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"content": "<p>Other criticisms he's had: sitting on a plane after surgery only healing a week is not helpful, there should be two weeks of rest minimum at a hospital after.</p><p>I suggested he could do a lecture at the library but that seemed to scare him. He'd only want to do it at the health care clinic that is trans specialized (so only for others looking to get the surgery) and he joked about how his friends from all over the world won't be able to come. So he's still in a bubble and wants to remain there but at least he is taking in ideas about how to make the surgery actually safer for others. I've also asked him to email the surgeon of his experiences and give the response to a news paper. He said he's bad at reading. I've suggested he contact his local political representative, it was deflected.</p><p>I think he wants others to not suffer as he has but also to not feel embarrassed or like a freak show. It's understandable but at the same time, that's what enables this system to keep hurting people.</p><p>I don't think he's at piece at all. I think that if I were to tell him it would be a big betrayal and I could be more productive encouraging him to put more checks and balances on this system. I think saying that no one should do this will trigger a teenaged rebellion reaction in many trans identifying people and so forbidding it is the wrong way to go.</p><p>We talked about how someone can say they are in pain but others won't feel that pain or want to listen.</p><p>I'd add an anatomy test to the quiz, having to live with a catheter for a couple of days, practicing sterilizing rooms and bathrooms to his sex reassignment surgery class. I'd also suggest the people who want to get this care for someone who gets it as well. They can see things first hand.</p><p>I pointed out that none of the nurses or surgeons have had this done so they don't know.</p><p>One day maybe I will say they only understand it in the abstract, then I will explain how many women feel the same way about transwomen taking their words and spaces. People can act like an authority but that doesn't mean they are.</p><p>When ever I feel guilty of having a different perspective or afraid of others thinking I'd morally wrong to write about this I always remember, this man like all others never asked a single woman what makes her a woman.</p><p>I basically interviewed him which is so weird. No one talks to him about boundaries, I've given up. Like many men he has me pegged as an emotional sponge and because I literally can't avoid it I've gotten to the place where I show my curiosity, horror and also where I hope that maybe he can be encouraged to fight this institutional power. God knows the media and politicians would listen to him over women.</p><p>Surgery is different from dressing and hrt. Activists need to take a backseat to the lived experience of those who get this surgery. Men who feel like women need to take a backseat to women's lived experience.</p><p>I hope I am doing things that prevent more suffering. I'm unsure.</p>",
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"en": "<p>Other criticisms he's had: sitting on a plane after surgery only healing a week is not helpful, there should be two weeks of rest minimum at a hospital after.</p><p>I suggested he could do a lecture at the library but that seemed to scare him. He'd only want to do it at the health care clinic that is trans specialized (so only for others looking to get the surgery) and he joked about how his friends from all over the world won't be able to come. So he's still in a bubble and wants to remain there but at least he is taking in ideas about how to make the surgery actually safer for others. I've also asked him to email the surgeon of his experiences and give the response to a news paper. He said he's bad at reading. I've suggested he contact his local political representative, it was deflected.</p><p>I think he wants others to not suffer as he has but also to not feel embarrassed or like a freak show. It's understandable but at the same time, that's what enables this system to keep hurting people.</p><p>I don't think he's at piece at all. I think that if I were to tell him it would be a big betrayal and I could be more productive encouraging him to put more checks and balances on this system. I think saying that no one should do this will trigger a teenaged rebellion reaction in many trans identifying people and so forbidding it is the wrong way to go.</p><p>We talked about how someone can say they are in pain but others won't feel that pain or want to listen.</p><p>I'd add an anatomy test to the quiz, having to live with a catheter for a couple of days, practicing sterilizing rooms and bathrooms to his sex reassignment surgery class. I'd also suggest the people who want to get this care for someone who gets it as well. They can see things first hand.</p><p>I pointed out that none of the nurses or surgeons have had this done so they don't know.</p><p>One day maybe I will say they only understand it in the abstract, then I will explain how many women feel the same way about transwomen taking their words and spaces. People can act like an authority but that doesn't mean they are.</p><p>When ever I feel guilty of having a different perspective or afraid of others thinking I'd morally wrong to write about this I always remember, this man like all others never asked a single woman what makes her a woman.</p><p>I basically interviewed him which is so weird. No one talks to him about boundaries, I've given up. Like many men he has me pegged as an emotional sponge and because I literally can't avoid it I've gotten to the place where I show my curiosity, horror and also where I hope that maybe he can be encouraged to fight this institutional power. God knows the media and politicians would listen to him over women.</p><p>Surgery is different from dressing and hrt. Activists need to take a backseat to the lived experience of those who get this surgery. Men who feel like women need to take a backseat to women's lived experience.</p><p>I hope I am doing things that prevent more suffering. I'm unsure.</p>"
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