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I Have Been Disowned . . .

Started by Gina Taylor, February 04, 2014, 09:11:52 AM

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Gina Taylor

Last night my mom called me and told me that she had heard that I had gotten a job. She then wanted to know if I was going to be working as a man or a woman. I told her as a woman, and she got upset with me; telling me that I had no respect for the family and I was being selfish.
She thinks I'm delusional because I know that I'm passable. In a population of 141,000 people, she tells me that most people that know me from my 'male life' can tell. I told her so what. This is the life I'm living now. I tried to tell her about others, but she is only concerned about me. So we ended it that she'll never accept me as a woman and so I feel that I have been disowned from my immediate family. Even though my psychiatrist has told her that I do suffer from GID and my therapist feels that because of the brain damage and then hormones and puberty between the ages of 10-14 that this may have culminated the effects of GID, she is not willing to accept it.
Gina Marie Taylor  8)
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Jill F

So sorry to hear, sweetie.  It's really ironic that she calls you "selfish".  And to turn it around and make it about her is really pathetic.   

Your life, your rules.   

Maybe some extended alone time is what she needs to make her process this.
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Sheala

I am so sorry to hear that. I pray that things get better for you as time goes on. Maybe she should seek her own counceling. It almost sounds to me that she is taking you GID and transition like a personal attack on her. Best of luck Hun.
---Content is not being happy with what you want, but being happy with what you have.---

---2014, New Year, New Me---

---screw being the black sheep, be the rainbow sheep its more fun---




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Jessica Merriman

 :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_hug: :icon_hug: Here is one for each day of the week sis! So sorry this is happening. :'(
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Kade1985

-hug-

I'm so sorry to hear about this. I know how you must be feeling. I'm terrified that because my mother keeps saying she won't accept my own transition that she will do the same to me. But we all have to do what is right for us, even if it's hard. I am proceeding with my own transition (as soon as my clinic submits my prescription to an out of state pharmacy and it gets delivered here). At least you know who you are and can live the life you deserve.

All my best wishes and hopes for you. Hang in there, you're not alone.

Kade
www.youtube.com/kadeforester <--- my weekly vlog for my transition
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Tristan

I'm sorry that happened. Family can be so cruel. Hopefully yours will change their mind like mine did
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Jerri

Gina,
I feel so sad that your family will not look past themselves to offer you support for your life and needs, maybe with time to adjust and accept you are a successfull woman they will find that value you bring to there lives and be able to look past some of the fears and misconceptions that are driving the beliefs they have today. Stay focused on the positive things as much as you can, control what is your reach and pray for all the rest.
take care sister,
jerri
one day, one step, with grace it will be forward today
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Northern Jane

I feel your pain! The same thing happened to me at 24, 40 years ago, and my (adopted) mom never did accept me. It was painful.

But everyone else did accept me and life was wonderful. She missed out on knowing a really special person.

I hope your mother wont be as foolish and will 'come around'.
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gennee

Gina, I'm sorry that your mom won't accept you as you are. Sometimes you have to move on. You know who you are and have been successful too.

:)
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
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LordKAT

It sounds like moving out and getting a job on your own were really good choices. I hope you don't allow her feelings to bring you down or rethink your plans. FWIW, you have supportive friends right here. We may not be there physically but we are in thoughts.
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calico

Ouch I was almost at that  impass 6 or 7 years with my own family, I'm sorry she is being this way perhaps the closing of communication will at some point in the future bring here back to you.  But remember you have family here who can back you up and share your feelings with. Hang in there girl!!
"To be one's self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity."― Irving Wallace  "Before you can be anything, you have to be yourself. That's the hardest thing to find." -  E.L. Konigsburg
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Rachel

#11
Gina hugs,

I am sorry your Mom does not accept you for the woman you are. I know the rejection hurts and I wish there was a way to make the pain go away.
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ThePhoenix

I am so sorry.  I know that rejection like this hurts a very great deal.  The good news is that we all have the power to at least keep one another from being alone.  So even if you feel disowned, you still won't be alone.
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Chaos

Sadly its very rare for a parent to return after a disownment.it takes real love to accept your child for who they are and a cold heart to throw them away.mind you some do return after guilt kicks in but as I said,its very rare.anyone who can take that step at all,deserves nothing in return.Gina I know how you feel as my family did the same.I was even stupid enough to try and reach back out to them without even a word.as a matter of fact I got blocked and ignored.but we become stronger,more independent and more confident in self.the loss is painful but the gain is worth it in the end.there are many who accept you as family.as a sister,daughter,mother and so much more.blood isn't always thicker but the heart is always larger.
All Thing's Come With A Price...
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TerriT

Geez girl, I'm really sorry. I hope things get better after time.

I'm afraid I'm running into the same situation so thank you for sharing.
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TinaMadisonWhite

Such rejection hurts.  A lot.   I am so sorry for your pain.  Lots of hugs!

But please remember this:  your family's rejection defines them, not you.

Wherever I go, I am the same person.  And yet I find that people respond to the "same" me in many different ways.  That's when I realized that their reactions say everything about them and next to nothing about me.

This realization has turned the tables for me:  I am now so much better at reading people for who they really are.  I now watch people's reactions - not to judge how well I am passing - but to judge what kind of person they are.

Do give your family time.  My therapist says that it takes 3-10 years for family members to adapt.  Even if they say they accept you, they typically don't get the real you for quite a while.   Try not to worry about how they feel right now.  Think long term.

Good luck!
Tina
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maximusloverus

I'm sorry your family has reacted this way. My immediate family on my mom's side is the same way though they don't accept me for other reasons as well. They stopped talking to me after I decided that I'm not going to drop my life to please them or go to college for a degree I don't want so I can work a job I hate to make them look good. What comforted me was when my father's side of the family told me that they're happy as long as I'm happy. Sometimes it takes time for families to adapt and do research to find out the truth of transition. Right now is your time to focus on you and they seem to not care about that. Try reaching out to other family that may have been in the background so to speak. If extended family can accept you then maybe the immediate family will be more inclined to look at you in a positive light. If not you know who will stand by you in hard times and who won't. We will always be here to help. When I was upset with family issues my dad used to tell me "Look at it this way, It's your life, your experiences, when you die you'll be the only one in that grave so why care about how others will see your life because only you will know if your life had been worth living."
Oh how wrong we were to think that immortality meant never dying
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suzifrommd

Oh Gina, I'm so sorry.

I hope I can share with you that I feel far more sorry for your mother than for you. She is missing out on having a wonderful daughter. You, on the other hand are saved the effort of trying to decide whether to keep the door open a crack. From your posts, I think the net impact of your mother in your life has been a major negative.

You deserve much better.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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Gina Taylor

Quote from: Jill F on February 04, 2014, 09:30:39 AM
So sorry to hear, sweetie.  It's really ironic that she calls you "selfish".  And to turn it around and make it about her is really pathetic.   

Your life, your rules.   

Maybe some extended alone time is what she needs to make her process this.

Thanks for your concern Jill, and yeah it is ironic that she calls me 'selfish' because she thinks that I'm only thinking of myself when I took that job, and not my welfare. It's hard to live off of what they give you when you're on disability and food stamps.  But it never surprises me with how she is able to make it out to be about herself in the end. She'll get no pity from me.

But I do agree 100% my life, my rules, and that's the way I've been living since I moved out a month ago. Unfortunately though, I've just lost a friend because of that, but I've also gained new support.
Gina Marie Taylor  8)
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Gina Taylor

Quote from: Sheala on February 04, 2014, 09:54:33 AM
I am so sorry to hear that. I pray that things get better for you as time goes on. Maybe she should seek her own counceling. It almost sounds to me that she is taking you GID and transition like a personal attack on her. Best of luck Hun.

Y'know Sheala that may be a good idea. It's been four weeks since I saw my psychiatrist and it's been three weeks since I've seen my therapist, and she should be digesting what information they told her, instead of trying to find ways of rebelling against me.
Gina Marie Taylor  8)
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