It’s a completely exhausted day here in the CatBox. Yesterday I slept most of the morning and intentionally skipped one Oxycodone. The intention behind increasing the Methadone is to decrease the Oxycodone. WWWendy is coming this morning to give me a shower Please pray that the shower is not too painful and that I feel less groggy.
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 4:54 (average 4:51). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Short Take:
From YouTube (a blast from the past): A Day In The Life (Remastered 2009)
Presidential historian Jon Meacham reacts to a new POLITICO report
Now This News – Katie Porter on fossil fuels
Rick Wilson on Bill Maher – Bill did not post this, but The Lincoln Project did.
Parody Project – “Envirnmentally resigned”
Guard cat defends mail slot
Beau: “Let’s talk about why Biden turned left….” I think Beau is missing (perhaps because of his youth) the fact that President Biden gre up in the 40’s and 50’s (whereas I gre up in the 50’s and sixties), but we both grew up into an emerging middle class which could not have existied but for social democratic programs. I think that’s the status quo he was running on returning to, even though it wasn’t specifically identified as such.
It’s a painful day here in the CatBox. I spent most of the morning and afternoon sleeping, which means I slept through most of my in-between doses of Oxycodone. This evening I discovered that my Providence Hospice Nurse forgot to refill my Oxycodone prescription. This facility bent over backwards trying to het an emergency prescription here, and they did so missing the deadline by lest than ten minutes. I was worried sick and the stress it engendered exacerbated my pain considerably. Bot the problem was all Providence. This facility was great. Please pray that Providence will get my meds properly organized once and for all!
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 5:27 (average 5:28). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Short Take:
From YouTube (a blast from the past): Simon & Garfunkel – Scarborough Fair + Lyrics
The Center for Science in the Public Interest is promoting this video poem on sugar – public health – and slavery
Meidas Touch – McVonnell’s War on America
Now This News. This is what Colorado legislators – and those in many other states – have to deal with. Every. Day.
The Damage Report – Side Effects of Tesr Gas and the like
Armageddon Update – the Big Lie (nothing we don’t know)
Ring of Fire – IMO Farron needs to grasp that real professionals know what their authority is, and that no good comes of trying to exceed it, or to rush things. But aside from that, he makes some good observations.
Now This News – File under “Everything Old Is New Again.” 2000 years ago, they used to be able to flood the arena to stage fake naval battles – ad events where condemned people were set afloat in “romatic” boats, only to be devoured by crocodiles (to loud cheers and much laughter).
Beau on the GOP proving him wrong. Stay with him.
Keith – I love to watch him, yet hate to see a new one because a new one means something awful has happened or is happening.
Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”
Treanspphibia is probably not something which affects as many people as does racism, or misgyny, or even homophobia. But those whom it does affect are affected more deeply than those affected by any other form of discrimination. It’s probably impossible to truly feel what these people are going through, but surely we can get some idea if we put our minds to it. Although some new legislation under consideration strestches that pretty far. To have your parents criminalized for believing you – to have your doctor criminalized for helping you – that seems to go farther in hate even than the HIV epidemic, and that was pretty bad (and in some ways still is.)
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I’m a pediatrician who cares for transgender kids – here’s what you need to know about social support, puberty blockers and other medical options that improve lives of transgender youth
When Charlie, a 10-year-old boy, came in for his first visit, he didn’t look at me or my colleague. Angry and crying, he insisted to us that he was cisgender – that he was a boy and had been born male.
A few months before Charlie came into our office, he handed a note to his mother with four simple words, “I am a boy.” Up until that point Charlie had been living in the world as female – the sex he was assigned at birth – though that was not how he felt inside. Charlie was suffering from severe gender dysphoria – a sense of distress someone feels when their gender identity doesn’t match up with their assigned gender.
The first thing our team does is make sure our patients and families understand what gender care is. We always begin initial visits in the same way. “Our goal is to support you and your family on this journey, whatever that may look like for you. My name is Mandy and I am one of the doctors at CATCH – the Child and Adolescent Trans/Gender Center for Health program. I use she/her pronouns.” Sharing pronouns helps transgender people feel seen and validated.
We then ask patients and families to share their gender journey so we can better understand where they are coming from and where they hope to go. Charlie’s story is one we often hear. A kid may not think much about gender until puberty but begins to experience worsening gender dysphoria when their body starts changing in what feels like the wrong way.
Support and acceptance from family has a huge impact on a transgender person’s mental health. AP Photo/Lynne Sladky
In addition to being accepted at home, young people often want to live in the world in their identified gender. This could include changing their name and pronouns and coming out to friends and family. It can also include using public spaces like schools and bathrooms, participating on single-gender sports teams and dressing or doing other things like binding breasts or tucking back male genitalia to present more in line with their gender identity. Though more research needs to be done, studies show that youth who socially transition have rates of depression similar to cisgender peers.
However, most young people also need to make physical changes to their bodies as well to feel truly comfortable.
Medical options for transgender youth can include hormone blockers or hormone therapy as a first step. AP Photo/Lynne Sladky
Gender-affirming medical interventions
When I first met Charlie, he had already socially transitioned but was still experiencing dysphoria. Charlie, like many people, wanted his physical body to match his gender identity, and this can be achieved only through medical interventions – namely, puberty blockers, hormonal medications or surgery.
For patients like Charlie who have started experiencing early female or male puberty, hormone blockers are typically the first option. These medications work like a pause button on the physical changes caused by puberty. They are well studied, safe and completely reversible. If a person stops taking hormone blockers, their body will resume going through puberty as it would have. Blockers give people time to further explore gender and to develop social supports. Studies demonstrate that hormone blockers reduce depression, anxiety and risk of suicide among transgender youth.
Once a person has started or completed puberty, taking prescribed hormones can help people match their bodies with their gender identities. One of my patients, Zoe, is an 18-year-old transgender woman who has already completed male puberty. She is taking estrogen and a medication to block the effects of testosterone. Together, these will help Zoe’s body develop breasts, reduce hair growth and have an overall more female shape.
The health risks from taking hormones are incredibly small – not significantly different, in fact, than the risks a cisgender person faces from the hormones in their body. Some prescribed hormone effects are partially reversible, but others are more permanent, like voice deepening and growth of facial hair or breasts. Hormones can also impact fertility, so I always make sure that my patients and their families understand the process thoroughly.
The most permanent medical options available are gender-affirming surgeries. These operations can include changes to genitals, chest or breasts and facial structure. Surgeries are not easily reversible, so my colleagues and I always make sure that patients fully understand this decision. Some people think gender-affirming surgeries go too far and that minors are too young to make such a big decision. But based on available research and my own experience, patients who get these surgeries experience improvements in their quality of life through a reduction in dysphoria. I have been told by patients that gender-affirming surgery “literally saved my life. I was free [from dysphoria].”
In March 2021, nearly five years after our first visit, Charlie walked into my exam room. When we first met, he was struggling with his gender, anxiety and depression. This time, he immediately started talking about playing hockey, hanging out with friends and making the honor roll. He has been on hormone blockers for five years and testosterone for almost a year. With the help of a supportive family and a gender-competent therapist, Charlie is now thriving.
Being transgender is not something that goes away. It is something my patients live with for their entire lives. Our multidisciplinary care team continues to see patients like Charlie on a regular basis, often following them into young adulthood.
While more research is always needed, a gender-affirmative approach and evidence-based medicine allows young transgender people to live in the world as their authentic selves. This improves quality of life and saves lives, as one of our transgender patients said about his experience receiving gender-affirming care. “I honestly don’t think I would be here had I not been allowed to transition at that point. I’m not always 100%. But I have hope. I am happy to see tomorrow and I know I will achieve my dreams.”
Mandy Coles, Clinical Associate Professor of Pediatrics and co-director of the Child and Adolescent Trans/Gender Center for Health, Boston University
================================================================ Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, one phrase struck me in this: “assigned at birth.” Specifically the word “assigned.” Could this help ore people to realize that external physical details really aren’t enough to determine for certain what gender a person’s soul is? By itself, maybe not … but as one tool in our learning, perhaps it can help.
Recently Mike Pezzullo, a senior Australian security official, expressed concerns that the drums of war are beating in the Asian Pacific. China and the United States have been rattling their sabres a lot lately. China threatens Taiwan, while the USA tries to protect its interests and its allies. Some say there is no need to be alarmed, while others say there is good reason to duck and cover.
What if the USA and China duked it out? A war would be disastrous for both sides. Even if the US won, we would be devastated economically as well as financially; and with both China and the US in tatters another country could wade in and become Top Dog.
If armed hostilities did break out, we would not be alone. We have numerous allies, many of whom have beefs with China. Japan, South Korea, India and Australia would almost certainly support us, as would Canada, most of Europe, and some Southeast Asian countries. China could not count on much help – Russia may take China’s side, or sit back with some popcorn and watch the show. However, having friends along will not make fighting any easier, and could result in more destruction and carnage.
Asian-Americans, especially those of Chinese extraction, would be in big trouble. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused hate crimes against Asian Americans to spike. If we went toe-to-toe with the Middle Kingdom, hatred for Chinese-Americans would increase drastically. “Made in China” would become an anathema. Nut jobs would target not just Chinese immigrants and people of Chinese descent, but also their businesses. The recent slaying of six Asian women in the Atlanta area reveals just how violent anti-Asian hatred can get. Remember how Japanese-Americans were rounded up and herded into concentration camps during World War II.
War would be bad news all around no matter who won. War is just about as ecologically unfriendly as you can get, even if you deploy tanks and fighter jets that run on sunshine and unicorn farts, and all of your weapons fire biodegradable ordnance. As the old hippie saying goes, war is not healthy for children and other living things. Tens or hundreds of thousands, maybe even millions, would be dead – combatants and civilians alike. Cities and towns would be reduced to ruins. Some animal species may be driven over the brink of extinction. And there is always the looming threat of nuclear war.
Let us hope that cool, rational heads will prevail. Let us hope that both Biden and Xi realize a war between these two powerful countries could have no real winner – victory would be Pyrrhic for either side. We should be cooperating with China to combat the threat that hangs over us all, namely, climate change, which could turn out to be more devastating than any non-nuclear war. The evidence is overwhelming that our planet is getting hotter, and human activity is causing the lion’s share. Just because China has a horrible, oppressive government does not mean we cannot work with Beijing to save the planet. The benefits will be mutual – and for all of humanity.