Why should only the girls get to have fun on the weird red spinny cylinder? 😉
Dr. Mason hails from Washington Heights in Chicago. After his father’s death, Mason was raised by his mother and his paternal uncle, Darius. As a young man, Mason was a hardworking student with a strong interest in medicine.
After high school, Mason attended Northwestern University and graduated at the top of his class with a BSc in Molecular Biology. Afterward, he was accepted into the Ph.D. program for pharmacogenomics at the University of Chicago.
While pursuing his doctorate, Mason met a young trans woman named Catherine Vaughn at a science expo. The two became fast friends. After witnessing Catherine’s difficulties in finding the proper dosage and type of hormone replacement therapy (along with her frustrations with her endocrinologist), Mason began to wonder if pharmacogenomics had a place in transgender medicine.
After achieving his doctorate, Mason accepted a teaching position at UChicago and began researching gene-tailored hormone treatments for transgender patients. His research proved fruitful, and he was eventually authorized to conduct a small-scale study with patients. Catherine—along with a dozen other trans women and trans men—volunteered for the trial.
It was a resounding success. Trans patients saw results twice as fast as traditional HRT, and the feminizing/masculinizing effects were far more pronounced. As a show of solidarity, Mason had also secretly tested to procedure on himself, resulting in an impressive gain in muscle mass without any of the side-effects of steroid abuse. Mason was on the threshold of a significant breakthrough.
Soon after publishing the trial results, Mason was approached by a man named Davis. He was told that his research had caught the attention of a group of businessmen who wanted to fund further research in transgender medicine. Davis offered Mason “unlimited cash” as long as he agreed to move to an undisclosed location and sign an ironclad NDA.
Catherine warned Mason against the offer, but he was too excited by the prospect of furthering the field of pharmacogenomics (and, perhaps, earning himself a Nobel Prize) to listen.
Mason was flown by helicopter to an island somewhere off the coast of the Pacific Northwest. Days later, he was given the genetic profile of a patient he was to “treat.” This patient turned out to be Jason, soon to become “Janelle.”
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