Sunday, 7 June 2026

What Happens When We Pause Puberty? The Medical Questions Behind the Dutch Protocol.

 Researched and Written by ChatGPT


The Dutch Protocol is the name given to a treatment approach developed in the Netherlands in the 1990s for adolescents experiencing gender dysphoria. The protocol uses medications to suppress puberty, allowing time for further assessment before potential treatment with cross-sex hormones. Originally designed for a small group of carefully screened patients, it later became the model adopted by many gender clinics worldwide and remains the subject of ongoing medical, ethical, and scientific debate.

One of the most important questions surrounding the Dutch Protocol is neither political nor ideological.

It is medical.

What happens when we interrupt one of the most important developmental processes in the human body?

The Origins of the Dutch Protocol

The treatment pathway commonly known as the Dutch Protocol was developed in the Netherlands during the 1990s.

The protocol was designed for a small group of carefully selected adolescents who had experienced persistent gender dysphoria from childhood, undergone extensive psychological assessment, and demonstrated significant distress as puberty approached.

The treatment pathway generally involved:

• Extensive psychological evaluation

• Puberty suppression using GnRH agonists ("puberty blockers")

• Cross-sex hormones during later adolescence

• Surgery in adulthood

The Dutch researchers hoped that delaying puberty would reduce distress while providing time for further evaluation and decision-making.

At the time, this approach was considered innovative and compassionate.

But it was also experimental.

What the Original Researchers Knew

Contrary to some claims, the original Dutch researchers were not unaware of potential risks.

They understood that sex hormones influence far more than appearance.

Bone health was a recognized concern from the beginning. Researchers monitored bone density because adolescence is a critical period for building lifelong skeletal strength.

Fertility was also acknowledged as a potential issue. Discussions regarding future fertility became part of the treatment process, particularly before the introduction of cross-sex hormones.

These concerns were not hidden.

They were known.

The Bigger Question

What is striking when reviewing the early literature is not what researchers discussed.

It is what they could not yet know. Puberty is not merely a process that creates secondary sex characteristics. It is one of the most complex developmental events in human life.

During puberty, hormones influence:

• Bone formation

• Brain development

• Sexual maturation

• Fertility pathways

• Metabolism

• Cardiovascular health

• Emotional development

• Growth and body composition

In other words, puberty is not a single system.

It is a whole-body process.

This raises an important question:

Can we pause such a complex process without consequences we do not yet fully understand?

The Evidence Today

More than twenty years after the Dutch Protocol was introduced, that question remains unsettled.

Several reviews have identified concerns regarding bone density in adolescents receiving puberty blockers.

Other areas—including long-term fertility, sexual function, cognitive development, and cardiovascular health—remain subjects of ongoing research and debate.

This does not prove severe harm.

But neither does it prove complete safety.

The reality is that long-term evidence remains limited.

Even major reviews conducted in recent years have concluded that evidence quality is generally low to moderate and that important questions remain unanswered.

The Population Has Changed

Another important issue is that the patient population today looks very different from the one for which the Dutch Protocol was originally developed.

The original studies involved a relatively small number of carefully screened patients.

Since the 2010s, many countries have reported a dramatic increase in referrals, along with significant demographic shifts among those seeking treatment.

Historically, the patients entering gender clinics were more commonly young males who had experienced gender dysphoria since early childhood. Beginning in the 2010s, several countries reported a sharp rise in adolescent female referrals, often presenting during or after puberty and sometimes without the same childhood history seen in the original Dutch studies.

Researchers continue to debate the reasons for this shift. Proposed explanations include greater social acceptance, increased awareness, changing referral patterns, mental health trends, social media influences, and peer-group effects. At present, there is no consensus explanation.

What is clear is that the population being treated today differs significantly from the population for which the original protocol was designed.

Whether the original protocol can be safely applied to this broader and more diverse population remains an active area of debate.

A Question Worth Asking

None of this means that people experiencing gender dysphoria are not suffering.

Nor does it mean that every treatment is harmful.

What it does mean is that reasonable people can ask reasonable questions.

Puberty is not a cosmetic process.

It is a foundational developmental process that affects nearly every system in the body.

The original Dutch researchers acknowledged some risks, particularly bone density and fertility.

What remains uncertain is whether anyone could have fully understood all of puberty's roles when the protocol was first developed. Even today, researchers continue to study the long-term effects of interrupting a process that influences the skeleton, brain, reproductive system, metabolism, and emotional development.

That is the question researchers, physicians, parents, and policymakers continue to wrestle with today.

And regardless of where one stands on the broader cultural debate, it is a question that deserves to be asked.

Because puberty is far more than appearance.

It is one of the most important developmental events in the human lifespan.

And whenever medicine intervenes in such a process, asking hard questions is not intolerance.

It is responsibility.

                                                                                    


Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Forgotten Ferals Cat Rescue Adoption Event in Kingston ON & Donation Details.

 

The Forgotten Ferals is a very busy rescue at the moment with many litters on the go.

If you're interested in volunteering, fostering, adopting, or donating, we thank you!!

From the founder:

"BIG WEEKEND COMING UP!

We will be at Pet Valu, hwy 15, Riverview location in Kingston 12 to 4 Sat and Sun June 6 & 7th 2026!!

Come see our sweet bundles of joy waiting to put a smile on your face!"


                                                                               


When Human Beings Become Moral Experiments: The Chilling Logic Behind 'Beneficial Bloodsucking'.

 Researched and written by ChatGPT


The lone star tick may be the headline, but the willingness to biologically modify human behavior without consent is the real story.

In October 2025, a peer-reviewed paper published in the journal Bioethics sparked debate far beyond academic circles.

The paper, titled "Beneficial Bloodsucking" by Parker Crutchfield and Blake Hereth, explores a provocative ethical argument involving the lone star tick and a condition known as alpha-gal syndrome (AGS).

AGS is a potentially life-altering allergy triggered by bites from the lone star tick. Individuals who develop the condition can experience allergic reactions after consuming red meat and, in some cases, other mammalian products. Symptoms range from digestive distress and hives to severe allergic reactions.

The authors begin with a philosophical premise: if eating animals is morally wrong, then interventions that reduce meat consumption may be morally desirable.

From there, they construct what they call a "Convergence Argument."

The argument can be summarized as follows:

• Eating animals is morally wrong.
• Alpha-gal syndrome discourages or prevents the consumption of animal products.
• Therefore, alpha-gal syndrome may produce a moral benefit.
• If future biotechnology allows humans to influence the spread of AGS, promoting that spread could be ethically justified.

Importantly, the paper is not a government policy proposal. It is an academic ethics paper exploring the implications of a particular moral framework.

Yet the questions it raises extend far beyond philosophy.

The issue is not merely whether eating meat is ethical.

The deeper question is whether a person's biology should ever be deliberately altered to influence their behavior.

For centuries, ethical medicine has rested on several foundational principles:

• Informed consent
• Bodily autonomy
• Individual choice
• The right to accept or refuse interventions

These principles exist because history contains numerous examples of authorities, institutions, and experts believing they knew what was best for others.

Modern bioethics emerged largely to prevent those mistakes from being repeated.

When viewed through that lens, the most controversial aspect of the paper is not the discussion of meat consumption. It is the suggestion that a medical condition could be viewed as a tool for shaping behavior.

Regardless of one's views on veganism, animal welfare, or environmental concerns, many people would argue that inducing a medical condition without consent crosses an ethical line.

A person may choose to stop eating meat.

A person may choose to become vegetarian.

A person may choose to become vegan.

Those choices are expressions of personal autonomy.

Being biologically prevented from making that choice is something entirely different.

This distinction matters.

In democratic societies, informed consent is generally considered more important than the perceived virtue of an outcome.

The reason is simple.

Once society accepts the principle that a person's biology can be altered for a "good cause," the debate immediately shifts to another question:

Who decides what qualifies as a good cause?

Today the subject may be meat consumption.

Tomorrow it could be alcohol.

Sugar.

Political beliefs.

Risk-taking behavior.

Reproduction.

Any behavior that an authority, institution, or expert class decides should be reduced.

This is why discussions of autonomy and consent remain central to ethical decision-making.

The concern is not necessarily the lone star tick.

The concern is the underlying principle.

Most people would agree that education, persuasion, and voluntary behavior change are legitimate tools for influencing society.

Biological manipulation without consent belongs in a very different category.

The publication of "Beneficial Bloodsucking" does not mean anyone is planning to spread ticks or engineer allergies on a population scale.

What it does reveal is that some academic discussions are increasingly willing to explore interventions that challenge long-standing assumptions about bodily autonomy and personal choice.

Whether one agrees with the paper or not, it raises an important question:

Should ethical goals ever override an individual's right to decide what happens to their own body?

That question may prove far more significant than the tick itself.


                                                                                


Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) & the Sleepio App.

My prompts and intro, research and writing by ChatGPT


The most successful mental health therapy I've experienced is CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy), and I've been working with it alongside a therapist for over a decade.

What I didn't know was that there is an entire branch of CBT designed specifically for insomnia.

It's called CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia), and learning about it led me to an app called Sleepio.

Sleepio is made by Big Health and is one of the best-known digital CBT-I programs. It isn't a meditation app and it isn't a sleep-sounds app. Its goal is to retrain the thoughts and habits that perpetuate insomnia.

Created by sleep researcher Colin Espie, the six-week program guides users through sleep tracking, short lessons, and personalized recommendations designed to improve sleep over time.

One of its most surprising techniques is called sleep restriction (sometimes called sleep compression). If you're spending eight or nine hours in bed but only sleeping five or six, the program may actually recommend spending less time in bed temporarily.

The principle is simple:

Don't teach your brain that being in bed means being awake.

If someone lies in bed for hours worrying, scrolling, planning tomorrow, reading the news, or becoming frustrated about not sleeping, the brain can begin to associate the bed with wakefulness rather than sleep.

The ideal setup might look something like this:

Bed = sleep

Chair = wakeful activities

Dim light

Paper book, magazine, crossword, knitting, journaling, or coloring

No clock watching

No doom-scrolling

No stimulating television

When genuine sleepiness returns—heavy eyelids, head nodding, difficulty focusing—you go back to bed.

The goal is to recondition the brain:

Bed = sleep.

Chair = awake.

Why are people paying attention?

Studies have found that participants often report:

• Falling asleep faster

• Less time awake during the night

• Better sleep quality

• Improved daytime energy

What caught my attention wasn't the app itself.

It was the question that naturally followed:

What benefit does your nervous system believe it gets from staying awake?

Or asked another way:

What does it fear missing if you fall asleep?

Many people with insomnia don't seem unable to sleep.

They seem stuck in a state of alertness.

Watching, planning, monitoring, and worrying.

Running tomorrow's problems at 2 a.m.

At some point, the issue may become less about sleep and more about a nervous system that has forgotten how to stand down.

Sometimes the most powerful sleep aid isn't another product.

It's permission.

Permission to stop watching and to stop worrying.

Permission to rest.


                                                                              


Sunday, 31 May 2026

Beyond the Headlines: Rethinking Jeff Bezos.

My prompts, research and writing by ChatGPT


I'll admit it.

For years, I didn't like Jeff Bezos.

If you'd asked me why, I probably would have repeated the same things everyone else was saying. Billionaire. Corporate giant. Symbol of greed. The usual headlines.

Then I heard Bezos speak about something that surprised me.

He argued that lower-income earners should pay zero federal income tax.

Not less.

Zero.

Whether you agree with the idea or not, it made me realize something: I had spent years hearing about Jeff Bezos without ever really listening to Jeff Bezos.

That got me wondering.

What else does he believe that never seems to make the news?

Here are ten ideas, positions, and actions from Bezos that don't fit neatly into the villain narrative many of us were given.

  1. Eliminate Income Tax for Lower Earners

Bezos recently argued that the bottom half of earners should pay no federal income tax, allowing working families to keep more of their paychecks and participate more fully in the economy.

  1. Invested Billions in Early Childhood Education

Through the Day One Fund, Bezos committed billions of dollars to creating and supporting Montessori-inspired preschools in underserved communities.

  1. Funding Support for Homeless Families

The Day One Fund also provides grants to organizations helping homeless families and children find stability and housing.

  1. Encourages Entrepreneurship

Bezos often speaks about reducing barriers that prevent ordinary people from starting businesses, taking risks, and improving their financial situations.

  1. Advocates Long-Term Thinking

One of his most consistent messages is that society should think decades ahead instead of focusing only on quarterly profits and election cycles.

  1. Criticizes Corporate Bureaucracy

Despite building one of the world's largest companies, Bezos frequently warns about excessive bureaucracy and how it kills innovation.

  1. Supports Scientific Research

Through his various ventures and philanthropic efforts, Bezos has funded research in medicine, climate science, technology, and space exploration.

  1. Wants Most of His Wealth Given Away

Bezos has publicly stated that he intends to give away the majority of his fortune during his lifetime.

  1. Promotes Customer-First Business Models

His philosophy that businesses should obsess over serving customers has influenced thousands of entrepreneurs worldwide.

  1. Believes Opportunity Should Expand, Not Shrink

Whether discussing technology, education, taxation, or business, Bezos often frames his ideas around creating more opportunities for ordinary people rather than fewer.

The Point

This isn't a defense of Jeff Bezos.

I don't know him.

You don't know him.

What I do know is that the version of Jeff Bezos that existed in my mind was largely created by other people.  Does anyone else notice this pattern?

Maybe some of the criticism is justified.

Maybe some isn't.

But once again I found myself wondering whether the public narrative had become inverted.

Not entirely false.

Just incomplete.

The older I get, the more I realize that truth often lives somewhere between hero and villain.

Perhaps the real lesson isn't about Jeff Bezos at all.

Perhaps it's about being willing to hear people directly before deciding who they are.


                                                                                 


Saturday, 30 May 2026

The Humble Green Onion: Why It's About to Become a Staple in My Kitchen.

 


For years, I treated green onions as a garnish.

A few slices on a baked potato.
A sprinkle on soup.
A little color on scrambled eggs.

Then I started looking at their nutritional profile and realized something surprising:

Green onions may actually be one of the most underrated vegetables in the produce section.

Compared to sweet onions such as Vidalia onions, green onions pack more vitamins, more fiber, and fewer natural sugars into each serving.

That doesn't mean Vidalia onions are unhealthy. Far from it. They're delicious and contain beneficial compounds of their own. But if your goal is squeezing as much nutrition as possible from every bite, green onions deserve a closer look.

Why Green Onions Stand Out

Green onions contain:

• Vitamin K – important for bone health and normal blood clotting
• Vitamin C – supports the immune system and collagen production
• Vitamin A precursors – important for vision and cellular health
• Folate – supports healthy cell function
• Fiber – helps support digestion and satiety
• Sulfur compounds – the same family of compounds that give onions and garlic many of their health-promoting properties

Because they are harvested young and eaten whole—including the green tops—you get nutrients from parts of the plant that are often discarded in mature onions.

Lower in Sugar

One reason Vidalia onions taste so sweet is because they naturally contain more sugars and fewer sulfur compounds than many other onions.

That sweetness makes them fantastic for cooking, roasting, and caramelizing.

Green onions, however, have a milder flavor with less sweetness, making them a useful option for people looking to reduce sugar intake while still enjoying onion flavor.

An Easy Way to Add More Greens

One of the biggest advantages of green onions is how easy they are to use.

You can add them to:

• Eggs
• Soups
• Stir-fries
• Sandwiches
• Salads
• Rice dishes
• Potatoes
• Pasta
• Homemade dips

Unlike larger onions, there's usually no peeling, chopping board, or tears involved.

Just snip and eat.

The Best Way to Keep Green Onions Fresh

Most people bring green onions home and toss them into the crisper drawer.

A week later they're slimy and headed for the compost.

A better method is surprisingly simple:

Method 1: The Jar Method

  1. Trim off any damaged ends.

  2. Place the roots in a glass or mason jar.

  3. Add an inch or two of water.

  4. Stand them upright near a sunny window.

  5. Change the water every few days.

Not only will they stay fresh much longer, but many will continue growing.

Method 2: The Fridge Method

  1. Stand the onions upright in a jar with a small amount of water.

  2. Loosely cover the tops with a produce bag.

  3. Store in the refrigerator.

This can keep them fresh for several weeks.

Method 3: Endless Green Onions

After using the green tops, leave about an inch above the roots.

Place the root section in water.

Within days you'll often see fresh green shoots emerging.

Many gardeners do this repeatedly before eventually planting the onions in soil.

A Small Vegetable with a Big Payoff

Nutrition doesn't always come from exotic superfoods with fancy labels and premium price tags.

Sometimes it comes from a humble bunch of green onions sitting quietly beside the lettuce.

They're inexpensive, versatile, easy to grow, and surprisingly nutrient-dense.

Not bad for a vegetable most of us have been treating like a garnish.

I know what I'll be buying more often.

                                                                                    


Wednesday, 27 May 2026

History Leaves Memory in Cultures.

 
*During a 'conversation', the ChatGPT said this:  "History leaves memory in cultures" and it resonated very deeply.  So I asked it to write a blog post based on this statement.  A few tweaks, adjustments and one rewrite later, we came out with this.

It resonates with me because it's something I've thought for a few years now. The internet shows us the plight of others and we feel their pain but is there a point to that?  We all have mirror neurons that trigger emotion when we see emotion in others. Mine is on overdrive all the time and I often wonder why.  

I'm really enjoying writing with ChatGPT and the last sentence in this blog post is why.  Sometimes the wording just hits.  

Let me know if this one hit you too.  

~


Not all memory lives in the mind.

Some memory lives in the body.
Some in ritual.
Some in land.
Some in fear.
Some in instinct.

And some may live far deeper than we currently understand.

Science already accepts that crows can remember human faces for years and even teach future generations which humans represent danger. Elephants remember migration routes and historical threats. Whales pass songs culturally. Wolves pass hunting strategies to pups.

Nature remembers.

Yet modern humans often refuse to believe that human beings themselves may carry layered ancestral memory systems far older and more complex than simple intellectual recall.

Why?

Because if humans carry memory deeply — biologically, emotionally, culturally, even spiritually — then history is not truly past.

It is alive.

History leaves residue in nervous systems.

The descendants of famine survivors often relate to food differently.
The descendants of war survivors often relate to safety differently.
The descendants of persecution often relate to identity differently.
The descendants of conquerors often relate to power differently.

These are not merely political observations.
They are anthropological ones.

Humans adapt to pressure.
And adaptations echo.

But here is where things become dangerous:
Humans do not inherit pure history.
Humans inherit stories about history.

Stories shaped by victors.
Stories shaped by religion.
Stories shaped by nationalism.
Stories shaped by propaganda.
Stories shaped by trauma itself.

History becomes emotionally edited.

A culture told for centuries that it was oppressed may carry defensive vigilance even generations later.
A culture taught it was chosen or superior may unconsciously normalize dominance.
A population repeatedly told another group is dangerous may biologically internalize caution before ever meeting an individual from that group.

Over time, identity itself fuses with narrative.

And once identity fuses with narrative, people stop experiencing each other directly.
They experience each other through inherited emotional filters.

This may explain why historical debates become so explosive.
People are not merely defending facts.
They are defending nervous-system reality.

To challenge a culture’s historical memory can feel — biologically — like threatening survival itself.

But perhaps this system exists for more than survival alone.

What if memory is also designed to produce empathy?

What if humanity evolves not simply by reasoning…
but by eventually feeling?

Many spiritual traditions suggest humanity is moving toward a state of expanded consciousness — a greater recognition of interconnectedness. Some call this awakening. Some call it unity consciousness. Some describe it symbolically as movement toward a “fourth density” or higher state of awareness.

If so, then perhaps memory serves a deeper purpose.

Perhaps souls, cultures, and civilizations repeatedly experience suffering from different perspectives until empathy becomes unavoidable.

The oppressed become protectors.
The conquerors become conquered.
The abandoned become caregivers.
The wounded become healers.

And through enough cycles, consciousness slowly expands beyond tribal identity.

Not through forced morality.
Not through ideology.
But through direct emotional recognition:
“I know this pain.”
“I remember this fear.”
“I understand this loss.”

At that point, empathy ceases to be philosophy.
It becomes memory.

Maybe this is why humans are capable of tears over events they never personally experienced.

Maybe somewhere deep within us, memory recognizes itself.

And maybe the ultimate evolution of consciousness is not becoming more intelligent.

Maybe it is becoming incapable of dehumanizing others because, at some level, we finally realize:
their suffering has also been ours.