Declan
Gender: Trans masculine
Pronouns: He / His / Him
Declan is transmasculine and in his twenties. He came out to his parents as transmasculine at 14 and he began using male pronouns at home and wearing gender neutral clothing. Declan was being assessed for ASD (Autistic Spectrum Disorder) at the time and was referred to an LGBT specialist therapist at CAMHS. He saw a number of therapists, not all were good experiences, but CAMHS did refer him to the Gender Identity Development Services (GIDS).
His family have been very supportive and he feels surrounded by people who treat me right, who like respect m although his dad has had trouble using the right pronouns. Declan has had a lot of support from a LGBT youth group where he felt safe and met a lot of his friends. At sixteen he changed his name by Deed Poll which meant all his documents including his GCSE certificates had his new name on them.
He was 16 when his GIDs referral came through and he feels lucky he only had to wait 8-12 months. GIDS sent a number of questionnaires and asked his mum a lot of questions about his ASD diagnosis and his general mental health and wellbeing. Although he felt he was through puberty, GIDs advised that he would have to take hormone blockers for a year before he could start testosterone.
He decided to wait for adult services thinking this would only be another year before he could start on testosterone. GIDs provided social support until adult services took on his care and he felt supported by the staff who helped with CAMHS and school issues. After being re-assessed by adult services again about his gender dysphoria, about a year and a half after he left GIDs, he was finally prescribed testosterone gel. Declan did not assess private medical services as the costs were too much of a barrier for him.
He finds the media coverage about trans issues very negative I feel there’s no really positive trans media eve so tend to avoid engaging with it.
He was initially confused about his sexuality and being trans but has accepted that Okay, I’m a trans guy, I like men so that must mean I’m gay no, but still sees his sexuality as being more fluid. Sex education at school was very heteronormative.
Declan says I think it’s important for people to have their own individual narrativesrather than try to conform to like someone else’s or what you expect a trans narrative to be like