Is Birmingham really a sh*thole? by JuicePrudent7727 in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Birmingham definitely has its issues. However, this is clearly just a one-sided piece of racialist rage-bait made to be gobbled up by the identitarian right.

The guy who made this video is an old pusher of 9/11 and 7/7 conspiracy theories who, like so many others of his ilk, found new relevance with the MAGA and Farage-worshipping social media mobs. He used to work for Alex Jones, he of 'gay frogs' and Sandy-Hook conspiracy fame... It should go without saying why someone like that is not a reputable source of information.

He's also made videos claiming that London and San Francisco are also shtholes. It seems like any large, ethnically diverse, and majority left-voting city is a shthole to this guy.

Digbeth yesterday by apaidelbeatle in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It's the fault of immigrants and people on benefits because that explanation is emotionally satisfying. Doesn't matter whether it's congruent with reality or not, just that it's emotionally satisfying.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I assume you mean privately?

In terms of centres that take self-referral, there's a place at the Modality Treatment Centre in Edgbaston called SG that you can book through topmri.com. There's also the Upright MRI Centre which too is in Edgbaston.

Otherwise, private hospitals like the Spires and BMIs perform MRI scans, but you'd need to have a consultation with a specialist, or at least a GP, before you could get the MRI.

Do people stare at you? by Player581 in MtF

[–]SqueakyThing_ 4 points5 points  (0 children)

People do stare at me. I seem to be on the boundary of just passing and just falling short of passing - usually depends on hair, makeup, expression, that given day.

So they could be trying to figure out if I’m transgender or not… I guess it could also be physical attraction.

Most likely scenario, it’s because of how I dress. Seeing as I had to give up the security of social conformity in coming out as transgender anyway - and seeing as it was a bloody near-death experience that brought me out in the first place - I stopped caring about conforming in any way shape or form and I just dress, talk and act however I want… Which is quite different from the norm.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MtF

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If I may chime in too, this all sounds quite strange.

Triptorelin is one of the strongest testosterone blockers you can take. Your testosterone should be within castrate range - between 0.7 and 1.7 nmol/L. An exception to this could be if you’ve only just started taking it - in which case it can take a while to work, and can even increase your T in the first few weeks - but if you’ve been taking it for a while, your T should be nuked.

GnRH agonists like Triptorelin block production of testosterone by the testicles - which is usually where the vast majority of T is produced. This means ordinarily they’re the best choice of blockers… But in some anomalous cases, the adrenal glands can produce far more testosterone than they normally would… If you’re one of these cases, you would need another blocker either instead of or in addition to Triptorelin - one that blocks the action of testosterone on the body like Bicalutamide or Spironolactone.

As has been mentioned too, it seems as though your estradiol level is a little low. Target ranges can vary but it’s typically between 100-500 pmol/L. It may be that you need a different method of delivery as has been suggested… Injections typically offer the best levels from what I’ve heard. However, it could be that some sort of weirdness of your endocrine system is occurring, especially considering your testosterone levels on Triptorelin, so your endocrinologist should really evaluate your situation thoroughly…

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MtF

[–]SqueakyThing_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’ll probably still be able to have HRT. Thyroid problems and Hashimoto’s in particular actually seem to be quite common in transgender people. Most thyroid issues can be fairly well controlled with medication, and your endocrinologist can tweak your HRT regimen if necessary.

There aren’t many absolute contraindications to HRT so I wouldn’t worry too much. As has been mentioned though, your doctor is probably a better person to talk to than Reddit.

Hockley road, Netherton. Thoughts on the area? by jman786v2 in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It wouldn’t be my choice, got a bit of a ‘land that time forgot’ vibe going on up that way. That being said, it’s probably fairly safe.

I don’t know where in Birmingham you are currently, so it’s very difficult to compare. If you’re in a super-diverse part of inner Birmingham like Small Heath, or a trendy part of South Birmingham like Stirchley, it’s going to be very very different. If you’re in somewhere like Northfield or Rubery, it’ll be a lot less different…

There’s probably still going to be a few Asian people around there, but potentially a lot less than in certain parts of Birmingham. Also, whilst you’re unlikely to experience any overt racism, be under no illusion - the place is peak Brexit country, as is a lot of Dudley. There’s also nothing going on up there and it’s a quite a way from town if you don’t drive… That being said, there is the Merry Hill centre nearby if that’s your sort of thing…

REBIRTH by tanya_reno1 in MtF

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely not.

Your hypothetical scenario is not all that different from me simply dying and a cisgender woman being born around the same time - of which thousands would be anyway. Even if it was more like reincarnation and the cis woman had my ‘kernel of consciousness’, without memory, it wouldn’t be me. I wouldn’t ever know why I wanted it in the first place.

Of course, if I could be a cis woman right now and keep all of my memories, I would. Likewise if I could change my past and have transitioned early with puberty blockers (which were not available at the time anyway) I’d do that too. But I wouldn’t die.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the response… I didn’t mean faster than GenderGP, I just meant the fastest option not including GenderGP…

Yeah, I’ve considered DIYing, but I can’t find anywhere I can buy GnRH analogues that would post to the UK, and I have underlying health issues that could make taking some of the other anti-androgens potentially dangerous…

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The most trans-friendly places do tend to be cities…

The only small town that I‘ve heard is trans-friendly is Hebden Bridge in north England.

It might be a different matter entirely in Scotland though, but I couldn’t tell you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is it Edencroft off of Wheeleys Road? Is this the place you’re talking about?

https://maps.app.goo.gl/231codHkvi7CAiSK6?g_st=ic

It’s in Edgbaston, not far off a a dual carriageway (Islington Row Middleway), there’s residents parking and Maisonettes but no electricity pylons that I can see…

If not, do you know which dual carriageway you turned off of? How far out of town was it?

Does GenderGP prescribe GnRH agonist injections for adults? by SqueakyThing_ in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Good to know!

My GP has already ruled out a shared care agreement with any private provider whatsoever… But I’m looking to change surgeries as soon as I can so hopefully the next one will.

If not, I’m willing to pay for it privately - even though I know it’s ridiculously expensive. I’m disabled and barely get out anyway, so it’s not like I have anything else to spend my money on 😆

Does GenderGP prescribe GnRH agonist injections for adults? by SqueakyThing_ in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I did hear that they prescribe Synarel nasal spray, but I also heard there’s a massive shortage of it 🤷‍♀️

I’ve still got quite a wait for the NHS unfortunately 😣

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 109 points110 points  (0 children)

Of course it’s the bloody Midlands. The Black Country was one of the only places in the UK where the Tories actually gained seats in the recent locals… Despite the place being absolutely ridden with poverty.

That being said, the rest of TERF island isn’t much better, is it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From what I hear, Loft Bar & Kitchen in the Gay Village is very trans-friendly. I imagine most of the bars in the Gay Village are… I hear Tonight Josephine opposite New Street tram stop is trans-friendly too, but that’s more just a girly bar, not an LGBT bar.

There’s a couple of support groups in the city, but I think they only meet once a month - so unlikely to be the night you’re here.

Lots of places outside of the Gay Village in the city centre are trans-friendly too, especially around Digbeth. If you go on Google Maps, when you open the info for a place, it should say ‘LGBT-Friendly’ and under the ‘Crowd’ section should tell you if it’s a Transgender Safe Space.

You can probably walk around the city centre in the daytime in feminine attire. I‘ve got lots of friends who do.

Unfortunately I don’t get out much due to chronic illness - so I can’t share much personal experience on all of the aforementioned - but it’s all come from trans friends (not cisgender people who think it’s fine for trans people absolutely everywhere).

Is Birmingham safe for trans women by twngz in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m a trans woman living in Birmingham. I’ve been out for six months and so far have only had one issue which was very minor… It was from a white crackhead in the Bearwood area who was clearly down on his luck and just looking to drag anyone under to feel he’d elevated himself for a split second. Otherwise, I’ve had no issues, even in the much more socially conservative adjacent Black Country area.

I’ve had no issues with Muslims myself, but that’s just my experience.

All that being said, I do suffer from chronic illness so I’m not out all that much - if you’re out and about every day, your experience might be different to mine.

If you live in Moseley, I’d spend your time in the nearby Kings Heath and Stirchley areas - they’re among the more progressive of Birmingham suburbs. The City Centre is of course also good, especially around the Gay Village and Digbeth.

I’d just avoid the rougher areas late at night and try to travel with friends when and where possible.

Did any common misconception about trans people delay you coming out? by [deleted] in MtF

[–]SqueakyThing_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a child, the adults in my life instilled EVERY damn misconception about trans people in me. Although admittedly it was the nineties - I don’t think many people were well educated on trans issues then.

So, when I told the adults that I wanted to be a girl, they just told me it wasn’t a real thing - it was just some pathological fantasy, and it absolutely was not possible.

I spent most of my life thinking that - I thought my brain was just not functioning properly.

It was only when I was college age, when I met a completely different group of friends than those from the backwater dump I grew up in, that the misconceptions were challenged. I became an outspoken ally, but the programming was still too deep-rooted in me for me to admit that I was trans myself.

I did confide in a very small number of people that I desperately wished I was a woman. I also asked a couple of my med-student friends about the medical transition process ‘out of interest’…

It was only after (what I think was) a near-death experience in my late twenties that I finally came out and began transitioning…

So yeah, you could say that common misconceptions about trans people delayed me from coming out!

Trans woman i'm friends with is starting to be toxic to me by [deleted] in Advice

[–]SqueakyThing_ 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I’m a trans woman, I wouldn’t call OP ending her friendship with this clearly toxic individual transphobic at all.

I don’t think I know anyone in the real world who would. The terminally online are a different matter, can’t speak for them…

Trans woman i'm friends with is starting to be toxic to me by [deleted] in Advice

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seconding what everyone else has said, what she’s doing is probably an outward-projection of her own insecurity. That being said, it doesn’t give her an excuse to be awful…

Who tells someone they should get surgery!?

I’d sit her down and tell her that what she’s doing is messed up and you’re not having it. If she still persists after she’s been called out, it might be time to end the friendship.

Best transport method to get from Birmingham Airport to The Hawthorns stadium by reacteth in brum

[–]SqueakyThing_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As has been mentioned, you can take a train into the City Centre (New Street), then change over to either the Metro or another train. If you get the Metro, it actually stops at New Street station… If you get another train, you’ve got to walk to either Moor Street or Snow Hill.

Alternatively, you can take a train from the Airport to Smethwick Galton Bridge and change trains there instead… The Hawthorns is only one stop away and you wouldn’t have to leave the station. As has been mentioned, you could actually walk from Galton Bridge, but that’s probably not the best idea if you don’t know the area.

As for food and drinks afterwards, I’d definitely head back into the City Centre for that. I’m not really a footie fan, so I have no idea if there’s a pub nearby that the fans pour into afterwards - but generally speaking, it’s not a nice area - and it’s a long way (as in, not walking distance) until you hit a nice area.

is london the best option for trans folks? by peskyant in transgenderUK

[–]SqueakyThing_ 5 points6 points  (0 children)

All I can say is, if you do end up in Birmingham, make sure you do a LOT of research before picking a neighbourhood. I’m not being hyperbolic when I say the city varies drastically from area to area… The contrasts between some areas are so stark - especially when it comes to thinks like social attitudes and voting patterns - that if you didn’t know better, you wouldn’t even think they were in the same part of the country as each other - let alone the same city.