill that was heard in North Dakota and have not relented, becoming one of the leading worldwide voices to stop this experimental practice. Yes, a transman is leading the fight, and that in itself should give the medical community pause.

The obligation has weighed heavily on my family. I have been let go from good-paying jobs because of my activism. I’m crippled with debt. I’m trans and I cannot detransition, even though I’d like to. The process has gone too far; there is no turning back. And so all I can do is try to be as resilient as Job, even though I understand no better.

The couple smiles and wishes me well. I go back to looking at the want-ads with the free wifi from the coffee shop. I’m still an agnostic, but I’m also better off than Job.

Support Work Here: ScottNewgent.com
#SCREAMLouder

https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/commentary/2023/12/16/transgender-regretter-scott-newgent/

A protester wears a transgender flag at the Missouri Statehouse in Jefferson City, Mo. Scott Newgent, a Dallas transition regretter, writes about his painful experience and efforts to keep others from experiencing the same regret.

I’m working to save children from my deepest regret: gender-affirming medical transition

Dallas transgender regretter Scott Newgent tells his painful story of surgery and regret.

https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/commentary/2023/12/16/transgender-regretter-scott-newgent

OP posts:
EmptyYoghurtPot · 17/12/2023 07:55

This was a hard read. About 18 months ago, it seemed as if all DS s friends were gay, transgender, non binary etc. It was particularly worrying for his best friend’s mum as he told her he was trans and wanted to change his name etc. she asked me for advice and I did lots of reading online about trans regret. Some of the stories were genuinely heart breaking. Fortunately the friend decided a few months ago that he did in fact identify as a boy and went back to using his birth name. Puberty is such a difficult time for children, it’s no wonder their thoughts and feelings get confused.

Igneococcus · 17/12/2023 09:26

I have wondered before what will happen to all those US kids who are having hormones and surgery when/if they are not covered by health insurance. How will they finance any medical treatment when they are not covered by their parent's insurance anymore, or they are too unwell to work to have their own.

VelvetVoice · 17/12/2023 09:47

This game I was forced to play

who forced them?

GrandmaMazur · 17/12/2023 09:53

VelvetVoice · 17/12/2023 09:47

This game I was forced to play

who forced them?

I would propose the butcher/s who carried out the experimental surgery and then left Scott to try and find somebody to rectify the mess they made

NotBadConsidering · 17/12/2023 09:54

VelvetVoice · 17/12/2023 09:47

This game I was forced to play

who forced them?

That part refers to the problems of the American healthcare system, irrespective of whether it’s related to gender or not, so I’m not sure why you’ve pulled that out to make some point or other.

LoobiJee · 17/12/2023 11:26

VelvetVoice · 17/12/2023 09:47

This game I was forced to play

who forced them?

It’s explained in the paragraph which you took that sentence from.

“My own state didn’t have a qualified surgeon willing to take on the complications from my surgery. So I fluttered from one ER to the next, weekend after weekend, working five days in between. I had to endure three months of ring-around-the-ER-posey. This game I was forced to play left me with lasting financial debt that I will never be able to repay.”

Scott had to go to A&E every weekend to get medical treatment as there was no local surgeon competent / willing to provide non-emergency treatment for the complications caused by the genital surgery performed previously. Scott compares those weekend trips to various A&E Departments as a game of ring-a-ring-a-roses. Scott was forced into that by the lack of after-care by the surgeon who performed that genital surgery. Scott is in the US where the health/medical sector is a money making enterprise.

ShortMotherfuckerWithTheIvoryHair · 17/12/2023 11:44

Why Scott’s voice is not more widely heard is beyond me. Every trans person should listen to Scott before they go down the medical pathway.

VelvetVoice · 17/12/2023 12:21

@LoobiJee Thank you - as I don’t know their back story I thought they were forced into transitioning and called it a game. I didn’t consider the medical difficulties as I assumed those would have been explained prior the decision to go ahead with the treatment therefore making it a choice.

Vegemiteandhoneyontoast · 17/12/2023 12:58

Reading what some detransitioners say, it seems that a lot of people don't get the full picture before having surgery and only find out the down sides afterwards. It's a really shitty situation.

Froodwithatowel · 17/12/2023 13:53

That is an incredibly hard read. Poor, poor woman, I admire her courage greatly living with all this and carrying on, and it is terrible that trying to manage the infections and pain and difficulties have got her into the additional terrible stress of medical debt. How anyone can listen to Scott and not think it is desperately urgent that children are not led up the path to this and every opportunity taken first that an adult transitioner has tried every other less permanent, harmful and traumatic option first.... how could anyone with a genuine care for others not? Who could want anyone to ever have to suffer like this?

RethinkingLife · 17/12/2023 14:20

Vegemiteandhoneyontoast · 17/12/2023 12:58

Reading what some detransitioners say, it seems that a lot of people don't get the full picture before having surgery and only find out the down sides afterwards. It's a really shitty situation.

Hasn't there been recent framing of the pre-surgery consent conversations as forced conversion therapy? iirc, the MtF complainants styled this as a barrier to gender-affirming care.

I read it on FWR, I think.

DuesToTheDirt · 17/12/2023 21:34

Poor Scott. Why the hell would any doctor do this to someone?

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