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One of my beginning students is part of the transgender community and has asked

several provocative questions about treatment. (I'm not sure it matters, but it

appears she is biologically female and still identified that way.) This first

came up during a brief talk about qi gong and stopping the menses. She

especially, it would seem, interested in those transmitting from female to male.

 

Although I have treated a few females transiting to male I was at a loss of what

to say. My first thought was that is quite conservative in

matters such as this. At first glance CM might call this a real bad idea, to

change gender, to stop the menses, to go through surgeries etc. Such a thing

seems incomprehensible or maybe just confusing to me if not many of us. However

I don't think we need to hear about " morality " of the issue nor doubt the

sincerity of the intent.

 

But then I thought about all those eunuchs through the centuries, which darn if

I haven't see a word written about in the CM literature. So I'm asking you folks

out there if they have run across any discussion of this. I will admit I have to

yet read the Flourishing of Yin- but I'm wondering if there was ever a book on

how to treat eunuchs or something else in the Chinese language canon.

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I've seen quite a few homosexuals become heterosexual after being

treated a few times on the qiao mai-- one of them after only ONE

treatment on yin qiao mai. I've seen other sexual " deviances " also

" straighten out " that way. NOTE: I've also seen many more

homosexuals NOT turn straight after treatment on the qiao mai, too!

It seems as though it only happens sometimes-- I can't tell you what

to make of that. Anyone else notice this?

 

This is not to make any moral judgement about it-- just what I've

noticed. I wonder about this, in the case of transgender people-- I

have not had the chance to find out if there would be a similar effect.

 

Thea Elijah

 

 

 

On Mar 9, 2010, at 2:20 PM, wrote:

 

> One of my beginning students is part of the transgender community

> and has asked several provocative questions about treatment. (I'm

> not sure it matters, but it appears she is biologically female and

> still identified that way.) This first came up during a brief talk

> about qi gong and stopping the menses. She especially, it would

> seem, interested in those transmitting from female to male.

>

> Although I have treated a few females transiting to male I was at a

> loss of what to say. My first thought was that is

> quite conservative in matters such as this. At first glance CM might

> call this a real bad idea, to change gender, to stop the menses, to

> go through surgeries etc. Such a thing seems incomprehensible or

> maybe just confusing to me if not many of us. However I don't think

> we need to hear about " morality " of the issue nor doubt the

> sincerity of the intent.

>

> But then I thought about all those eunuchs through the centuries,

> which darn if I haven't see a word written about in the CM

> literature. So I'm asking you folks out there if they have run

> across any discussion of this. I will admit I have to yet read the

> Flourishing of Yin- but I'm wondering if there was ever a book on

> how to treat eunuchs or something else in the Chinese language canon.

>

>

>

 

 

 

 

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Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you did this? Or

how many straight people became gay after you needled the wrong points? Sorry I

don't buy it Thea, even in quotes the implication is that straight is normal and

gay is abnormal. If you were to say that your acupuncture resolved internal

sexual conflicts I would say fine but this seems badly put. Not the conversation

I was asking for.

Doug

 

 

 

, Thea Elijah <parkinglot wrote:

>

> I've seen quite a few homosexuals become heterosexual after being

> treated a few times on the qiao mai-- one of them after only ONE

> treatment on yin qiao mai. I've seen other sexual " deviances " also

> " straighten out " that way. NOTE: I've also seen many more

> homosexuals NOT turn straight after treatment on the qiao mai, too!

> It seems as though it only happens sometimes-- I can't tell you what

> to make of that. Anyone else notice this?

>

> This is not to make any moral judgement about it-- just what I've

> noticed. I wonder about this, in the case of transgender people-- I

> have not had the chance to find out if there would be a similar effect.

>

> Thea Elijah

>

>

>

> On Mar 9, 2010, at 2:20 PM, wrote:

>

> > One of my beginning students is part of the transgender community

> > and has asked several provocative questions about treatment. (I'm

> > not sure it matters, but it appears she is biologically female and

> > still identified that way.) This first came up during a brief talk

> > about qi gong and stopping the menses. She especially, it would

> > seem, interested in those transmitting from female to male.

> >

> > Although I have treated a few females transiting to male I was at a

> > loss of what to say. My first thought was that is

> > quite conservative in matters such as this. At first glance CM might

> > call this a real bad idea, to change gender, to stop the menses, to

> > go through surgeries etc. Such a thing seems incomprehensible or

> > maybe just confusing to me if not many of us. However I don't think

> > we need to hear about " morality " of the issue nor doubt the

> > sincerity of the intent.

> >

> > But then I thought about all those eunuchs through the centuries,

> > which darn if I haven't see a word written about in the CM

> > literature. So I'm asking you folks out there if they have run

> > across any discussion of this. I will admit I have to yet read the

> > Flourishing of Yin- but I'm wondering if there was ever a book on

> > how to treat eunuchs or something else in the Chinese language canon.

> >

> >

> >

>

>

>

>

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On Mar 10, 2010, at 3:39 AM, wrote:

 

> Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you did

> this?

>

it definitely gave rise to external turmoil, but internally they felt

quite " settled. "

 

 

 

> Or how many straight people became gay after you needled the wrong

> points?

>

So far none have gone from straight to gay following 8 Extra tx.

 

 

 

> Sorry I don't buy it Thea, even in quotes the implication is that

> straight is normal and gay is abnormal. If you were to say that your

> acupuncture resolved internal sexual conflicts I would say fine but

> this seems badly put.

>

It does seem a very good hypothesis that the tx resolved internal

sexual conflicts. It hasn't happened nearly often enough to call it a

theory, but generally speaking I would agree that this is what seems

to have happened.

 

I don't really have any clarity about being gay or straight being

normal or abnormal, or what that means specifically within Chinese

medicine--- any more than you do. I just don't know enough about

it. My job is to help people be themselves, in the trust that this is

what health means for them. But do clients always come in with that

kind of clarity about themselves? If the client's gender dysphoria is

a yin qiao mai problem, should I support their problem just because

they request that I do so? How do I evaluate whether a desire or an

orientation is healthy or pathological?

 

Personally, I don't. It's not for me to evaluate. Exactly as you

say, I will treat for the sake of clarifying and balancing so that

internal conflicts may be resolved-- and then we see what happens.

There is no way acupuncture can " make " someone's sexual orientation

change--- at least I cannot imagine so! But txing the 8 Extras

certainly can promote clarity/self-congruence on that level.

 

What I am saying is, before acceding to your client's request, perhaps

it is best to evaluate where the request is coming from in her-- from

self-rejection on an 8EV level, or somewhere very balanced and whole

in herself?

 

As a practitioner, I would want that clarity. Since I cannot get that

clarity from my judgments, I must get it through practice results.

How might I do that? As you say, do what I can to resolve internal

sexual or gender identity conflicts, and see what happens next.

 

 

I know it is not politically correct to question anyone's sexual or

gender orientation. But I think we need to, just as much as we

question everything else about them, in the attempt to help the person

" come home " to health.

 

I'm not saying that the sociological norm equals health. I'm saying

it's worth questioning, and doing so via tx, so that you do not find

yourself possibly in the position of assisting a pathology.

 

 

> Not the conversation I was asking for.

>

 

Is that (above) better put? I'm not being a Nazi here; I'm just not

buying that health is whatever the client comes in asking for.

 

While we don't " need to hear about " morality " of the issue nor doubt

the sincerity of the intent, " it does seem clear that health is not

just a matter of " anything goes " Right?

 

No conclusions--- but the responsibility to clarify on a client by

client basis.

 

 

Thea Elijah

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

> Doug

>

> , Thea Elijah

> <parkinglot wrote:

> >

> > I've seen quite a few homosexuals become heterosexual after being

> > treated a few times on the qiao mai-- one of them after only ONE

> > treatment on yin qiao mai. I've seen other sexual " deviances " also

> > " straighten out " that way. NOTE: I've also seen many more

> > homosexuals NOT turn straight after treatment on the qiao mai, too!

> > It seems as though it only happens sometimes-- I can't tell you what

> > to make of that. Anyone else notice this?

> >

> > This is not to make any moral judgement about it-- just what I've

> > noticed. I wonder about this, in the case of transgender people-- I

> > have not had the chance to find out if there would be a similar

> effect.

> >

> > Thea Elijah

> >

> >

> >

> > On Mar 9, 2010, at 2:20 PM, wrote:

> >

> > > One of my beginning students is part of the transgender community

> > > and has asked several provocative questions about treatment. (I'm

> > > not sure it matters, but it appears she is biologically female and

> > > still identified that way.) This first came up during a brief talk

> > > about qi gong and stopping the menses. She especially, it would

> > > seem, interested in those transmitting from female to male.

> > >

> > > Although I have treated a few females transiting to male I was

> at a

> > > loss of what to say. My first thought was that is

> > > quite conservative in matters such as this. At first glance CM

> might

> > > call this a real bad idea, to change gender, to stop the menses,

> to

> > > go through surgeries etc. Such a thing seems incomprehensible or

> > > maybe just confusing to me if not many of us. However I don't

> think

> > > we need to hear about " morality " of the issue nor doubt the

> > > sincerity of the intent.

> > >

> > > But then I thought about all those eunuchs through the centuries,

> > > which darn if I haven't see a word written about in the CM

> > > literature. So I'm asking you folks out there if they have run

> > > across any discussion of this. I will admit I have to yet read the

> > > Flourishing of Yin- but I'm wondering if there was ever a book on

> > > how to treat eunuchs or something else in the Chinese language

> canon.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Doug - if you're asking for a TCM perspective on this issue, then you need to be

able to separate the ethnocentric view from the TCM one. This topic came up in

clinic in Seattle and the Chinese profs had a very different take on this than

many of the students did (as you already have guessed) - but that's arguing

political correctness and not TCM. If you think of TCM as restoring the norm,

and equating castration with sex change... (please pardon the humor...) does

that make a woman a man without testicles? (runs and ducks for cover).

 

Geoff

 

, " " wrote:

the wrong points? Sorry I don't buy it Thea, even in quotes the implication is

that straight is normal and gay is abnormal. If you were to say that your

acupuncture resolved internal sexual conflicts I would say fine but this seems

badly put. Not the conversation I was asking for.

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On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 11:06 AM, yingsuke2002 <ozark.canuckwrote:

 

> This topic came up in clinic in Seattle and the Chinese profs had a very

> different take on this than many of the students did...

>

 

Can you encapsulate that discussion?

 

 

--

, DAOM

Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

http://twitter.com/algancao

 

 

 

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Okay, so I am new to this group. I am also relatively new to TCM, being a third

year student. What I am not new to is transgender issues. I am a trained sex

educator and have spent time with many transgendered individuals. First and

foremost, a discussion about transgender identity is not a discussion about

sexuality. It is a discussion about external expression of what is internal.

I have thought a lot about TCM in regards to people who are transgendered,

mostly because I have friends who have asked me to treat them and I have been

confused about the method that would benefit my patient the most. The immediate

response from most of my instructors is that a transgendered person is moving

against what is natural, yin and yang. This, I decided, I don't buy. I will

tell you why.

Going back to basics, there is no yin here and yang there. There is yin and

yang, and they are mutually dependant. They transform into each other and in

nature, we always see yin within yang and yang within yin. Discussions of how

men have sperm, which is white and yin, while women have menses, which is red

and yang. Going further into anything you will find there is always yin within

yang, yang within yin. Our tai chi symbol shows us that there are varying

degrees of this as well, not just a finite percent.

In my opinion, I find transgendered people to be on this spectrum, as we all

are, of yin within yang or yang within yin. It's helping them find the balance

that works for them. Many times (not always) people who feel a gender variance

also have physiological variances as well. This can present as hormone

imbalances (PCOS is one example)or physical variances (undecended testicles,

elongated clitoris, etc.). This is a natural variation that has occurred

throughout history. Two-spirits in some cultures, dieties in others. It is not

new. What is new is trying to squash them into a gender binary, which is just

not the case. There are always degrees, the tai chi can show us that.

As far as treatment goes, I think that a discussion with each individual patient

can tell you what is needed. Some people I know merely want to be percieved as

male (or female) but who have no need to alter their bodies. Others cannot have

peace until their body matches what they feel inside. It's up to us as

practitioners to find out what they REALLY want, not what they are feeling

societal pressure to do. Once that is established, we are here to help them

find balance. For those taking testosterone, which is very hot, their blood

needs to be cooled and yang sedated. Most often you will see irritability,

anger and lots of patients report acne. Treat what you see, right? Those

taking estrogen can have lower libidos and signs of central qi fall. That is

what you treat, always keeping in mind what the chemicals they may be taking are

causing to happen in their bodies.

It is not our place to judge, just to treat and help our patients be healthy,

balanced, and at peace.

 

Sarah

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Again, I'm not looking for a conversation about any of our contemporary

thoughts. I'm just asking if medical issues around trans sexuality have appeared

in the CM literature before.

 

Doug

 

 

 

, " yingsuke2002 " <ozark.canuck

wrote:

>

> Doug - if you're asking for a TCM perspective on this issue, then you need to

be able to separate the ethnocentric view from the TCM one. This topic came up

in clinic in Seattle and the Chinese profs had a very different take on this

than many of the students did (as you already have guessed) - but that's arguing

political correctness and not TCM. If you think of TCM as restoring the norm,

and equating castration with sex change... (please pardon the humor...) does

that make a woman a man without testicles? (runs and ducks for cover).

>

> Geoff

>

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It seems that having a tradition of eunuchs since ancient times, many of whom

were in the Imperial system, and even were doctors, it seems there should be

quite a bit or information somewhere in the literature or oral tradition.

 

In India, eunuchs are considered neutral in gender. The Sanskrit language has

three genders- masculine, feminine and neutral, so that may have influenced this

as well.

 

Eric

 

On Mar 10, 2010, at 11:47 AM, wrote:

 

> Again, I'm not looking for a conversation about any of our contemporary

thoughts. I'm just asking if medical issues around trans sexuality have appeared

in the CM literature before.

>

> Doug

>

> , " yingsuke2002 " <ozark.canuck

wrote:

> >

> > Doug - if you're asking for a TCM perspective on this issue, then you need

to be able to separate the ethnocentric view from the TCM one. This topic came

up in clinic in Seattle and the Chinese profs had a very different take on this

than many of the students did (as you already have guessed) - but that's arguing

political correctness and not TCM. If you think of TCM as restoring the norm,

and equating castration with sex change... (please pardon the humor...) does

that make a woman a man without testicles? (runs and ducks for cover).

> >

> > Geoff

> >

>

>

 

 

 

 

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Doesn't Tibetan medicine have pulses that can indicate gender,

including hermaphrodites?

 

Does Chinese medicine have anything like this?

 

K

 

 

 

On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 12:05 PM, Eric Rosenbush <adividya wrote:

 

>

>

> It seems that having a tradition of eunuchs since ancient times, many of

> whom were in the Imperial system, and even were doctors, it seems there

> should be quite a bit or information somewhere in the literature or oral

> tradition.

>

> In India, eunuchs are considered neutral in gender. The Sanskrit language

> has three genders- masculine, feminine and neutral, so that may have

> influenced this as well.

>

> Eric

>

>

> On Mar 10, 2010, at 11:47 AM, wrote:

>

> > Again, I'm not looking for a conversation about any of our contemporary

> thoughts. I'm just asking if medical issues around trans sexuality have

> appeared in the CM literature before.

> >

> > Doug

> >

> > --- In

<%40>,

> " yingsuke2002 " <ozark.canuck wrote:

> > >

> > > Doug - if you're asking for a TCM perspective on this issue, then you

> need to be able to separate the ethnocentric view from the TCM one. This

> topic came up in clinic in Seattle and the Chinese profs had a very

> different take on this than many of the students did (as you already have

> guessed) - but that's arguing political correctness and not TCM. If you

> think of TCM as restoring the norm, and equating castration with sex

> change... (please pardon the humor...) does that make a woman a man without

> testicles? (runs and ducks for cover).

> > >

> > > Geoff

> > >

> >

> >

>

>

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, " Sarah " <sarah.liners wrote:

> It is not our place to judge, just to treat and help our patients be healthy,

balanced, and at peace.

 

Nice post.

 

Eric

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, " " wrote:

>

> Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you did this? Or

how many straight people became gay after you needled the wrong points?

 

It's amazing our malpractice rates are as reasonable as they are when you

consider the risks involved. (joking, obviously:) Better not tell Fox News about

this treatment.

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Guest guest

I agree with you Sarah. In my opinion, religious/society based judgement needs

to left at the door and we need to concentrate on treatments that will

ultimately bring balance to that individual.

 

A smile lightens the heart

Warmly,

Dianne

 

 

 

 

________________________________

Sarah <sarah.liners

 

Wed, March 10, 2010 2:42:56 PM

Re: Changes

 

 

Okay, so I am new to this group. I am also relatively new to TCM, being a third

year student. What I am not new to is transgender issues. I am a trained sex

educator and have spent time with many transgendered individuals. First and

foremost, a discussion about transgender identity is not a discussion about

sexuality. It is a discussion about external expression of what is internal.

I have thought a lot about TCM in regards to people who are transgendered,

mostly because I have friends who have asked me to treat them and I have been

confused about the method that would benefit my patient the most. The immediate

response from most of my instructors is that a transgendered person is moving

against what is natural, yin and yang. This, I decided, I don't buy. I will tell

you why.

Going back to basics, there is no yin here and yang there. There is yin and

yang, and they are mutually dependant. They transform into each other and in

nature, we always see yin within yang and yang within yin. Discussions of how

men have sperm, which is white and yin, while women have menses, which is red

and yang. Going further into anything you will find there is always yin within

yang, yang within yin. Our tai chi symbol shows us that there are varying

degrees of this as well, not just a finite percent.

In my opinion, I find transgendered people to be on this spectrum, as we all

are, of yin within yang or yang within yin. It's helping them find the balance

that works for them. Many times (not always) people who feel a gender variance

also have physiological variances as well. This can present as hormone

imbalances (PCOS is one example)or physical variances (undecended testicles,

elongated clitoris, etc.). This is a natural variation that has occurred

throughout history. Two-spirits in some cultures, dieties in others. It is not

new. What is new is trying to squash them into a gender binary, which is just

not the case. There are always degrees, the tai chi can show us that.

As far as treatment goes, I think that a discussion with each individual patient

can tell you what is needed. Some people I know merely want to be percieved as

male (or female) but who have no need to alter their bodies. Others cannot have

peace until their body matches what they feel inside. It's up to us as

practitioners to find out what they REALLY want, not what they are feeling

societal pressure to do. Once that is established, we are here to help them find

balance. For those taking testosterone, which is very hot, their blood needs to

be cooled and yang sedated. Most often you will see irritability, anger and lots

of patients report acne. Treat what you see, right? Those taking estrogen can

have lower libidos and signs of central qi fall. That is what you treat, always

keeping in mind what the chemicals they may be taking are causing to happen in

their bodies.

It is not our place to judge, just to treat and help our patients be healthy,

balanced, and at peace.

 

Sarah

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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lol

 

On Mar 11, 2010, at 2:04 AM, smilinglotus wrote:

 

>

>

> , " "

> wrote:

> >

> > Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you

> did this? Or how many straight people became gay after you needled

> the wrong points?

>

> It's amazing our malpractice rates are as reasonable as they are

> when you consider the risks involved. (joking, obviously:) Better

> not tell Fox News about this treatment.

>

>

>

 

 

 

 

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As I understand our insurance malpractice policy we can treat heterosexuality,

we just can't claim to cure it.

:-)

Doug

 

 

, " A. Brameier " <snakeoil.works

wrote:

>

> lol

>

> On Mar 11, 2010, at 2:04 AM, smilinglotus wrote:

>

> >

> >

> > , " " <taiqi@>

> > wrote:

> > >

> > > Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you

> > did this? Or how many straight people became gay after you needled

> > the wrong points?

> >

> > It's amazing our malpractice rates are as reasonable as they are

> > when you consider the risks involved. (joking, obviously:) Better

> > not tell Fox News about this treatment.

> >

> >

> >

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

.... and no telling how many treatments will be needed, either.

 

(If we keep on with this line of questioning, I'm sure some factions

will soon be getting started on treating those dolphins.)

:D

 

 

 

On Mar 11, 2010, at 3:23 PM, wrote:

 

> As I understand our insurance malpractice policy we can treat

> heterosexuality, we just can't claim to cure it.

> :-)

> Doug

>

> , " A. Brameier "

> <snakeoil.works wrote:

> >

> > lol

> >

> > On Mar 11, 2010, at 2:04 AM, smilinglotus wrote:

> >

> > >

> > >

> > > , " " <taiqi@>

> > > wrote:

> > > >

> > > > Well, so many things to say here. Like, were they upset that you

> > > did this? Or how many straight people became gay after you needled

> > > the wrong points?

> > >

> > > It's amazing our malpractice rates are as reasonable as they are

> > > when you consider the risks involved. (joking, obviously:) Better

> > > not tell Fox News about this treatment.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Sarah

It is not our place to judge, just to treat and help our patients

be healthy, balanced, and at peace.

 

Stephen

Sarah, thank you for your excellent posting! What a great

reminder of what practice is all about, so eloquently summed up

in your final sentence!

 

Stephen Woodley LAc

 

--

http://www.fastmail.fm - One of many happy users:

http://www.fastmail.fm/docs/quotes.html

 

 

 

 

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