I have a very specific body dysphoria that I can pin point to certain events and experiences in my childhood. Quite a young age too. For example, specific realisations in year 1.* I’m very observant and socially aware/ sensitive. But I also worked out in my 20s that it was a perspective of my own perception and would worsen when I was under stress, which I understood to be about gaining some sort of control. It’s slightly OCDish i think. I’ve never been diagnosed at all but came to realisations via academic experiences and studies. And then various bits on TV and radio over the years.
A couple of years ago there was a programme or series about body dysphoria on radio 4 which explored the current approach of cbt and not using surgery as it was known that surgery did not alleviate the distress or hyperfocus, which would often then move on to something else.
I really believe that GD is very similar - but so much harder in some ways to avoid once the seed has been set, as society is extremely gender stereotyped AND now the condition of trans is so very normalised, accepted and believed by society to exist and require physical treatment.
I also find it so at odds with other movements around body positivity, which should be actively railing against body dysmorphia, especially for people with facial disfigurements
a very large driver is the very visually obsessed society we have today, which is completely saturated by visual media and imagery of perfection.
perfectionism can be linked to obsessional approaches, control and distress. We are such social creatures it’s very hard not to compare ourselves constantly to what we see. In the past we would have seen very few different people day to day and very little human imagery, if any.
Humans are also easily influenced by tribal trends. in the past that would have united small groups. Now it’s political.
the narrative needs to be reset. Somehow.
*in that same y1 class, a boy we played with was teased for playing with the girls. One day we found him sobbing wising he was a girl.