Jaron Seth Bloshinsky / Jazz Jennings / I Am Jazz - Puberty Blockers: Not Even Once

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He doesn't have a sexuality, but he wanted a relationship. Makes you think how much of young people dating is socially enforced. There is some true on the claim that young girls are encouraged to date and in Jazz's case, I'm sure they wanted him to date a boy because that's what "girls do". That's even crueler in his situation because it's like trying to force your disabled kid to be a gymnast.

There's the biological imperative and cultural one as well. But biology drives it. Jazz's biology was chemically and psychologically nipped in the bud.

I think the way kids are channeled to date is cultural. That's all Jazz and his wooden mother see tho and that's all Jazz can reflect. The pictures in movies or on IG or Twit are all Jazz understands about being female. And he's been scripted and mouthing the words of his insane mother and Hollyweird producers for over a decade.
 

For anyone that enjoys hate-watching things, I believe this dailymotion channel has pretty much all the previous seasons of the show available. I've been watching some while boozing it up.
How appropriate that you can see the previous seasons on a channel named after something Jazz can never have.

I know it's based on the 50s show, I just like the double entendre.
 
Is there a chance that they could give Jazz some physical therapy to at least get some sensation to the area? Even if her male puberty was arrested at 11 or whatever, kids still have sensation down there. Maybe this is a :optimistic: but physical therapists have machines that help break up/stimulate? scar tissue if you injure your wrist
Even if there were ways to clear away the scar tissue, it might already be too late. Peripheral nerves degenerate if they cannot reconnect to their end organ for a few months, or else they develop into a painful neuroma in their attempt to regenerate. I think the best bet is direct, electric stimulation of his spinal cord -- more fun experiment for the Science Fair!

He doesn't have a sexuality, but he wanted a relationship. Makes you think how much of young people dating is socially enforced.
In his case it is more like "mom enforced"; I remember a car conversation where Mom urged Jaron to fuck.
 
All of Jazz's "friends" are so fake. That Noelle person oddly reminds me of Narcissa/Cosmo in his mannerisms and narc ego, especially when he's envious about Jazz's puberty blockers. Every time Jazz and friends hang out, you can tell it's painfully scripted and/or they're all being forced to hang out together.

I legit don't think some of these so-called friends are really even trans. I'm pretty confident that they are indeed paid actors with completely different lives outside the show. Maybe not Noelle, but most of the others.
 
Even if there were ways to clear away the scar tissue, it might already be too late. Peripheral nerves degenerate if they cannot reconnect to their end organ for a few months, or else they develop into a painful neuroma in their attempt to regenerate. I think the best bet is direct, electric stimulation of his spinal cord -- more fun experiment for the Science Fair!

In his case it is more like "mom enforced"; I remember a car conversation where Mom urged Jaron to fuck.

Well then they screwed yet another thing up.

This is TMI but I got physical therapy for something completely unrelated and they were advertising for PT for women who have "issues" with sex, etc. Stuff related to sensation and vaginal performance.

They should have explored these less invasive options until their phones wore out.
 
Well then they screwed yet another thing up.

This is TMI but I got physical therapy for something completely unrelated and they were advertising for PT for women who have "issues" with sex, etc. Stuff related to sensation and vaginal performance.

They should have explored these less invasive options until their phones wore out.
You expect too much from nazis in all but name. Mengele cut up people because he could. So does Bowers.
 
It is never appropriate for a parent to encourage his or her early or late adolescent children to have sex. For most young adults, there is a veritable sex-buffet "out there" and what they need, is for their elders to offer them an example of good discriminating judgement and self-restraint. They don't need to be encouraged to act on their urges, especially ones that lead to drama, misunderstandings, wasted time, illness, infections, diseases, and babies.

Like what if we told our daughters, "sometimes it just feels good, to pick up the nearest hunky guy, and fuck like rabbits ..."

Imagine telling your son "in a room full of women, one of them wants to have sex. Find the one who will give it out, and take her home."

That is not what kids want to hear from their parents. Telling Jazz that she should have sex, is bad, even if both mother and child know that it won't be acted on. It is a matter of basic respect.

They remind me of the movie "Meet the Fockers" ...

Boundaries people, boundaries.
 
It depends on what the kids observe too, combined with the personality they develop and the effort the parents put into the examples they give. The rest is how the kid assimilates that and how much of it they keep and discard.
The ability to develop that judgement requires a bit of being exposed to the sex buffet and deciding how much worth it is to them, if there's any at all. Whether they opt for promiscuity, mindless or responsible, monogamy or outright celibacy will come out of their decisions and their interactions.
Here's Jazz problem: he spent his entire adolescence isolated. So to hell with finding that stuff out on the field, he relies on what his parents, the internet, and the degenerates in his subculture tell him. If his role models and peers are AGP motherfuckers, well then no wonder his life revolves around a hole.
Secondly, that mystical sex switch he so looks forward to might be a thing. A thing called puberty. That thing he never went through. He could also be referring to not wanting to be promiscuous and preferring chastity until he's sure he found a stable partner, but he can't quite express it properly because has the brain of a preschooler. In the same way you didn't realize something you already knew or were doing was a thing until someone else told you it had a name and explained the theory behind it.

(Edit: wording)
 
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Jazz saying his sexuality will activate

Apparently he is still believing this shit. Who is telling him this? His crazy mother?

It's OVER for him. It was over the day his puberty was blocked. Every surgery is destroying his crotch further & further. He has to be aware that it's not getting better.
 

7 Questions With Jazz Jennings of TLC’s ‘I Am Jazz’
Her transition has been documented in the public eye for more than a decade. The newest season of her reality show began this week.


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Jazz Jennings, shown last year, has been sharing her gender confirmation surgeries and her recovery on her TLC reality show “I Am Jazz.” The sixth season began this week. Credit...Anthony DelMundo/WireImage, via Getty Images
Johnny Diaz
By Johnny Diaz
  • Jan. 30, 2020, 9:54 a.m. ET
Jazz Jennings has been in the spotlight since 2007, when she was 6 and appeared on the ABC News program “20/20.” Wearing a dress, she opened up to Barbara Walters about being a transgender child, at a time when mainstream audiences didn’t often hear from those voices.

Thirteen years later, Ms. Jennings, now 19, continues to be an advocate for L.G.B.T. youth. She has had a doll modeled after her, written a children’s book and a memoir, and, with her family, started the TransKids Purple Rainbow Foundation. And she’s the star of the TLC reality show “I Am Jazz,” which returned for its sixth season this week.
TV viewers have followed many firsts in Ms. Jennings’s daily life, from going to prom to having a boyfriend. They tuned in when she had her gender confirmation surgery in New York City last season, surrounded by her parents and three older siblings. (There were complications after the surgery, and several follow-up procedures and visits with doctors were also chronicled on the show.)

Around the country, children and teenagers have watched Ms. Jennings go about her life at a time when some states are pushing back on transgender youth seeking the kinds of medical treatments the TV star and her friends have received. In South Dakota, young transgender people fear a bill that would restrict access to hormone treatments and surgeries on anyone under the age of 16. Similar bills have been introduced in other states including Colorado, Florida and South Carolina. (And despite the growing presence of transgender people in popular culture, the community faces elevated levels of homelessness, poverty and violence, especially for transgender women of color.)



Ms. Jennings talked to The New York Times about the new season, which features her third surgery, one she described as “a cosmetic operation for aesthetic reasons.” As Ms. Jennings recovers, she and her family have to contend with another complication and a possible fourth surgery. Ms. Jennings also helps raise money for a transgender friend who says that her mother’s insurance doesn’t cover her gender confirmation surgery.

The following is an edited and condensed version of the conversation.
You've talked about having body and mind alignment. Can you explain the importance of this?


Finally undergoing bottom surgery has allowed me to confidently flourish in my new body and dismantle any remaining gender dysphoria. For the first time, my body fully reflected my soul — how I felt on the inside. The surgery didn’t solve all of my issues, but it did offer a sense of peace and comfort that wasn't otherwise there.

You seemed excited last year about being accepted to Harvard. Why did you decide to delay college?
I decided to delay college so that I could focus on taking a deep breath with all of the recent events of my life. I just needed a year to focus on my mental well-being and get in the right head space. I’m very glad I took a gap year and plan on starting school at Harvard in the fall.

You had complications after your surgery. Given those, do you regret having it done at an early age?
I have no regrets when it comes to the surgery. Even though I was young, I knew what I wanted and got the surgery right when I was meant to. Yes, experiencing the complications sucked, but it all worked out in the end.

You have described the surgery as a lifesaving operation that was covered by insurance. Do you think most health insurance should cover the costs of such surgeries?
This is a controversial question because some consider this specific procedure as an “elective” surgery undergone by choice rather than necessity. However, I disagree wholeheartedly. Gender dysphoria is a real condition and this surgery saves lives. It IS a necessity for so many transgender people and should absolutely be covered by insurance. So many trans people are suicidal due to the insecurities they feel being stuck in the wrong body.

You have shared so much of your life on camera since the show debuted in 2015. How do you balance what you share with viewers and what you keep private?
There is so much of my life that isn’t featured on the show. Even though most of the monumental events of my life are recorded, I still have so many private moments that aren’t shared. There is definitely a good balance and I feel like, even with a TV show about my life, I still have a great deal of privacy.

You recently shared your surgical scars on social media. What do you hope people take away from seeing them?
I hope that people appreciate the strength and perseverance it took to complete my transition and have the courage to be body confident. We all have bodies — some are bigger, some are smaller, some have scars.

What message do you hope that viewers take away from your show?
I hope they understand the importance of unconditional love. That’s always been the core of my family’s message. You just have to love and appreciate all people for who they are, including our differences. We’re all beautiful and unique and we just have to learn to embrace that.
 
For the first time, my body fully reflected my soul — how I felt on the inside.

Stunted, distorted and mangled? Sounds about right.

This is a controversial question because some consider this specific procedure as an “elective” surgery undergone by choice rather than necessity. However, I disagree wholeheartedly. Gender dysphoria is a real condition and this surgery saves lives. It IS a necessity for so many transgender people and should absolutely be covered by insurance. So many trans people are suicidal due to the insecurities they feel being stuck in the wrong body.

If health insurance covers genital surgeries and hormone cocktails to indulge the mentally insane, then I demand nutritionists, gastric bypass, weight loss pills, laxatives, cryolipolisis and rib removal be included as well for the mental well being of the proana/promia community.

ETA:
You just have to love and appreciate all people for who they are, including our differences. We’re all beautiful and unique and we just have to learn to embrace that.

Kinda ironic coming from someone who loathes himself so much he destroyed both his identity and his body.
 
They should make that doll with full botch scars. You know, to make sure kids have the full picture about the transition procedures the adults in their lives are trying to rope them into when they give them this doll.
"Now available with a detachable penis"
 
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