I have wondered numerous times over the past few years why there are so many people seeking to change their genders today. So, I was interested when I saw an article at Psychology Today titled “Why Is Transgender Identity on the Rise Among Teens?” by Samuel Paul Veissière, Ph.D.
Veissière defined transgender
identity as being “characterized by experiencing distress with, or an inability
to identify with one’s biological sex, usually prompting a desire to live one’s
life as the opposite sex.” According to the DSM-5 (the standard classification
of mental disorders used by mental health professionals), this condition is
known as “gender dysphoria.” This classification is not a moral judgement on
anyone experiencing gender dysphoria.
One point of factor emphasized by Veissière
is that gender dysphoria is not a new condition and that “conditions akin to … ‘transgender
identity’ have been known to occur in all societies with varying degree of
acceptance, suppression, or even encouragement.” “There has been widespread
acceptance of individuals who were born males and dress and live as females” in
India, Thailand, Philippines, and Brazil. This acceptance “long predates the
current transgender movement in the West.”
Veissière stressed the “culturally
recognized incidences of pre-modern transgender individuals” introduced another
puzzle piece to understanding the phenomena. All “the culturally recognized
incidences of pre-modern transgender individuals … involve natal males who
transition to female.” According to Veissière, the DSM-5 gives prevalence rates
of gender dysphoria for males as approximately twice that of females. He stated
that this difference corresponds to approximately twice as many male
homosexuals as lesbians worldwide. He shared other findings that he considers
to be “clearly puzzling.”
As
attested by current controversies, rates of transgender identity appear to be
on the rise, particularly among young people. Increased social acceptance of a
previously stigmatized condition likely plays a role in this process, but other
findings are clearly puzzling: Transgender identity is now reported among young
natal females at rates that clearly exceed all known statistics to date.
In a recent survey of 250 families whose
children developed symptoms of gender dysphoria during or right after puberty,
Lisa Littman, a physician and professor of behavioral science at Brown
University, found that over 80 percent of the youth in her
sample were female at birth. Littman’s study reported many other surprising
findings. To meet the diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria, a child
typically needs to have shown observable characteristics of the condition prior
to puberty, such as “a strong rejection of typically feminine or masculine
toys," or “a strong resistance to wearing typically feminine or masculine
clothes." Again, 80 percent of the parents in the study reported
observing none of these early signs in their children.
One question is, “Why are so many young females interested in changing their gender?”Veissière shared results of a study that showed several reasons. “First, many of the youth in the survey had been directly exposed to one or more peers who had recently ‘come out’ as trans.” A second reason reported by 63.5 percent of the parents surveyed was that the youth “exhibited a marked increase in Internet and social media consumption” prior to announcing that they were trans. Another finding of the study was that after coming out, the youth had “an increase in distress, conflict with parents, and voiced antagonism toward heterosexual people and non-transgender people.” The parents also described their child as “sounding scripted,” “reading from a script,” “wooden,” “like a form letter,” “verbatim,” “word for word,” or “practically copy and paste.”
Veissière shared Littman’s cautions “about
encouraging young people’s desire to transition in all instances.” Littman coined
a new term for what she discovered in her study – “rapid-onset gender dysphoria”
(ROGD). This condition “appears to be a novel condition that emerges from
cohort and contagion effects and novel social pressures.” She hypothesized that
“ROGD can be cast as a maladaptive coping mechanism for other underlying
mental health issues.” ROGD seems to afflict females more than males. In other
words, peer pressure may be causing many young females to think that they are
in the wrong body.
I came across another article are
this topic. Although this source is not professional, it is illuminating on the
topic of children not having the wisdom or the maturity to make life-changing
decisions without parental guidance. “The Andy Griffith Show” that aired on
November 13, 1961, was titled “Opie’s Hobo Friend.”
Jared Miller explained that Sheriff
Taylor, played by Andy Griffith, discovered that his son, Opie, was adopting
some strange ideas and learned that they were coming from a hobo, played by
Buddy Ebsen. The sheriff located the hobo and discussed the effect that he was
having on Opie. “There seems to be something wrong with his thinking. He’s
gotten a little twisted on things lately, like being able to tell the
difference between right and wrong.”
The sheriff suggested that the hobo
move along, and the hobo responded with an appeal to moral relativism, “Maybe I
do look at things differently than other people. Is that wrong? Who’s to say
that the boy would be happier your way or mine? Why not let him decide?”
The hobo made a good try, but the sheriff
replied, “No, I’m afraid it don’t work that way. You can’t let a young’n decide
for himself. He’ll grab at the first flashy thing with shiny ribbons on it.
Then, when he finds out there’s a hook in it, it’s too late. Wrong ideas come
packaged with so much glitter it’s hard to convince ‘em that other things might
be better in the long run. All a parent can do is say ‘wait,’ ‘trust me’ and
try to keep temptation away.”
The hobo understood the sheriff’s statement
and agreed to leave, but not before saying, “That wasn’t so difficult. Your
problem is solved.”
The sheriff replied, “My problem is
just beginning. You left behind an awful lot of unscrambling to be done.”
The trans movement – or moment, as
some people say – has some twisted views also. Parents today send their
children to school to become educated, but they are being indoctrinated by post-modernist
teachers. Parents must understand that such false teaching is taking place and
remove their children from danger. Otherwise, they will be doing a lot of
unscrambling – or worse if they are too late. If anyone needs help, they can
watch Sheriff Taylor at this site.
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