Storytelling: Inside out: Transgender stories: OHSU's transgender health program

Grey Osten, 30, software engineer, Portland. {quote}Once I figured out that trans people existed and that was a thing that I could do, I still had a lot of trouble accepting how I wanted to go about transitioning, because I felt like there was only one right way to do that--you have to do things in this order and you have to have these surgeries and have to take these hormones and have to do all this stuff. In reality, it’s a continuum. You can pick and choose what pieces are important to you. This is a choose your own adventure game.{quote}Kristyna Wentz-Graff/Staff
OHSU's transgender health program

Grey Osten, 30, software engineer, Portland. "Once I figured out that trans people existed and that was a thing that I could do, I still had a lot of trouble accepting how I wanted to go about transitioning, because I felt like there was only one right way to do that--you have to do things in this order and you have to have these surgeries and have to take these hormones and have to do all this stuff. In reality, it’s a continuum. You can pick and choose what pieces are important to you. This is a choose your own adventure game."

Kristyna Wentz-Graff/Staff