Edit: I deleted my previous comment as being extraneous and too off topic.
Still off topic.
Nezchan, I'm curious. Did the Canadian healthcare system pay for any part of your transition? In the USA there are basically no insurance companies that will pay for anything connected with the transition, since it's a "voluntary" (yeah right) procedure.
I'd actually rather not get into that for reasons. Sorry.
But in general, healthcare does pay for doctors and specialists like endocrinologists, and in some provinces at least it pays for surgery. That part varies since healthcare is administered on a provincial level so it's not quite the same across the board. Generally though, they don't cover drugs so hormones tend to be either out of pocket or covered under private plans.
Eh? I didn't know you were trans*, Nez. Nor did I know you lived in Canada. Where do you live? I live in Ontario. There's hardly any gay, bi, or pan women where I live. It's disgusting how transphobic everyone is, even in a progressive country like Canada. I keep having to tell Mom to refer to Caitlyn Jenner by the correct pronoun. You should've seen my mom when I tried to explain to her how there's over ten different genders out there :P.
Sorry for getting off topic >_<. Anyways, I don't think first cousins or aunts and nieces can get married here. Then again, my great grandmother and great grandfather were supposedly first cousins. Eww. Don't tell me inbreeding doesn't cause problems, cause their children all suffer from anxiety disorders and other issues. I mean, my grandma didn't tell my dad what his real name was until he was in his thirties! Turned out that his first name was really his middle name, and his middle name was really his first name! And don't forget about how my great aunt told my cousin the wrong middle name. How do you even forget your kids' names!?