Families, communities, states, and nations are stronger when each person is medically healthy. One of the medical health problems that is being forced on individuals and families is the idea that people can be born in the wrong body. It is a mental health problem known as gender dysphoria.
Many
young men and young women are being urged to have body changing surgeries
and/or take hormones in an attempt to change from a male to a female or from a
female to a male. It is possible to change the looks of a person, but it is
impossible to change their DNA.
In “The Family: A Proclamation to the World,” modern-day prophets and apostles published information that all people need to know about gender issues: “Gender is an essential characteristic of individual premortal, mortal, and eternal identity and purpose.” Females were female and males were male in the premortal world, and females will be female and males will be male in the postmortal world. Gender remains the same from the premortal world to this world to the eternal world.
Yet, people in this world seek to indoctrinate young men and young women who are experiencing mental trauma known as gender dysphoria and who believe that they are in the wrong body. Some of those same people sought to stop one young man from telling his story, according to Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell at The Daily Signal.
Threats and bullying from peers and
censorship from his college couldn’t stop detransitioner Simon B. Amaya Price
from sounding the alarm on so-called gender transitions for children.
Amaya Price, 20, was tasked with creating
an event about social change for a class at Berklee College of Music, a private
music college in Boston. He decided to host a presentation Oct. 20 titled “Born
in the Right Body: Desister and Detransitioner Awareness” to share his own
struggles with gender dysphoria in high school and how he overcame them.
After Amaya Price received almost 1,000
negative comments on social media, including messages threatening his physical
safety and recommending he drop out of school and commit suicide, the
administration of the liberal arts college forced him to cancel the
presentation, Boston-native Amaya Price told The Daily Signal.
But on Sunday, Amaya Price made a comeback.
After Berklee failed to follow up on his requests to reschedule the event, he
found his own platform….
The MIT Open Discourse Society allowed
Amaya Price to host his lecture on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. An organization called Democrats for an Informed Approach to Gender
provided refreshments and logistical support. The Foundation for Individual
Rights and Expression, or FIRE, also raised awareness of Amaya Price’s
situation.
The event logged about 40 in-person
attendees and 60 virtual listeners. Many in the audience were parents whose
children suffer from gender dysphoria, looking for answers of how to save their
children from the transgender cult, Amaya Price said….
“I feel like I’ve given a lot of these
parents hope, because I’m here today, I’ve been through this, I came out the
other side, and I’m OK,” he said. “That’s what a lot of these parents need.
They need hope. And right now how it is in Massachusetts, especially, there
aren’t a lot of places to look.”
Amaya Price’s presentation highlighted the
hate he says he has received on social media since announcing his event and his
journey from identifying as trans to accepting his biological sex. He ended
with the reminder: “No child is born in the wrong body.”
Amaya Price, who has been diagnosed with
autism, said he experienced social ostracism and a mental health crisis in
ninth grade, leading him to decide his problem was that he actually was a girl.
He told his therapist, who affirmed his
gender dysphoria and referred him to Boston Children’s Hospital for hormones
and surgeries. His pediatrician told Amaya Price’s father he could choose
between having a “dead son or a living daughter,” and that the then-14-year-old
would kil himself if denied hormones and surgery.
Amaya Price’s father immediately shut down
the possibility of a medical “transition,” which his son now says is “the best
thing he could have done.”
Amaya Price calls himself a “desister,”
someone who identified as transgender but decided to live in accord with his
biological gender instead of undergoing medical interventions.
The
truth must come out: No one is born in the wrong body. God, through his
prophets and apostles, has proclaimed that we brought our gender with us from
the premortal world, and we will take it with us into the postmortal world. The
best thing that parents can do for their children is to refuse the hormonal
treatment and the surgeries and give their children time and therapy to treat
their gender dysphoria. By doing so, parents can strengthen their family,
community, state, and nation.
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