I would agree with Brielle. It shouldn't matter as long as there isn't an ulterior motive behind your transitioning or de-transitioning.
It may be helpful, for anyone in their journey to transition, to make the best informed decisions for their self by understanding why someone would de-transition. Knowledge is king so the more we learn the better off we'll be.
I believe that anyone who is transgender is more open minded and more accepting of others than 99% of the population.
Just Saying, Kelly
In my particular case, I have transitioned and have been living as a woman for almost two years. I was recently diagnosed as being intersex, my hormone levels are high in estrogen and my chromosomes are XXY, I also have many female physical traits.
I was told that I actually am an intersex female, a woman. How would you even be able to detransition??
Not going to place my vote , but I de-transition for 13 years and form chatting with other members here I'm not a long in doing that .......
Alexis
I should have explained further. The point is how the information is distorted and used. We are led to believe that detransitioning is a significant number, but this is spread for political reasons. However, the truth is that the rate is way down in the single digits. As I remember, studies that I have seen are mostly in the 1% to 2% range for people who detransitioned because it wasn’t helping them psychologically. If a person detransitions due to medical, financial, family, peer pressure or employment reasons, that is different and does NOT mean that the initial decision to transition was wrong. All these are external factors. The thing is, when we see data, pay attention to the source. That says a lot about its validity.