De - transitioning #1 …
Hormones castrated me physically, spiritually, emotionally and intellectually. I’m 51 and finally free—don’t let them do this to kids.
Översikt
After 40+ years of gender dysphoria and six years off hormones, Keith Caputo has booked surgery to remove the “fake breasts” he gained during transition. He credits deep trauma work and plant-medicine therapy—not medical transition—for finally healing his dysphoria, and he now condemns prescribing hormones or surgeries to children as “disgusting.”
Fullständig Videosammanfattning
Keith Caputo opens the video with the news that he has been off hormone therapy for six or seven years and that, as of January 2025, he has booked surgery to remove the “fake breasts” he acquired during transition. He declares that he has “cured” his gender dysphoria after decades of struggle, describing the journey as walking “through the fire” and emerging with a clearer understanding of his soul and spirit. Keith emphasizes that he is now living as a “more healed version” of himself, crediting years of trauma work and plant-medicine therapy for the shift. Addressing online criticism—comments that he “looks ugly” or “looks like a man”—Keith responds bluntly that he “always was a man” and suggests detractors are unaccustomed to authentic voices. He positions himself as aligned with “real transsexuals” who, in his view, respect women’s rights and children’s innocence, while distancing himself from what he calls the current culture of medicalizing minors. He is adamantly opposed to prescribing hormones or performing surgeries on children, calling the practice “disgusting” and lamenting that the side-effects of hormone therapy are rarely discussed by trans advocates. Keith recounts that he lived with gender dysphoria for more than 40 years, beginning in early childhood marked by severe family trauma—pulling heroin needles out of his father’s body and losing his mother at age 22. These experiences, he says, left “holes in my soul” and contributed to his fractured sense of identity. He underscores that no one made decisions for him; he entered therapy for nearly three years before medically transitioning, contrasting that with what he sees as today’s rush to medicate toddlers. Hormones, he asserts, “castrated” him physically, spiritually, emotionally, and intellectually, and he claims three decades of anecdotal evidence confirm similar harms in others. Looking ahead, Keith announces he is legally reclaiming the name Keith and anticipates feeling “so free” once the upcoming surgery is complete. He frames detransition not as a regression but as alchemical transformation: having “played with energy” by embracing the feminine, he now understands that engagement never made him biologically female and was ultimately a response to womb trauma and maternal loss. He ends by thanking both supporters and detractors for the lessons they provide, positioning himself as an “alchemist” who has manifested “peace of mind, heart, and soul,” and reiterates that he would not wish the trans experience “on my worst enemy.”