Ooooof. I hadn't thought of that. Transition is lengthy, isn't it? I guess some of us just assume you go see a doctor and that's it. I guess that could be a problem for photo ID. Hopefully this isn't insensitive somehow, but if you've got the stuff to book and undergo transition, shouldn't you be able to just go and update your forms of ID?
The VA page says if your name has changed bring proof thereof. I think that since they can't prove that you're trans while applying, and that's not tracked by the state as far as I know, it should just be "my name has changed, no reason needed, here's the doc". Transitioning/transition should have zero bearing on the process of obtaining/using ID in theory.
So, for trans women, it's known that just the hormonal part of transitioning tends to take impact on a ten-year time scale (... if you must know, this is literally just the time scale for growing breast tissue). There's also legal paperwork, voice training, facial feminization surgery (or top surgery for trans guys), we can go on and on and on.
Legal access to hormones is heavily controlled and made difficult through cost and various legal barriers. Think about it like this: if they're trying to chip away at abortion in a state, you can bet your butt that they're probably trying to chip away at access to trans-affirming care, too. This also means that
access to medical support in transition fluctuates. A lot of the "detransitioners" are people who, say, couldn't pay for their T for six months. It is also legal in many places to fire employees for being trans, refuse medical access in general, or just make every interaction possible a hassle.
Your ability to consistently access trans-affirming care is
heavily dependent on your ability to access money which is
heavily dependent on your ability to access trans care which is
The judge has to accept that changing your name will create a positive impact on your life. Trump has assigned many judges this year. Which judge will help you? Which will not?
The VA page says if your name has changed bring proof thereof. I think that since they can't prove that you're trans while applying, and that's not tracked by the state as far as I know, it should just be "my name has changed, no reason needed, here's the doc". Transitioning/transition should have zero bearing on the process of obtaining/using ID in theory.
*sigh*
OK, here's an easy way to think about it. Think about literally any environment in which a cis woman would typically have to navigate the possibility of being hit on (this is "every environment where there is a man, Alex."). Now imagine that each one of those interactions flipped over to the possibility of anti-trans harassment.
Every public bathroom, every restaurant, every street, and, yeah, every DMV, every legal institution, every doctor ...