LEAP for Intersex and Trans

LEAP for Intersex and Trans This is a passion project, to raise correct awareness about Intersex and Transgender individuals. The baby has no say in getting a sex assigned at birth!

When a baby is born it is assigned a sex which is either male (having Male anatomy), female (having Female anatomy) or Intersex ( ambiguous genitals). When the baby grows up, 2 years onwards he/she starts expressing their choices in what they like to wear, what role they play in a game, what clothes they want to put on, etc, that's how they express their gender the way they perceive themselves. In

most cases a baby assigned as male child, expresses traits of masculinity, that is also what is expected of him and a female child expresses traits of femininity. Unfortunately in Pakistan most cases of ambiguous genitals are misunderstood, due to lack of knowledge, are frowned upon by parents, siblings and peers, and either given up to strangers or abused at home. Ideally the intersex child should be sent home with a sex assigned at birth according to the results of certain tests, physical appearance and future sexual potential, in accordance with the latest guidelines. And the parents should be told to allow free expression of gender to understand how they perceive themselves. Only some of those children have dysphoria. A dysphoric individual will be in extreme distress and depression because of the sex assigned at birth and his/her perception of himself/herself and they will need help transitioning. So a Trans man would be a child with female anatomy but a masculinized brain and a Trans woman would be a child with a male anatomy but a feminine brain. It isn't an easy process and because of the discrimination and stigma they suffer from mental health issues. So in short Man = Trans man & Woman = Trans woman when dealing with human rights. Health needs for trans are various too. There are guidelines available on that. Please be advised that Islam is a tolerant religion, it allows surgeries in certain cases (Al-Azhar University of Egypt has given fatwas back in 1989)
Sex assigned at birth is Not the same as Gender. Gender is a spectrum and all of us experience life with a mix of femininity and masculinity, easily explained by the hormonal balance or imbalances in us. Once that child reaches puberty, certain hormones kick in, and the adolescent now experiences sexuality too. That's when sexual orientation comes into play. Your brain tells you who you desire physically, you may not express those desires and control them at will and all individuals have sexual and reproductive health rights that should be known to all healthcare providers. Lack of knowledge is no excuse! PMDC has set code of ethics on unbiased practice! Those codes are shared on this page too.

23/05/2026

On 22nd May, at ✨ Unwritten: Stories of Becoming ✨
Zoya chose courage over silence and shared her truth with breathtaking vulnerability.
And for a moment, strangers stopped being strangers.
The room listened.
The room felt.
The room understood.
The audience didn't just hear a story... They witnessed a human being.
This is why Unwritten matters.
Because empathy begins when someone finally feels safe enough to speak.
At PMA Karachi we change paradigms.
📍 Next session: 19th June 2026 insha'Allah.
Come experience what awareness, humanity, and informed conversations can do!

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

05/05/2026

Let's talk about another common inters*x variation in Pakistan...
47XXY - Klinefelter Syndrome
Notice the extra X in the chromosome.

At birth the child will look like a baby boy.
Over time family and healthcare providers can notice slight differences in the body, as they will have chest buds growing naturally leading to gynaecomastia.
They will have less facial and body hair.
The voice may not sound too masculine.
Upon lab tests the ratio of testosterone and estrogen will be different from average males and they may have fertility issues like azoospermia.
Sometimes they will not know about their inters*x variation till they visit a fertility clinic.
The majority of these individuals do not have gender incongruence, and even if they do, affirming care will be needed regardless.

When healthcare providers don't understand these individuals they are subjected to unnecessary medication to be able to reproduce and in our country there is a lot of shame associated with being "NaMard".

Awareness leads to compassion and I invite you to use your compassion for offering inclusive care.
Please reach out for capacity building workshops and training in inters*x and transgender affirming healthcare!

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

*xeducator

17/04/2026

Gentle reminder
Please book your follow up appointment at your earliest.
I have procured Estradiol Valerate injections for my transwomen clients.

Please remember, receiving HRT under medical supervision is essential.
Keeping a track of your progress is important as we always make sure there is no harm done.

ھارمون کے ٹیکے بغیر ٹیسٹ کے لگوانے سے جانی نقصان کا اندیشہ رہتا ہے۔ بہتر ہے کہ آپ علاج معالجہ کسی ایسے ڈاکٹر سے کروائیں جو ٹرانسجنڈر ہیتھکئر پہ عبور رکھتا ہو۔
Alignment of your body with your experienced gender is part of affirming care.

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

care *xeducator

Understanding Partial Androgen Insensitivity: A Human-Centered Perspective for Our SocietyIn Pakistan, conversations aro...
15/04/2026

Understanding Partial Androgen Insensitivity: A Human-Centered Perspective for Our Society

In Pakistan, conversations around s*x development are often limited, shaped by silence, stigma, and lack of awareness. Yet, many individuals are born with natural variations in how their bodies respond to hormones. One such variation is Partial Androgen Insensitivity (PAI), which occurs in individuals with 46XY chromosomes.
To understand this simply, think of the body as a lock-and-key system. Hormones like testosterone are the “keys,” and receptors in the body are the “locks.” In Partial Androgen Insensitivity, the key is present, but the lock does not fully respond. This leads to a difference in how the body develops, particularly in traits typically associated with male development.

How Does This Variation Present?
Individuals with Partial Androgen Insensitivity are often assigned male at birth because their external ge***alia may appear typically male. In many cases, there is no visible ambiguity, especially in milder forms.
As a result, families and society raise them as boys without ever questioning underlying biological differences.

However, as the child grows, certain patterns may emerge:
Reduced facial and body hair
Less muscle mass compared to peers
Gynecomastia (breast development) during puberty
A softer physical appearance
Emotional and psychological traits that may not align with rigid expectations of masculinity in our culture

What is important to understand is that biology is not only about appearance—it also influences identity, feelings, and internal experiences.

The Inner Experience: When Identity and Expectations Clash
Many individuals with Partial Androgen Insensitivity report a deep internal sense of disconnect when expected to conform to traditional male roles. Despite trying hard to “fit in,” they may naturally feel more aligned with a feminine outlook, expression, or identity.
This is not a choice, nor is it a result of upbringing. It is a lived experience rooted in how their body and brain have developed.
In a society like ours, where gender roles are rigid and heavily enforced, this mismatch often leads to gender dysphoria—a distress that arises when one’s internal sense of self does not align with societal expectations or assigned roles.

The Role of Families and Society
Unfortunately, many desi families struggle to understand this. Parents may respond with confusion, denial, or attempts to “correct” the child’s behavior. This is often not out of cruelty, but lack of awareness and guidance.

However, the impact on the individual can be profound:
Chronic anxiety and depression
Social withdrawal
Low self-esteem
In severe cases, self-harm or suicidal thoughts
Rejection at home is one of the strongest predictors of poor mental health outcomes. On the other hand, acceptance—even if gradual—can be life-saving.

Do We Always Need Expensive Tests?
In resource-limited settings like Pakistan, advanced genetic testing is often not accessible—and importantly, not always necessary.
A careful clinical history, physical examination, and understanding the individual’s lived experience can guide diagnosis and care. Expensive testing may confirm what is already evident, but it does not change the core need: supportive, affirming care.

What Does Appropriate Care Look Like?
Care for individuals with Partial Androgen Insensitivity should be respectful, individualized, and centered on the person’s well-being.
This includes:
Affirming conversations that allow individuals to express their identity safely
Psychological support to address dysphoria and emotional distress
Family counseling to educate and guide parents toward acceptance
Medical support when needed, including hormone-related care tailored to the individual
Most importantly, care should move away from forcing conformity and instead focus on helping the individual live a life that feels authentic and peaceful.

A Message for Our Community
Every human being deserves dignity, understanding, and the right to exist without fear. Variations like Partial Androgen Insensitivity are part of natural human diversity.
As a society, we are at a crossroads. We can either continue the cycle of silence and stigma, or we can choose awareness, compassion, and informed care.
Because sometimes, the difference between a life of suffering and a life of thriving is not medicine—it is acceptance.
And that begins at home.

Dr. Sana Yasir
Vice President PMA Karachi
Inters*x Educator & Gender affirming physician.

Copied - Worth sharing!The Science of Being TransgenderMost people are never taught this. They are handed a culture war ...
10/04/2026

Copied - Worth sharing!
The Science of Being Transgender
Most people are never taught this. They are handed a culture war designed by fascists and told to pick a side. What they are rarely given is the actual biology. Here it is…
It Begins Before Birth
Every human embryo starts from the same template. For the first six weeks of development there is no s*xual differentiation at all. The same structures, the same hormonal environment, the same biological potential in every direction. The embryo does not yet know what it is going to become. Neither does the body building it.
Then the process begins.
A genetic cascade triggers the release of hormones that will shape the developing body. But this process does not happen all at once. It happens in stages. And the stages matter enormously to understanding why transgender people exist.
The ge****ls differentiate first. Then, weeks later, the brain follows. These are two separate biological events running on different hormonal timelines. They are not locked together. They are not guaranteed to produce the same outcome. The hormonal environment present during ge***al development and the hormonal environment present during brain development can differ. In most people they align. In some people they do not.
This is not a malfunction. This is biological variation doing exactly what biological variation does.
Here is the part that should stop the argument cold.
Men have ni***es. Every single man reading this has ni***es that serve no reproductive function whatsoever. Nobody debates this. Nobody holds a parliamentary inquiry into it. It is simply accepted as a fact of human development and moved on from.
But it is the same phenomenon.
Ni***es develop during that early undifferentiated window before the hormonal cascade begins. By the time testosterone arrives the ni***es are already formed and they stay. The body built them during a period when it had not yet committed to a direction. They are a trace of shared developmental architecture. Every body carries the blueprint of both pathways because that is how human development works.
Gender identity works the same way. The brain develops during a separate window from the ge****ls. If the hormonal environment differs between those two windows, which it can and does, the result is a person whose gender identity does not align with their s*x assigned at birth. The mechanism is identical to the one that gave every man on earth ni***es he will never use. One outcome gets laughed off as a curiosity. The other gets turned into a political crisis.
That inconsistency is worth sitting with.
Numbers That Should Make People Stop and Think
Before getting into the detailed science, here are some figures that tend to reframe the conversation entirely.
Approximately 1.7 percent of the population is born inters*x. That is people born with chromosomal, hormonal or anatomical variations that do not fit the standard definitions of male or female. 1.7 percent sounds small until you apply it to population size. In the United Kingdom alone that is over a million people. Globally it is around 130 million people. That is more than the entire population of Japan born with bodies that the binary cannot account for.
Left-handedness affects approximately 10 percent of the global population. Nobody argues that left-handed people are confused, that their condition is a trend or that they should be denied healthcare. They are simply left-handed. Inters*x people are more common than many genetic conditions that receive significant medical research funding, public sympathy and zero political debate.
Red hair affects roughly 1 to 2 percent of the global population. It is considered a natural human variation. Nobody is legislating against it.
Identical twins share virtually all of their DNA. If being transgender were purely a social phenomenon or personal choice, the concordance rate for transgender identity between identical twins would be no higher than between strangers. It is not. Studies show concordance rates of around 39 percent between identical twins where at least one is transgender, compared to significantly lower rates in fraternal twins. If this were a trend or an ideology, the DNA would not care. It does.
Approximately 0.5 percent of adults in the UK identify as transgender. That figure has remained broadly consistent across studies when methodology is controlled for. It is not rising because of social contagion. It is rising in visibility because the social conditions that previously forced people to hide have partially, though not fully, improved.
The Brain Structures
The hypothalamus is a small region at the base of the brain that regulates fundamental aspects of human experience including body temperature, hunger, sleep and aspects of identity and behaviour. Within it sits a structure called the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, referred to in research as the BSTc.
Studies beginning in the 1990s and replicated multiple times since have found consistent differences in this structure between transgender and cisgender individuals. Transgender women have a BSTc that more closely resembles that of cisgender women than cisgender men. Critically this finding holds regardless of whether the individual has received hormone treatment or not. The brain structure differences predate any medical intervention. They are not caused by hormones taken later in life. They are present before treatment begins, pointing directly at developmental origins.
This finding has been confirmed across multiple research teams in multiple countries. It is not fringe science. It is published, peer reviewed and sits in mainstream neurological literature. The fact that it is not common knowledge is a political failure, not a scientific one.
A 2018 study published in the journal Biological Psychiatry used MRI imaging to examine white matter microstructure in transgender adolescents before any hormone treatment. The results showed that the brain connectivity patterns of transgender boys resembled those of cisgender boys more closely than cisgender girls. The same was true in reverse for transgender girls. These were children. Their brains had developed this way before any medical intervention whatsoever.
Prenatal Hormone Exposure
The relationship between prenatal hormone exposure and gender identity is one of the better documented areas in this field.
Conge***al adrenal hyperplasia is a condition in which a genetic female fetus is exposed to elevated levels of androgens in the womb. Research has consistently shown higher rates of gender nonconformity and transgender identity in people with this condition compared to the general population. This is a direct, measurable link between prenatal hormone environment and gender identity outcomes.
Research on individuals exposed to diethylstilboestrol, a synthetic oestrogen given to pregnant women between the 1940s and 1970s, showed similar patterns. Those exposed in utero showed higher rates of gender variance than unexposed populations.
The mechanism is understood. Hormones during the critical window of brain development influence the organisation of neural circuits associated with gender identity. If the hormonal environment during that window differs from what produced the ge****ls weeks earlier, the result is a person whose gender identity does not align with their s*x assigned at birth.
That person is transgender. They were transgender before they were born.
Genetics
Twin studies are among the most powerful tools available for separating genetic influence from environmental influence. The research on transgender identity using twin studies is consistent.
Studies examining identical twins, who share virtually all of their DNA, show significantly higher concordance rates for transgender identity than studies of fraternal twins, who share approximately half their DNA. If being transgender were purely a matter of social influence or personal choice, identical twins would show no higher concordance than fraternal twins. They do.
A 2013 study published in the International Journal of Transgenderism examined 23 identical twin pairs where at least one twin was transgender. In 39 percent of pairs both twins were transgender. Among fraternal twin pairs the concordance was significantly lower. This points clearly toward a genetic component.
Specific genetic research has identified variants in genes associated with hormone signalling pathways, particularly those related to androgen and oestrogen receptors, that appear at higher frequencies in transgender populations. The steroid 5-alpha reductase gene, the androgen receptor gene and the aromatase gene have all been implicated in multiple studies.
No single gene causes a person to be transgender any more than a single gene causes a person to be gay, left-handed or musically gifted. Complex human traits rarely work that way. What the research shows is a consistent genetic architecture underlying gender identity that has nothing to do with choice, trend or ideology.
The Inters*x Evidence
Inters*x conditions exist in roughly one in one hundred people depending on which variations are included in the definition. Using the broader definition accepted by the United Nations the figure rises to 1.7 percent. These are people born with chromosomal, hormonal or anatomical variations that do not fit the standard definitions of male or female.
Androgen insensitivity syndrome is among the clearest examples. A person with complete androgen insensitivity syndrome has XY chromosomes but develops a fully female body because their cells cannot respond to testosterone. They are raised as girls, identify as women and are women in every observable physical sense. Their chromosomes say one thing. Their body says another.
If chromosomes alone determine s*x then this person, by the logic most commonly deployed against transgender people, is male. Nobody who meets her would describe her that way. Nobody who knows her would describe her that way. The chromosome argument collapses the moment it is applied honestly to real human variation.
Klinefelter syndrome produces people with XXY chromosomes. Turner syndrome produces people with a single X chromosome. There are people with XYY chromosomes, ### chromosomes, mosaic chromosomes where different cells in the same body carry different chromosomal combinations. The binary of XX equals female and XY equals male describes the majority but does not describe everyone and never did.
This is not a modern discovery. These conditions have been documented in medical literature for over a century. The decision to ignore them in public debate about biological s*x is a choice, not an oversight.
The Epigenetic Layer
Epigenetics is the study of how gene expression is regulated without changes to the underlying DNA sequence. Environmental factors including hormone levels, stress and other prenatal conditions can switch genes on or off during critical developmental windows. These epigenetic changes can influence brain development in ways that affect gender identity.
A 2008 study in the journal Molecular Psychiatry proposed an epigenetic model for s*xual orientation and gender identity, suggesting that epigenetic changes during prenatal development could explain why identical twins do not show one hundred percent concordance for transgender identity despite sharing virtually identical DNA. The same genes can be expressed differently depending on conditions in the womb.
This adds another layer of biological complexity to an already complex picture. Gender identity is not determined by a single mechanism. It is shaped by genetics, by prenatal hormone exposure, by epigenetic regulation of gene expression and by neurological development during specific critical windows. All of these operate before birth. None of them are choices.
This Is Not New and It Is Not Western
This is the part of the conversation that tends to silence the social contagion argument completely.
Gender diverse people have existed on every inhabited continent across every period of recorded human history. This is not a modern invention. It is not a product of social media, progressive politics or Western cultural influence. It is a human constant that predates every culture currently debating it.
In South Asia the Hijra community has been documented for over four thousand years. Hijra people, who are transgender women or inters*x people, held recognised social and spiritual roles in Hindu, Jain and Muslim societies. They are referenced in ancient texts including the K**a Sutra and the Ramayana. The British colonial administration attempted to criminalise them in the nineteenth century. The harm from that criminalisation is still being addressed today.
In Indigenous North American cultures across hundreds of distinct nations, Two-Spirit people held respected roles as healers, mediators and spiritual leaders. The term Two-Spirit is a modern pan-Indigenous English term adopted in 1990 to describe these traditional roles, which varied significantly across nations but consistently recognised gender diversity as a natural and valued part of human experience.
In Polynesia the Fa’afafine of Samoa are people assigned male at birth who embody both masculine and feminine traits and are recognised as a distinct gender within Samoan culture. They are not marginalised. They are integrated. Their existence has been documented continuously for centuries.
In ancient Egypt gender diverse individuals appear in religious and administrative records. In Rome the Galli, priests of the goddess Cybele, lived as women and were accepted within Roman religious life. In medieval Europe there are documented cases of people living as a gender different from the one assigned at birth, some of whom were later canonised as saints.
In Japan the Wakashu represented a recognised third gender category for centuries. In Albania the sworn virgins, known as Burrnesha, were women who lived as men and were granted the full social status of men within their communities, a role that persisted well into the twentieth century.
The argument that transgender identity is a modern Western trend cannot survive contact with this history. It requires ignoring four thousand years of documented human experience across cultures that had no contact with each other and arrived independently at the same recognition. That recognition is that some people are born into a gender that does not match the body they arrived in, and that this is a natural part of human variation.
Modern science did not create this. Modern science simply caught up with what human cultures already knew.
What the Medical Consensus Says
Every major medical organisation that has examined this evidence has reached the same conclusion.
The World Health Organisation removed transgender identity from its list of mental disorders in 2019. The American Psychiatric Association states clearly that being transgender is not a mental illness. The British Psychological Society, the Royal College of Psychiatrists, the Endocrine Society, the World Professional Association for Transgender Health and the American Medical Association all recognise gender-affirming care as evidence-based and medically necessary.
The NHS itself, before its current political complications, operated on the basis that transgender identities are real, that gender dysphoria causes genuine distress and that treatment reduces that distress and improves outcomes. The research supporting this has not changed. The political environment has.
The Su***de Data and What It Actually Shows
There is a persistent and false claim that transition causes psychological harm or that transgender people’s mental health difficulties prove something is wrong with being transgender. The research does not support this.
Studies consistently show that transgender people who receive gender-affirming care, social support and acceptance show significantly better mental health outcomes than those who do not. The elevated rates of depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation in transgender populations are not caused by being transgender. They are caused by stigma, rejection, discrimination, denial of care and hostile environments.
When those factors are removed, outcomes improve dramatically. A 2020 study in the journal Pediatrics found that transgender youth who were supported in their gender identity by their families showed su***de attempt rates 52 percent lower than those who were not supported. The difference between those two groups was not their biology. It was whether the people around them treated them with basic human dignity.
The harm does not come from being transgender. The harm comes from how transgender people are treated.
The Moments That Should Change the Argument
For anyone still uncertain, here is a short list of things that are true simultaneously.
More people are born inters*x than are born with red hair. Red hair is considered a charming genetic quirk. Inters*x conditions are still used to justify the idea that s*x is strictly binary.
Every man alive has ni***es developed through the same biological mechanism that produces transgender people. One is considered unremarkable. The other is considered a crisis.
Identical twins with identical DNA are transgender at nearly the same rate, pointing directly at biology. If this were a social trend the DNA would not follow.
Children as young as three consistently and persistently identify with a gender that differs from their s*x assigned at birth, before they have the language for it, before social media existed, before any of the cultural explanations offered by those who oppose transgender existence were present.
Indigenous cultures across every inhabited continent have documented gender diverse roles and identities going back thousands of years. This is not a Western import. It is a human constant that every culture on earth has independently recognised.
Gender diverse people appear in the oldest religious texts humanity has produced. They were healers, priests, mediators and leaders. The idea that this is new is not just wrong. It requires erasing thousands of years of human history to maintain.
What This Means
Being transgender is a naturally occurring variation in human development. It has biological roots that begin before birth. It is documented across history and across cultures. It is recognised by every credible medical authority. It is not a trend, not a choice, not a mental illness and not a threat to anyone.
The argument that it is any of those things is not a scientific argument. It is a political one. And politics, unlike biology, can be changed.
The biology was settled long before the argument started.
The argument was never really about the biology.

09/04/2026

We all want to protect our children and we want them to be closer to Allah, our creator.
Allah is the most merciful and most compassionate.
Our Prophet (s.a.w) was sent as Rehmatul lil Alameen (mercy to all worlds)
So if we reject our children for being diverse, we are pushing them away from our deen and Allah's mercy.
Many parents think...
Trans = sin

Please know that
Feelings and identity are not sinful
Actions we take as per our choice must be taken into consideration.
Allah judges with niyyah(intention) and ikhtiyar(choice) then amal(action).

Perhaps the journey to transition is your child's imtihan(test) and for you as well.
If you support your child they will feel safe and be safe from unnecessary harm.

Variations in human bodies exists. Not everything fits in simple categories.
Allah created diversity.
Your concern is genuine and lack of knowledge creates problems.
Reach out if you want to support your child.
I can help!

Share this reel as it was created for awareness purposes.
Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY


*xeducator

The absence of care leads to higher rates of moderate-to-severe depression and anxiety, often exacerbated by the stigma ...
27/03/2026

The absence of care leads to higher rates of moderate-to-severe depression and anxiety, often exacerbated by the stigma and fear of a hostile social or legal environment.
A lack of affirmation can cause internalized transphobia, low self-esteem, and a sense of "living in an inauthentic body," which may lead to a loss of hope and a feeling of being at a "standstill" in life.
My clients tell me that without the ability to transition socially or medically, individuals have experienced constant, daily distress from being misgendered or not recognized as their true gender, leading to social withdrawal and isolation.

Inability to access legal, safe, and monitored medical care often pushes individuals to seek hormones through unregulated "underground" markets, which poses severe risks of toxicity, incorrect dosing, and infections.

Studies show a 72% increase in su***de attempts among transgender youth in the first year after anti-transgender laws are passed.
Access to care is shown to decrease suicidality by over 70%.

Fear of discrimination or previous negative experiences with healthcare providers leads many to avoid all medical checkups, leading to untreated health issues.

Training of healthcare providers in affirming care is the need of the hour!

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

*xeducator

16/03/2026

Say a special prayer for my gender variant and bodily diverse clients...

Beshak Allah doesn't over burden a soul.
Ya Hayyo Ya Qayyumo
I only for your mercy, always!
You are indeed Ya Walliul Wali
Please accept our ibadat in these promised nights, Ameen.
Continue to make me waseela for your mercy and kindness, help me decrease the fitna in this world, and bless with your Noor here and in the hereafter, Ameen.

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

*xeducator

10/03/2026

Gentle reminder...
Please book your appointments if your follow up is due.

Sehat KO priority dain.
Har 3 maheene pe APNI jismani sehat ko barqarar rakhnay k liye, follow up k liye zaroor waqt nikalain.

Aligning your body with your experienced gender also means taking care of your body.

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

*xeducator

If your teenager says,“Ammi… Abbu… I don’t feel comfortable in my body,”that is not rebellion.That is vulnerability.They...
26/02/2026

If your teenager says,
“Ammi… Abbu… I don’t feel comfortable in my body,”
that is not rebellion.
That is vulnerability.

They are not trying to embarrass you.
They are trying to trust you.

Adolescence is already a storm.
Gender dysphoria makes it feel like drowning inside that storm.

When parents respond with anger, shame, or rejection…
the child doesn’t “become normal.”

They become alone.

And in Pakistan, we know what happens to children who are alone.
Many end up on the streets.
Begging.
Exploited.
Forced into unsafe environments.
Not because they wanted that life.
But because home stopped being safe.

Research across cultures shows that family acceptance reduces depression, self-harm, substance abuse, and su***de risk dramatically.
Support doesn’t “create” gender diversity.
It protects your child from harm.

You don’t have to understand everything in one day.
You don’t have to have all the answers.

But you do have to keep the door open.

Say this instead:
“I don’t fully understand yet… but I love you. Let’s learn together.”

That sentence can save a life.
Your child needs a parent.
Not a judge.
Not a society spokesperson.

If you’re confused, scared, or overwhelmed — get guidance.
Don’t give up on your child.

Because when families hold their children… the world becomes safer for them.
So what are you choosing?

Love and light 💜✨
Dr. SY

*xeducator

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