Isn't the treatment for the distress basically to treat the person of the gender that they say they identify as?
Currently, yes. An interesting observation here is that for all other conditions, the treatment is one undertaken by the patient themselves. For gender dysphoria, the treatment includes everyone who is not the patient also engaging in the treatment.
I'm a lot more willing to provide that support for someone with a diagnosis. I'm a bit less so when the person self-identifies without a diagnosis.
I believe that you identify as a woman and I doubt that you would a) appreciate anyone telling you that they don't agree with you b) reduce that identity to the mere presence of genitalia?
I think this reductionism potentially does women in general a disservice because if we reduce 'women' to biology then we open the door for a lot of the efforts made to help women reduce inequalities to be dismantled unless they have a biological basis. Or worse, the invention of spurious biological justifications for inequalities.
I'm sure we agree the experience of being a women is more than the experience of having female genitals and, if we do, then surely that also allows for an experience of being a woman absent female genitals? It may not be the same lived experience as you but that doesn't mean it's invalid. After all I'm sure there are all sorts of women who have all sorts of different lived experiences from you. All that is being asked is that the range of 'lived experiences of being a woman' includes transwomen.
Female identity doesn't reduce to only biology, but biology is an inherent part of that identity. The experience of being a female in society is the other part of that identity, which includes social norms and expectations of behavior, presentation, and roles. Most of those social norms are
harmful to females in general, but we grow up with them as an unavoidable element of our development.
Yes, females will each have some variance in their experiences, but the general experiences are often very common across thematic concepts and expectations. Just as different females might have different sized feet... but in general female feet are smaller than male feet.
You are asking me to expand my lived experience of being a female to include transwomen. What is their lived experience that should be considered similar to that of females?
What experiences, attributes, and characteristics do ciswomen and transwomen have in common that are not shared by cismen and transmen?