British national Sue Pascoe, 54, can never forget her trip to India in March. It was here, in a small clinic in north Delhi, that she was given the body she always craved — of a woman. Born Graham Pascoe, she had gender identity disorder or gender dysphoria, which made her feel at odds with the gender she was born with and led her to identify instead with the opposite gender. In August 2014 she got an official diagnosis but the earliest she could have undergone sex reassignment surgery (SRS) under UK's perennially overbooked National Health Service was four years later. But after pretending to be someone else for half a century, Pascoe didn't want to waste a single...
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