Gender-Affirming Health Care Is Life or Death for Trans People

The pandemic has made things more dire — but there are reasons to feel hopeful

Halley Bondy
Elemental

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Photo: d76 masahiro ikeda/Getty Images

This story includes descriptions of people experiencing suicidal ideation, which may be disturbing to some readers. If you or someone you know need help, consider calling the National Suicide Prevention Hotline at 800–273–8255 or the Trevor Project Hotline (for LGBT youth) at 866–488–7386.

If Brooklyn Scherer hadn’t been able to transition into her true gender identity, she says she wouldn’t be here today.

Raised as a boy by conservative parents in the suburbs of Seattle, Scherer, now 37, buried her true identity for decades. She’s also autistic, she tells Elemental, which led to further social isolation. She had suicidal thoughts for years and even experienced a few suicide attempts.

“I probably would have committed suicide years ago if I had a foolproof way to do it painlessly,” Scherer says. “For a while, I was waiting around until my mom died so that it wouldn’t guilt-trip her.”

But Scherer’s fate turned around when she learned the term “transgender” later in life, which helped her understand her own identity. She also learned about gender-affirming health care, like hormones, surgery, and therapy, which…

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Halley Bondy
Elemental

Freelancer, journalist, script writer, editor, and mom based in Brooklyn.