The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday is the urgent need for our rising generation to be free from confusion about their genders. I spoke yesterday to a mother of two teenage girls who are suffering from this confusion about their gender. They are convinced that they “do not feel like girls.”
The mother spoke of her heartache at
finally being told about the confusion with which her daughters are dealing. They
were questioning everything that she had previously taught them. Much of her
pain comes from her knowledge that her daughters were in pain and could not
approach her for help. This family’s struggle started a few years ago and has
gone through numerous painful episodes, including threatened or attempted
suicide. Gratefully, the attempts were not successful.
The question remains, what is
causing so many young people to struggle with confusion about their gender? Children,
teenagers, and young adults have too many traumas in their lives without being
confused about who they are. I have great compassion for the young people and
their families going through these struggles. However, the experiences of
others show that their attempts to solve their “problem” could bring greater
pain. Laurel Duggan shared the story of a biological man who tried to solve the
gender confusion problem by having sex-change surgery at age 19 and regretted
it decades later.
Anxiety, depression, and same-sex
attraction drove Corinna Cohn to undergo irreversible surgery at 19, according
to an article [in The Washington Post] published Monday. Cohn later felt regret
about losing the ability to have children, becoming permanently dependent on
medication, and taking on health risks related to cross-sex hormones and
reduced testosterone.
“As a teenager, I was repelled by the
thought of having biological children,” Cohn wrote for the Post. “Years later,
I was surprised by the pangs I felt as my friends and younger sister started
families of their own.”
Young people are now able to get
sex-change surgeries quickly and without intensive psychological evaluations,
Cohn wrote, especially in light of professional pressure to “affirm”
gender-confused young people through medical procedures.
“I shudder to think of how distorting
today’s social media is for confused teenagers. I’m also alarmed by how readily
authority figures facilitate transition,” Cohn wrote.
Alabama’s Legislature passed a bill
Thursday banning sex-change procedures for children. If signed by Gov. Kay
Ivey, a Republican, it will be the first law of its kind in the U.S.
In her article in the Post, Cohn urged
transgender individuals to slow down before making permanent, life-alternating
medical decisions, explaining that their feelings about their bodies will
likely change as they get older and experience relationships:
I once believed that I would be more
successful finding love as a woman than as a man, but in truth, few straight
men are interested in having a physical relationship with a person who was born
the same sex as them. In high school, when I experienced crushes on my male
classmates, I believed that the only way those feelings could be requited was
if I altered my body.
No one knows why there is an
increase in the number of young people who struggle with gender issues. No
matter the cause of the affliction, most people realize that it is a real
problem, and the young people suffering with it need compassion and support to
make their way through it. I understand that most young people are better
adjusted after puberty, but this is not the case with the children of my friend
and many others. We should not be judgmental in any way, and we should offer
our support even if it is only a listening ear.
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