NHS Stops Prescribing Puberty-Blockers:

About time too!!

Thankfully, I was a tomboy before this madness existed or I would probably have been told I was a boy. I dressed like a boy, rode a bike, cared for the family dog, had conker fights, took a snail to school to race other snails (mine was, admittedly, painted in purple nail varnish!) and loved doing DIY with my father. I chopped wood in the cellar for our open fire, polished all the brass in the house, cleared the autumn leaves, collected and disposed of slugs at 20p a slug, washed cars for pocket money and bred baby mice to sell to the pet shop. It certainly wasn't sugar and spice and all things nice! But nobody ever said anything about my tomboy nature so I never even thought about it.


Later on, I got into creative activities, such as sewing and jewellery-making. I later studied for an engineering and business degree, but my career has been more feminine: shop keeping. In my spare time, I love to do DIY: painting, woodwork, building, gardening and even a spot of electrics. Had the Tavistock Clinic got its hands on me, I would have been convinced to change sex about four times. Had I been exposed to modern culture, I would have been totally focused on trying to work out what gender I was rather than on the hobbies I loved. How much time and energy children have been conditioned to waste on something they never needed to think about! How much more creative and productive they could have been had they never been made aware of gender dysphoria!

I am doing the decent thing and telling my story in the hope it offers an alternative perspective to parents, and perhaps saves some children from unnecessary life-changing and potentially life-limiting body modifications. Conversations on topics as serious as these that involve the welfare of children should include all arguments and all possibilities so that an educated and well thought out decision can be made for each individual child.

Some good news for once today as the NHS has finally stopped prescribing puberty blockers to children. Hopefully, this will spell the end of this travesty and the start of payback time. These wronged children will soon grow up to be questioning adults who will want answers for why their childhoods were meddled with so catastrophically. 

Some exerts from the article below: 

'the biggest medical scandal of this century.'

'parents who buy puberty-blocking drugs illegally without prescriptions off the internet or through unregulated foreign clinics, and warns they could face knocks on the door from social workers, or even the police.'

'ailments include liver damage, weight gains of up to two stone, mental health problems, skeletal damage and a failure to grow to their natural height.'

'a top medical academy blames social media for fueling demand for blockers'

So, we can't entirely blame the likes of the Tavistock clinic: parents are also going to be answerable, not just for fueling these doubting thoughts but also for exposing them to social media and modern culture in general, which is clearly warped. 


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