Puberty Blockers are a Human Right

Rori Porter
6 min readApr 26, 2022
Licensed from Envato

When I was growing up, trans people were primarily relegated to daytime trash TV, movies about serial killers, and murder victims on Law and Order. There weren’t any trans role models I could look up to until I was already an adult. I didn’t have the opportunity to see myself in any media because depictions of trans people were always horrible, devastating, or blatantly offensive. Documentaries about trans children tended to be damaging and exploitative, and talks of puberty blockers revolved entirely around cisgender kids experiencing precocious puberty.

That is all to say, trans people in my generation had little opportunity to be appropriately treated for gender dysphoria. Unless you were a toddler screaming about your gender identity, you didn’t get the help you needed. Resources were largely unavailable, and the context to explore my gender identity wasn’t something I experienced until college.

Now, I am usually very hesitant to speak on the trans issues making headlines. Discussions about trans women in sports, bathroom bills, the aptly dubbed the “don’t say gay” bill, and the draconian laws coming out of Texas right now are extremely weighty topics that invite a level of debate and scrutiny that I prefer to keep out of. But right now, trans kids are at the forefront of the trans rights movement, which sees conservative politicians going as far as…

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Rori Porter
Rori Porter

Written by Rori Porter

Queer Transfemme writer & designer living in Los Angeles. She. Stage name: Thirstie Alley

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