TransGuys

Apr 29 2020

Meet Mauricio

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Mauricio Ochieng, 30, Kisumu state, Kenya


Mauricio travels seven hours on a bus to Nairobi to collect his testosterone injections. It’s a journey he’s been making for over a year. It’s worth it.

“With the injections my body has started changing, I look less ‘feminine’, my voice is deeper and I’m growing a beard,” he says. “I was finally on the way to becoming myself. I am a man. I was never a woman.”

Growing up in rural Kenya, about 350km from the capital Nairobi, Mauricio knew he was different. He has more than 150 cousins and couldn’t relate to any of them.

“I was the black sheep of the family.”

He knew that he was not a girl, despite his body. His parents believed he was a lesbian. That was bad enough, they said, but it was something they understood. When he told them that he was a man in a woman’s body, they made him leave the family home.

Mauricio was 16 and homeless. He was sexually assaulted multiple times. Just over a year later, he fell pregnant from one of the rapes. People called him a “chkora”, a slur for a street beggar.

He went to his mother’s house and said: “Please don’t make me give birth in the street like a dog.”

She let him come home.

Mauricio’s daughter was born in 2007. He worked at the local market, buying and selling shoes.

In 2018 he decided to begin his transition. Testosterone injections cost around 1,200 shilling per dose (about £9) - which is a day’s work.

The 14-hour round trip each month to collect his medication felt like a huge achievement. Mauricio was saving up for Top Surgery: to have his breasts removed.

Then coronavirus reached Kenya, and soon lockdown restrictions followed.

Mauricio does not have his next supply of testosterone.

“I’m having sleepless nights, depression,” he says. “What will happen if I cannot have access to my medication? What will all this pain have been for?

"I am a trans man in a transphobic country. If I don’t get my medication what will happen to my body - it is already changing. Will I look abnormal? Who is going to fight for us to be heard in this chaos?”

(Source: bbc.com)

16 notes

Oct 31 2019
Binding in the *1950s*
Jim McHarris was a trans man who was born in Mississippi in 1924. He transitioned in his early teens and traveled around the country taking various jobs: short order cook, cab driver, gas station attendant, auto mechanic,...

Binding in the *1950s*

Jim McHarris was a trans man who was born in Mississippi in 1924. He transitioned in his early teens and traveled around the country taking various jobs: short order cook, cab driver, gas station attendant, auto mechanic, shipyard worker, and preacher. He eventually returned to Mississippi and settled in Kosciusko.

In 1954, he was pulled over and arrested. During the pat-down, he revealed his birth sex to the officers but they didn’t believe him, so McHarris was forced to strip naked in front of a judge and the police. He served 30 days at a prison farm. Although McHarris dressed in men’s clothes he was housed with female prisoners. After his release, he was shunned by the community and left Kosciusko, continuing to live as a man.

His story was unearthed in a 1954 issue of Ebony magazine in which Jim is quoted as having said, “I ain’t done nothing wrong and I ain’t breaking no laws.”

Source: A Brief History of FTM Trans Civilization
https://transguys.com/features/ftm-trans-history
Photo from Hue magazine archives.

(Source: transguys.com)

138 notes

Aug 20 2019

10 Ways To Avoid Getting Caught Up In a Testosterone Shortage

There’s zero indication that testosterone shortages are going away, so it’s important to arm yourself with information so that you know what to do when a shortage strikes. 

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1. The best way to avoid a testosterone shortage is to not let yourself run out of T to begin with.
It’s a good idea to always keep a backup vial around, but this is becoming harder to do in many areas of the U.S. where 10ml and 5ml vials are no longer dispensed and only 1ml vials are available. (Seemingly all of the sudden, pharmacies are enforcing the 28-day rule that calls for multi-dose vials to be discarded 28 days after first use.) If you can, leave a spare vial in your emergency kit, and order your testosterone prescription refill BEFORE you actually run out of T!

2. Get informed about the shortage. Talk with your pharmacist and look up information about the shortage online. You may be able to find out when the shortage is expected to end. In the U.S., you can use this USA Drug Shortage Search tool. In Canada, check here.

3. Take your prescription to another pharmacy. Pharmacies don’t all run out of testosterone at the same time, so if your pharmacy can’t fill your prescription crack the phone book and start calling all the pharmacies in your area, even pharmacies in nearby cities if you have to. You’ll probably need to see your doctor to move your prescription to a different pharmacy.

4. Switch to another brand or formulation. This can be harder to do than it sounds. First, you’ll have to see your doctor for a new prescription. Don’t delay as it’s unlikely that you’ll be the first in line for the alternative brand or formulation and what often happens during a shortage is that the alternative product also becomes unavailable due to increased demand.

In Canada, there are just two brands of injectable testosterone available. They have different concentrations of testosterone requiring a different dosage, as well as different suspension oils which some people are allergic to. If you obtain an alternative brand or formulation, be sure to read the label carefully and compare it to what you normally take.

Switching between different delivery methods, ie. intramuscular vs transdermal, can also lead to difficulty in maintaining stable hormone levels and it can take months for your body to adjust to the switch.

“Switching back and forth between different products is not ideal, and many doctors do not have experience in prescribing the different forms of testosterone,” said Dr Anastacia Tomson during the recent South African shortage.

Of course, be prepared to pay more as all the alternatives to T. cypionate and T. enanthate will be more expensive.

“I noticed a difference when I switched from Reandron to Testex, but this [shortage] is much worse. It’s not just about getting my period back, which is bad enough because it means reliving everything I’ve struggled to get away from, it’s about general changes in my body. I feel more sluggish and tired. And I’ve put on weight.” —Yerai, transgender man in Spain

5. Check with your local trans health clinic. If you have access to a trans health clinic, you may find that they keep some testosterone on hand and can give you shots during a shortage (provided you have an existing prescription.)

6. Get injectable T compounded. Only certain compounding pharmacies can make injectable testosterone so you’ll need to search around. Depending on where you live in the U.S., New Era Pharmacy in Portland, OR may be able to ship to you. Some downsides are that the accuracy of testosterone concentrations in compounded T has been questioned and compounded injectable testosterone can cost twice as much as what you’re used to spending on testosterone.

7. Get T from a friend. This is illegal and would likely be frowned upon by your prescribing doctor, but when times are tough sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.

8. Ration your supply of testosterone. If you can reduce your dosage or frequency of injections, you might be able to ride out the shortage, though you probably won’t feel 100%.

9. Patience. If a testosterone shortage isn’t expected to last very long, you might be able to just wait it out, although symptoms of low T will start to creep up as soon as two weeks after a shot.

10. Underground labs. This is illegal and not recommended. Buying testosterone from a rogue internet pharmacy is a dangerous way to obtain medicine, but when you’re left without options the risks can look a little less menacing. If you’re forced to resort to this, you absolutely must purchase a testosterone testing kit.

Hopefully, you’ll never feel the effects of a testosterone shortage, but if you do, at least you’ve got a game plan now.


Source: Testosterone Shortages: Whatcha Gonna Do When They Come For YOU?

(Source: transguys.com)

29 notes

Apr 26 2019
Feb 08 2019
+

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TransGuys.com is giving away an EZP by Transthetics.
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Want to win? Enter here.

(Source: transguys.com)

63 notes

Feb 07 2019
ICE wants Chin to believe that he’s alone. We want him to know and feel that’s not true.
Will you write to him? You can address the letter to:
Yuen Tsui
ID: 53906
Irwin County Detention Center
132 Cotton Dr.
Ocilla, GA 31774
Be sure to include your...


ICE wants Chin to believe that he’s alone. We want him to know and feel that’s not true.


Will you write to him?

You can address the letter to:
Yuen Tsui
ID: 53906
Irwin County Detention Center
132 Cotton Dr.
Ocilla, GA 31774

Be sure to include your return address. Please drop us a message when you send your letter, so we can let him know its coming! If you have any questions, want to host a letter writing party, or just need some support, email sasha@nqapia.org

- National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance
http://www.nqapia.org/wpp/

Sign the Petition

Donate Here

1,027 notes

Jan 08 2019
“To my knowledge, I’m one of the first openly transgender healthcare practitioners providing hormone therapy in the state of Texas.” -Dr. Colt Keo-Meier. Photo by Todd Spoth/Courtesy Dr. Colt Keo-Meier.
What does the informed consent model look like...

“To my knowledge, I’m one of the first openly transgender healthcare practitioners providing hormone therapy in the state of Texas.” -Dr. Colt Keo-Meier. Photo by Todd Spoth/Courtesy Dr. Colt Keo-Meier.


What does the informed consent model look like for patients who are seeking gender care services?

Dr. Colt Keo-Meier: We at UTMB practice the informed consent model which is outlined in the 7th edition of the WPATH Standards of Care. Patients who are over the age of 18 who come into the clinic seeking hormone therapy, barring any major health issues that would be of concern for initiating hormone treatment, will generally receive their hormone prescription and administering education within two visits. So, there’s no need for a letter from a psychotherapist for hormone treatment or any other sort of gatekeeping involved. Those patients who are under 18 will need parental consent to start hormone treatment unless there is a circumstance where they are able to provide their own consent.

https://www.spectrumsouth.com/gender-care-utmb-galveston/

(Source: spectrumsouth.com)

151 notes

Dec 09 2018
Sep 21 2018
Topless trans man features on cover of Arabic gay magazine
The new issue will be available online from 27 September. It features two covers, each featuring a trans man simply referred to as Rashed. Although the publication has featured a trans woman...

Topless trans man features on cover of Arabic gay magazine
The new issue will be available online from 27 September. It features two covers, each featuring a trans man simply referred to as Rashed. Although the publication has featured a trans woman on the cover before, this is the first time it has featured a trans man.

(Source: gaystarnews.com)

5,892 notes

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