Quote from: translora on October 08, 2012, 01:41:29 PM
Would anyone else be willing to talk about the types of questions that we should expect from a qualified (versus unqualified) gender therapist? In other words, how can you tell a generalist from a gender identity specialist? I just don't want to get going too deeply with someone and then find out later that I've got the wrong person.
I've been looking for a therapist who specializes in gender issues, and have searched a bunch of online resources in my area. But it looks like a lot of therapists put this on their listing while actually specializing in other things (which you can tell by what they say on their web sites). I really hope to find someone for whom helping gender identity patients is a passion.
My introductory email does ask this question directly, but I'm looking for sort of a double-check. Maybe my question to all here should be: What questions were you asked that really helped you figure things out? And which questions made you realize you had the wrong person?
Thanks!
Lora
http://translora.wordpress.com
Ugh!
My insurance company hooked me up with a therapist who claimed to have had quite a number of Transgender patients, though she wouldn't give me a number. I was suspicious, so I slipped little tests into our first couple of sessions.
"I'm concerned about that word that means being sexually attracted to the idea of yourself as a woman. It's on the tip of my tongue. Can't think of its. Starts with an A. Do you know the word I'm thinking of?"
She wasn't able to come up with the word ->-bleeped-<-.
"I like using the word 'cis'. Are you comfortable with that term?"
She quite clearly didn't know what I was talking about. She asked, "What does that term mean to you?"
The final straw was when she said, "I had a trans client once. He used to go out wearing women's clothes now and then. Would that be enough for you?"
As soon as she used the male pronoun, I knew she wasn't who she said she was.
They say you should trust your therapist, but trust is EARNED. If your therapist claims to be a GT, but whiffs on the basic terminology and can't seem to pronoun accurately, that will raise alarm bells.