Showing posts with label gender dysphoria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gender dysphoria. Show all posts

Friday, 1 February 2019

More on the Guidance for Gender Transitioning Services

The Pastoral Guidance issued by the House of Bishops for parishes planning services to help trans people mark their transition has been give a response in an open letter asking the House  to revise, postpone or withdraw this guidance until significant concerns have been properly addressed. This letter in turn has received an angry response by some with the agreement of the Bishop of Liverpool among others. These may be signs that the plea to listen will fall on deaf ears but a more measured response came from the Revd Dr Tina Beardsley, retired healthcare Chaplain, researcher and co-author of This is My Body and Transfaith. Her response makes me want to underline a few things and make a note of a few questions in the hope of developing my own understanding if no-one else’s.
First, it seems to me that the Open Letter never speaks of trans people because it does not seek to speak about people; it speaks to a Guidance which commends the unqualified celebration of a process. There is of course a relationship between trans people and the process of gender transition but the Letter questions the assumption that the only way to welcome trans people is to celebrate their gender transition liturgically – and to do so in every case.
Secondly, if the Guidance had merely cautioned against dead-naming and mis-gendering people, it would not have caused this Response. There is a difference between welcoming people, using their preferred names and pronouns, and offering a liturgical stamp of approval on gender transition. The former we can do while remaining agnostic about any specific transitioning process, the latter demands that we make a (positive) judgement on the process which in turn requires an agreed understanding of what gender transition is and why it is always something to be celebrated. Hence the call for serious theological analysis.
Thirdly, Tina Beardsley queries the focus on gender dysphoria, observing that the trans experience is broader. The reason for this focus on gender dysphoria lies in the fact that the Guidance specifically speaks of celebrating gender transition. This appears to assume that someone has received a gender recognition certificate which at present, here in England, is only possible after a diagnosis of gender dysphoria or after sex reassignment surgery. The latter also falls in the category of gender dysphoria, understood, with the American Psychiatric Association,  as “a conflict between a person’s physical or assigned gender and the gender with which he/she/they identify.” It is not clear that the Guidance issued by the House of Bishops is meant to apply to gender nonconformity as distinct from gender transitioning that seeks to resolve a mismatch (gender dysphoria), whether the mismatch had been experienced as distressing or not.
Fourthly, if being trans means to understand, feel, and identify oneself as having a gender mentality that conflicts with the sexual characteristics of one’s body and with the gender which society stereotypically attributes to people with those sexual characteristics, trans identity has a long history. Nevertheless there have been significant developments in the 20th century which change the context and raise new questions (see below) and there have been new developments in recent years in relation to pre-pubescent children which raise new concerns (Peter Ould makes reference to these in his comment).
Fifthly, the last few decades have seen a noticeable move away from gender stereotyping among many, even though elements of sexism and rigidity about gender roles remain. At the same time our ability to make someone’s body conform, to some extent, to their dissonant gender mentality has increased. This means that today the process of gender transitioning, in particular connected with sex reassignment surgery, often tends to affirm and reinforce gender stereotypes, when in the past a lived trans identity more commonly undermined gender assumptions and stereotypes. This is an issue that concerns society as a whole, not just individuals.
Sixthly, the new possibilities for manipulating our bodies raise afresh questions about how we think of our bodies theologically, especially given that the conflict between gender mentality and sexual characteristics is no longer considered a mental health issue.[1] Tina Beardsley points out that “the therapeutic consensus today is that being trans is a human variation, not a pathology” but in those cases were being trans leads to medical intervention[2] it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that it is a health issue. If it is not a mental health issue, should the dis-ease be located in the body? Should we think of the body of a trans person as “disabled” or “ill” until it is (to some extent) healed by sex reassignment surgery?
Finally, to affirm gender transitions liturgically seems to grant an ontological reality to “gender” as something separate from biological sex. This raises the questions about how we are to think about gender which have not yet been really addressed by the church.  Are we to assume that our souls are gendered in the way our bodies are sexed? Is there a difference between self and soul? Is dissonance always essentially about what it means to be “male” or “female” or is “gender” in some cases unrelated to “male” and “feamle”?
We do not need answers to these questions in order to welcome trans people, using their preferred names and pronouns. It is the recommendation of liturgy which in affirming gender transitions makes certain assumptions which demands that such questions are addressed.



[1] Mental health problems still carry a stigma which is why many are keen to avoid any suggestion that gender dysphoria is a mental health issue.
[2] I recognise that the desire to make one’s body conform to one’s gender identity is not universal among trans people. It is however one of the contexts of the Guidance and the Guidance does not distinguish between gender transitions with and without sex reassignment surgery.

Friday, 21 December 2018

Good News for All Genders


God has made you uniquely you.
God knows you intimately, better than you know yourself.
God loves you and desires the best for you.
In Christ God took on human flesh for our sakes.
God knows intimately what it means to be human.
Jesus experienced hostility because he did not conform to expectations related to his identity.
Being ill at ease, not least in relation to our identity, is a normal part of being human in this world. Jesus came to make us at ease with God, with each other and with ourselves. We can begin to experience this here and now, while awaiting the new creation of heaven and earth in which there will be no illness nor sadness.
There is nothing you need to do or can do in order to make yourself more acceptable, loved, affirmed and welcomed by God. You do not need to have any gender issues sorted, nor anything else.
God asks you to put your trust in him and promises not to disappoint you in the end. Disillusionment is part of the journey of redemption; brokenness helps us to sympathise with others and to look forward to the completion of our redemption.
Sieh nicht an, was du selber bist in deiner Schuld und Schwäche.
Sieh den an, der gekommen ist, damit er für dich spreche.
Sieh an, was dir heut widerfährt,
heut, da dein Heiland eingekehrt,
dich wieder heimzubringen
auf adlerstarken Schwingen.
Non-metrical, non-rhyming translation of the first stanza of this beautiful hymn by Jochen Klepper:
Do not look upon what you are yourself in your guilt and weakness.
Look upon him who has come to speak (plead) for you.
Look what happens to you today,
today that the Saviour stops by
to bring you home again
on wings strong as of an eagle.

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

Understanding Gender Dysphoria

“Gender dysphoria is a condition where a person experiences discomfort or distress because there is a mismatch between their biological sex and gender identity.” (NHS website) It is not about sexual attraction or orientation and is to be distinguished from disorders of sexual development.

Mark A. Yarhouse has  a book that is scheduled to be published in July 2015 under the title Understanding Gender Dysphoria: Navigating Transgender Issues in a Changing Culture. The first chapter can be read here. The video of a talk based on the book given at Calvin College is accessible here.

What causes someone to experience gender dysphoria? We don’t know. Yarhouse does not believe that the condition can be explained by environmental factors.
The most popular theory of causation today is called the brain-sex theory...The theory is based on the understanding that sex differentiation of the genitalia and sex differentiation of the brain occurs at different stages of fetal development. The idea is that perhaps in rare instances the genitals develop in one direction while the brain develops in the other direction.
Other theories of causation … tend to be multifactorial models with more consideration given to psychosocial factors. Proponents of these models suggest there are–in addition to prenatal/biological considerations–differences in areas such as temperament, level of anxiety, sensory reactivity, same-gender parental identification and modeling, and early childhood trauma that may also be part of the picture.
(The citation here is from a blog post of his.) Yarhouse does not think that we have sufficient data at present to settle the matter.

Can and should gender dysphoria be treated? Most cases actually resolve before a child reaches late adolescence or adulthood. The options for intervening around gender dysphoria in childhood are essentially the following
  • facilitating congruence between one’s gender identity and one's biological sex,
  • facilitating a cross-gender identification,
  • waiting to see what will occur over time,
  • artificially delaying puberty to allow a child to decide about gender identity in later adolescence.

From 39:28 in the video Yarhouse outlines how he seeks to help people to navigate the territory of gender dysphoria and from 53:11 he presents the three most prominent orienting frameworks within which people approach gender dysphoria, before suggesting an integrated framework that allows for insights from all three. The three lenses are
  • integrity: “identifies gender dysphoria as confusing the sacredness of maleness and femaleness and specific resolutions of gender dysphoria as violations of that integrity.”
  • disability: “identifies sexual identity issues and gender dysphoria as reflections of a fallen world in which the concerns are more likened to a disability, a nonmoral reality to be addressed with compassion.”
  • diversity: strong form – deconstruction of gender/sex as oppressive; weak form – highlights sexual identity and gender identity issues as reflecting an identity and culture to be celebrated as an expression of diversity.[*] 

Yarhouse argues that knowing about these different lenses with which people look at the issue helps us to avoid talking past each other, facilitates cognitive complexity and perspective-taking, and allows us to draw on the best each framework has to offer which he seeks to do from about 1:03:47 onwards. Implications for pastoral ministry are drawn from 1:05:21. 



[*] An advocate of the first framewok would be Robert Gagnon who writes of transsexuality as “an explicit denial of the integrity of one’s own sex and an overt attempt at marring the sacred image of maleness or femaleness formed by God” (“Transsexuality and Ordination,” 2007).
For the second lens compare Karen Keen’s use of the distinction within the world of hearing loss between people who identify as “Deaf” (capital-D, people with hearing loss are seen to form a distinct culture) and those who identify as “deaf” (small-d, keen to overcome the distinction between them and others and hence, e.g., happy with cochlear implants) within the context of sexual identity.
Yarhouse gives a citation from Joshua Butler to illustrate the strong form of the third framework but notes that in his experience the weak form is far more commonly held among people with gender dysphoria.