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Methais
06-06-2015, 08:45 AM
Becoming disabled by choice, not chance: ‘Transabled’ people feel like impostors in their fully working bodies

OTTAWA — When he cut off his right arm with a “very sharp power tool,” a man who now calls himself One Hand Jason let everyone believe it was an accident.

But he had for months tried different means of cutting and crushing the limb that never quite felt like his own, training himself on first aid so he wouldn’t bleed to death, even practicing on animal parts sourced from a butcher.

“My goal was to get the job done with no hope of reconstruction or re-attachment, and I wanted some method that I could actually bring myself to do,” he told the body modification website ModBlog.

His goal was to become disabled.

People like Jason have been classified as ‘‘transabled’’ — feeling like imposters in their bodies, their arms and legs in full working order.

“We define transability as the desire or the need for a person identified as able-bodied by other people to transform his or her body to obtain a physical impairment,” says Alexandre Baril, a Quebec born academic who will present on “transability” at this week’s Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities at the University of Ottawa.

“The person could want to become deaf, blind, amputee, paraplegic. It’s a really, really strong desire.”

Researchers in Canada are trying to better understand how transabled people think and feel. Clive Baldwin, a Canada Research Chair in Narrative Studies who teaches social work at St. Thomas University in Fredericton, N.B., has interviewed 37 people worldwide who identify as transabled.

Most of them are men. About half are in Germany and Switzerland, but he knows of a few in Canada. Most crave an amputation or paralysis, though he has interviewed one person who wants his penis removed. Another wants to be blind.

Many people, like One Hand Jason, arrange “accidents” to help achieve the goal. One dropped an incredibly heavy concrete block on his legs — an attempt to injure himself so bad an amputation would be necessary. But doctors saved the leg. He limps, but it’s not the disability he wanted.

The transabled are very secretive and often keep their desires to themselves, Baldwin says. One 78-year-old man told Baldwin he’d lived with the secret for 60 years and never told his wife.

Some of his study participants do draw parallels to the experience many transgender people express of not feeling like they’re in the right body. Baldwin says this disorder is starting to be thought of as a neurological problem with the body’s mapping, rather than a mental illness.

http://wpmedia.news.nationalpost.com/2015/05/health_biid.jpg?w=620&h=465
Chloe Jennings-White adjusts leg braces at her home on May 16, 2013, in Salt Lake City, Utah. She wears leg braces even though she does not need them. A disability acquired in recent years has forced her into a wheelchair.

“It’s a problem for individuals because it’s distressing. But lots of things are.” He suggests this is just another form of body diversity — like transgenderism — and amputation may help someone achieve similar goals as someone who, say, undergoes cosmetic surgery to look more like who they believe their ideal selves to be.

In the late 1990s, Scottish surgeon Dr. Robert Smith amputated the legs of two patients at their request. While the surgery involved National Health Service staff, each patient paid nearly $6,000 for their procedures.

As the public begins to embrace people who identify as transgender, the trans people within the disability movement are also seeking their due, or at very least a bit of understanding in a public that cannot fathom why anyone would want to be anything other than healthy and mobile.

But this has been met with great resistance in both the disability activist community and in transgender circles, argues Baril, a visiting scholar of feminist, gender and sexuality studies at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut.

“They tend to see transabled people as dishonest people, people who try to steal resources from the community, people who would be disrespectful by denying or fetishizing or romanticizing disability reality,” Baril says, adding people in both transgender and disabled circles tend to make judgmental or prejudicial statements about transabled people. “Each try to distance themselves.”

Baril — who is himself disabled and transgender — believes the transgender community distances itself because it has worked very hard to de-pathologize what’s known as ‘gender dysphoria,’ and sought its removal from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Transability is also known as Body Integrity Identity Disorder, which was only just added to the “emerging measures and models” appendix section of the DSM-5 in 2013. Many transabled people want to see it fully added to the psychiatric bible because it might legitimize their experience in the field of medicine, Baril notes.

http://news.nationalpost.com/news/canada/becoming-disabled-by-choice-not-chance-transabled-people-feel-like-impostors-in-their-fully-working-bodies

http://i.imgur.com/5ka76Qj.jpg

Tgo01
06-06-2015, 08:58 AM
The world has gone crazy.

everan
06-06-2015, 09:01 AM
The world has gone crazy.

Always has been.

We didn't start the fire.

Warriorbird
06-06-2015, 09:02 AM
Still not as crazy as the people who inject silicone into their bloodstream.

Stretch
06-06-2015, 09:06 AM
Almost as crazy as making bad pr0n = art.

Parkbandit
06-06-2015, 09:27 AM
BUT THEY GET TO PARK REALLY, REALLY CLOSE TO STUFF!!

Tgo01
06-06-2015, 09:35 AM
You know life is getting too easy in first world countries when the worst thing some of its citizens have to worry about is having too many limbs.

SHAFT
06-06-2015, 09:43 AM
We live in a world with dragons, white walkers, and men who can change faces. I'm not shocked by anything. Winter is coming however.

Warriorbird
06-06-2015, 09:51 AM
We live in a world with dragons, white walkers, and men who can change faces. I'm not shocked by anything. Winter is coming however.

Snoop Dogg always provides an honest, fresh, perspective. Thanks man!

Silvean
06-06-2015, 10:12 AM
Fascinating. There's a paraphilia associated with this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apotemnophilia

I don't understand the use of the term "transabled" over "Body Integrity Identity Disorder." The goal as stated in the article is to "legitimize" their experience through inclusion in the DSM rather than de-pathologizing the condition.

You can say any crazy thing at a conference and make it sound like it has prestige or broad acceptance. On my cynical days, I think the best way to make it as an academic is to come up with a crazy-ass theory and just stick to it like glue.

Whirlin
06-06-2015, 10:16 AM
I don't understand the use of the term "transabled" over "Body Integrity Identity Disorder." The goal as stated in the article is to "legitimize" their experience through inclusion in the DSM rather than de-pathologizing the condition.


Honestly, DSM has become a dumping ground filled with things doctors don't necessarily agree on, and simultaneously tries to declare itself the source of truth of all things medical diagnosis. There have been so many things prematurely placed on the DSM, which are subsequently removed, and things that are conflictory with other conditions with the slightest nuance. They're gone the route like Wizards of the Coast, in releasing a new edition every couple of years regardless of how small or drastic the content change is.

Silvean
06-06-2015, 10:37 AM
They've gone the route like Wizards of the Coast, in releasing a new edition every couple of years regardless of how small or drastic the content change is.

It definitely became easier to self-diagnose when they switched the DSM over to D20.

JackWhisper
06-06-2015, 10:41 AM
This isn't nearly as frightening as the story I read about the guy who went to sleep with his girlfriend, they cuddled up, she fell asleep on his arm, and somehow during the night.... she slept on his arm, and he laid a certain way and the blood flow cut off to his arm and he ended up having to have it amputated. Because his girlfriend slept on his arm.

I now sleep a different way because of that story.

Although I do remember a transabled guy who stuck his fucking foot in ice water for six hours while his wife was out at work. She came home, he was passed out from pain, foot had to be amputated. What a moron.

Tisket
06-06-2015, 11:55 AM
Although I do remember a transabled guy who stuck his fucking foot in ice water for six hours while his wife was out at work. She came home, he was passed out from pain, foot had to be amputated. What a moron.

Sounds like an urban myth to me.

This whole thread sounds like an urban myth.

JackWhisper
06-06-2015, 11:59 AM
Sounds like an urban myth to me.

This whole thread sounds like an urban myth.

That was on TV. A documentary about these kinds of people.

Cereal Killer
06-06-2015, 12:14 PM
I read this book already. Geek Love by Katherine Dunn.

Warriorbird
06-06-2015, 12:30 PM
That was on TV. A documentary about these kinds of people.

I have students that still believe mermaids are real.

JackWhisper
06-06-2015, 12:39 PM
I have students that still believe mermaids are real.

I find it hard to believe you still have students.

We must show them PC! =P

Tisket
06-06-2015, 12:54 PM
That was on TV. A documentary about these kinds of people.

Let me rephrase...I choose to believe these are urban myths.

Also, I'm pretty sure they are indeed, urban myths.

Warriorbird
06-06-2015, 01:16 PM
I find it hard to believe you still have students.

We must show them PC! =P

I've explained that it's an unofficial forum for a text based game to a couple of them. They were wowed by the sheer level of nerdiness I possess.

Simultaneously, there's all sorts of deeply questionable "documentaries" out there, like the aforementioned mermaid one.

Silvean
06-06-2015, 01:43 PM
I've explained that it's an unofficial forum for a text based game to a couple of them. They were wowed by the sheer level of nerdiness I possess.

NO! Never reveal our secrets to the outsiders! Hisssss. Hisssssss!

Methais
06-06-2015, 03:02 PM
I've explained that it's an unofficial forum for a text based game to a couple of them. They were wowed by the sheer level of nerdiness I possess.

Simultaneously, there's all sorts of deeply questionable "documentaries" out there, like the aforementioned mermaid one.

You could have just made up a cooler story, like it's an unofficial forum for the Jelly of the Month club.

http://content8.flixster.com/question/56/51/66/5651666_std.jpg

Warriorbird
06-06-2015, 03:43 PM
You could have just made up a cooler story, like it's an unofficial forum for the Jelly of the Month club.

http://content8.flixster.com/question/56/51/66/5651666_std.jpg

It probably would've worked better! Mainly I think I made them feel better about all the Flash based games I tease them about.