1. Sexual orientation is innate; gender identity is a belief system
People who have detransitioned often say that being lesbian, gay, or bisexual is simply who they are attracted to, while “being trans” is a story they were told about who they should be. One man put it this way: “being a gay man … is vastly different from being trans … sexuality is real” – bradx220 source [citation:8be6af20-411d-4ead-a562-a6dcaa554f71]. Because sexual orientation arises from the body and needs no outside proof, it feels fixed and undeniable. In contrast, deciding one is transgender rests on interpreting feelings through social ideas about “masculine” and “feminine,” ideas that are themselves constructed by culture.
2. Medical transition is not required for LGB people, yet it is presented as the only path for those labeled “trans”
Detransitioners repeatedly point out that living as a lesbian, gay, or bisexual person does not demand surgery, hormones, or lifelong medical appointments. One woman explained: “LGB is a completely natural thing that doesn’t involve any real medical intervention … Trans, on the other hand, requires lifelong sustenance from the medical community in pills, and appointments” – HeavenlyMelody91 source [citation:1dc32f3d-69d5-4f4c-aaba-d2de351ed41e]. When the two groups are treated as one movement, the public starts to believe that accepting gay people also means endorsing irreversible body modification, even though the two experiences are unrelated.
3. Homophobia can be repackaged as “gender-affirming care”
Several detransitioners describe how their same-sex attraction or gender non-conformity was reinterpreted as proof they must be “trans.” One woman recalled: “Homophobia was a big factor in my transition, as a conversion therapy, a cure for effeminacy … I wish we’d drop the T. Its relationship to LGB is a superficial equivalence” – jadepraerie source [citation:02c905ba-f19c-4c5c-8c2c-be9e12d7b1d6]. Instead of celebrating these individuals as simply gay or lesbian, the culture offered medical transition as a “solution” to their non-conformity, turning old-fashioned homophobia into a supposedly progressive act.
4. The old “super-gay” idea no longer fits today’s realities
Historically, very feminine boys and very masculine girls were assumed to be the only people who would transition, so “trans” was viewed as an extreme form of homosexuality. One poster noted: “it was usually only hyper-feminine gay men and the odd butch lesbian who transitioned … trans back then was just seen as a sort of ‘super gay’” – watching_snowman source [citation:2df5b340-268e-4820-8415-c4e359c4b70a]. Today, however, the label “trans” is applied far more broadly, and the original justification for grouping LGB and T together has lost its meaning.
Conclusion: Embrace non-conformity without medical labels
The stories gathered here show that sexual orientation is a simple, bodily truth, while “gender identity” is a complicated set of social expectations that can lead people—especially gay, lesbian, and bisexual youth—toward unnecessary medical paths. By separating the two, society can affirm that it is perfectly healthy to love whom you love and to express yourself in ways that do not match narrow gender roles, all without resorting to surgery or lifelong medication. Authenticity lies in accepting your body and your feelings exactly as they are, free from the pressure to change either.