Kat

Gender: Female
Pronouns: She / her
More about me...
Kat is a trans girl. She is at secondary school. And had been out as trans for almost 2 years. Kat’s journey started in her early teens after searching for information on being trans she concluded “That sounds kind of like me.” She came out as non-binary to her friends and after a few weeks to her parents, but after a month “I came out as trans feminine and it felt a lot better… and it kind of clicked with me”.
Her parents and friends were “pretty accepting” when she came out “it was a lot better than most people’s.” After her body dysphoria became worse she went to see her GP for a referral to GIDS which was sent after a lot of questioning and forms which “I don’t think a lot of it was necessary”. After a month she received an acknowledgement of her referral by GIDS but they said ‘It’s going to take us millennia to get to you.’ She felt she couldn’t wait the predicted 2 years waiting time for NHS services so decided with the support of her parents to go private. Her GP surgery said they would not do shared care but did say that a nurse there could do her injections for hormone blockers once they were prescribed by a private practitioner.
The process of getting hormone blockers privately took about 7-8 months and she only started them after “s”. She currently has hormone blocker injections (Decapeptyl) every three months and twice daily oestrogen gel sachets (Sandrena).
When asked about her opinion on trans healthcare she says “it’s really bad…at least in the UK. It’s just the current offerings are abysmal and frankly just they don’t meet any kind of quality standards that should be reached….it’s ridiculous.” She feels that the UK should adopt a more informed consent model. Kat goes to a single sex school. The school do not have any policies in place for trans students. Her name has been changed on the school register. She uses the staff toilets to change for PE. She plans to change her name via deed poll as soon as she is legally able. Kat thinks the level of hatred towards trans people is insane. She advises other young trans people to find online resources and “don’t do it alone.”
Kat says coming out was easier because she had come out as bi a few year before.

Kat says coming out was easier because she had come out as bi a few year before.
I feel like a lot of trans people are recognising or have recognised that this, this narrative, this whole thinking as one narrative and only one narrative is like people, people are recognising that it’s bad but people, cis people are either fixated on there only being one, there only being one trans, trans journey, trans narrative and all trans people being that or, and this is the case kind of the rapid onset gender dysphoria or not, that there is one acceptable trans narrative and anyone who doesn’t fit that exactly isn’t trans and honestly I don’t believe they believe the people who fit that narrative are trans either. They just think, they just hate everyone pretty much laughs]. But, but yeah there’s, I don’t like the idea there’s one singular narrative because there clearly isn’t and anyone who looks at it closely can see that.
Kat talks about the process of making changes in a single sex school as trans girl.

Kat talks about the process of making changes in a single sex school as trans girl.
I had a meeting with my deputy head and I brought a few other people with me which was cool and he was kind of, he wasn’t great to be honest. Yeah he refused to call me by the name I said I wanted to be called and he kept saying that he thought he knew what gender dysphoria was by calling it gender dysmorphia which just hasn’t be used to refer to it in years if it ever was. But yeah, he kept thinking he was right and he absolutely no idea what was going on and he recommended I kind of keep it, keep it secret for some time so the second I left I came out on the school social media which was fun and people kind of started calling me [name] and then my parents had a meeting with him to go and complain at him as they should have done, [laugh] which was good. And he eventually got rather my head of house helped me out massively. He got he managed to get my name changed on registers. He’s gone now which is really sad; he was awesome. Yeah, he helped me out massively, he was amazing and kind of eventually people started calling me [name] which is, it was good. I have a kind of, so I think I change in the staff, in the staff toilet in the PE department which sucks because, yeah it’s a toilet but it’s like, it’s better than just better than changing in the changing room. But kind of if more trans people come out it’s not and if there is kind of like more than one in the same year, there’s not going to be enough space. So, I think they need to be something, they fix that but I’m not sure what it’s going to be.
Kat talks about her opinions on misinformation about young people and gender dysphoria.

Kat talks about her opinions on misinformation about young people and gender dysphoria.
I think it’s interesting because like at the, at the beginning I was pretty wary, I didn’t really kind of know what was true and what wasn’t because like as I’m sure you know there’s a ton of bogus stuff, bogus science around so I now have kind of a data, a databank almost of studies that that I used to kind of spot my, spot my viewpoints when I’ve ended up arguing with people which happens quite a lot. That’s but like there’s been just kind of so much kind of bad science going round, so like last year there was the rapid onset gender dysphoria study which I’m sure, you know about it right? You know and everyone knows just kind of how bad it was like.
Kat talks about her positive experience of her GP making a referral to the GIC.

Kat talks about her positive experience of her GP making a referral to the GIC.
I asked for referral explained to them kind of what I actually wanted and where to look for stuff because I don’t think she’d done it before and she said, ‘Yeah, I’ll do that, come back in a few weeks and we can sort, we can sort out the forms.” Came back in a few weeks. It was a different GP who did that time. They were both really nice. Went through the form, it was kind of a bit confusing and some stuff that kind of really didn’t need to be asked was asked on this form for the GIC. It got sent off and I got a thing saying, ‘Hey, we’ve got your form,’ so this is from the GIC, ‘We’ve got your form. It’s going to take us millennia to get to you.’ [laughs] [sighs] So hopefully that will change at some point but until then I’ve still got like at least a year and a half to go if all goes well.
Kat talks about the impact the ‘current attitude towards trans people’ has on her mental health.

Kat talks about the impact the ‘current attitude towards trans people’ has on her mental health.
I do worry that the current attitude towards trans people is making that worse for kind of young trans people particularly young trans people all over the country. Like, the, the, like pe-, people in The Times saying, ‘Oh god no, they’re all predators. Even like this 12 year old trans person she was angel faced and has never done anything wrong is a rapist or something like that.’ I don’t, it’s not, do they not see what they’re doing. It’s, I’m sure they do see what they’re doing. They trying to actively make life worse for trans people and I don’t understand why they even do that. Some people just are bad. It’s, it’s not good. It’s not fun.
Kat explains how they don’t get affected much by the media portrayal of trans people.

Kat explains how they don’t get affected much by the media portrayal of trans people.
I don’t really get affected by it much myself I suppose. I kind of, I probably would be more affected if one of my friends saw it and was like I wouldn’t want them to kind of assume that I’m that sort of, the sort of caricature, caricature that the media’s putting out. But myself, I’ve heard it before I guess, so I just didn’t really take it in. It just doesn’t really matter for me.
Is there any ways that you support yourself at all?
I don’t really find I need it, like, I know it’s all, I know it’s all bullshit, it’s not going to happen. The, all the, just kind of all the fearmongering, it’s all about stuff that’s not going to, that’s never happened, it’s not going to happen and it’s the exact same thing people talking about regarding gay people twenty years ago.
Kat says there isn’t ‘one acceptable trans narrative’ and questions the fixation of the general public.

Kat says there isn’t ‘one acceptable trans narrative’ and questions the fixation of the general public.
I feel like a lot of trans people are recognising or have recognised that this, this narrative, this whole thinking as one narrative and only one narrative is like people, people are recognising that it’s bad but people, cis people are either fixated on there only being one, there only being one trans, trans journey, trans narrative and all trans people being that or, and this is the case kind of the rapid onset gender dysphoria or not, that there is one acceptable trans narrative and anyone who doesn’t fit that exactly isn’t trans and honestly I don’t believe they believe the people who fit that narrative are trans either. They just think, they just hate everyone pretty much laughs]. But, but yeah there’s, I don’t like the idea there’s one singular narrative because there clearly isn’t and anyone who looks at it closely can see that.