Susan's Place Logo

News:

Please be sure to review The Site terms of service, and rules to live by

Main Menu

Telling teenage kids - how did it go?

Started by E-Brennan, June 17, 2014, 07:57:10 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

TaoRaven

Total surprise. But I am glad that he feels comfortable enough to share that with me :-)
  •  

Jessica Merriman

Quote from: TaoRaven on June 26, 2014, 11:53:36 PM
Total surprise. But I am glad that he feels comfortable enough to share that with me :-)
Sounds like you have a good relationship with him.  :)
  •  

kira21 ♡♡♡

You can say it's not right to do that to a 15 year old.

1. It's there.  You need to deal with it.  You can't pretend anything that some people don't like doesn't exist.  Shall we pretend that there are no gays too? How about not people of different races?

2. It stigmatises us.  I know there is something to deal with there, but by saying pish it back in the can, you are giving the message that trans people are something to be ashamed of and should be hidden.  I would want my children to be brought up with good values. Even if they are not popular values.

suzifrommd

Quote from: Gina Taylor on June 26, 2014, 11:11:21 AM
I'm kind of glad that someone started this thread, because I've been perplexed with this situation for a while. I have a nine year old niece that kind of knows what's going on in my life. I've been dropping little hints at her from time to time,  but because my sister's divorced and has had some problems my parents tell me that if child law finds out that my niece is living in an environment that they don't feel is good for her they could take custody of her. Should I wait till she's older before I tell her or should I risk it?

In this situation, here's what I would do:

1. Honestly and straight forwardly answer any questions your niece asks. It's not fair to you or your relationship with your niece to ask you not to give simple facts about yourself when she's curious.

2. However, for all other communication, run it by her mom (your sister).

I wish I felt as certain about CPS not caring about a transperson in your niece's family, but with some of the wacky stories I've heard lately...
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
  •  

Rachel

My wife and daughter seam to be adjusting well and there has not been any hostility or nasty comments for a week. So, I am guessing the shock of the news to my daughter has worn off and my wife no longer has  to worry about how she will take it. I wish I could have presented the message but that is water under the bridge.


Gina, I would discuss what you wanted to say to your niece with your sister. Also, I would abide with her wishes.
HRT  5-28-2013
FT   11-13-2015
FFS   9-16-2016 -Spiegel
GCS 11-15-2016 - McGinn
Hair Grafts 3-20-2017 - Cooley
Voice therapy start 3-2017 - Reene Blaker
Labiaplasty 5-15-2017 - McGinn
BA 7-12-2017 - McGinn
Hair grafts 9-25-2017 Dr.Cooley
Sataloff Cricothyroid subluxation and trachea shave12-11-2017
Dr. McGinn labiaplasty, hood repair, scar removal, graph repair and bottom of  vagina finished. urethra repositioned. 4-4-2018
Dr. Sataloff Glottoplasty 5-14-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal in office procedure 10-22-2018
Dr. McGinn vaginal revision 2 4-3-2019 Bottom of vagina closed off, fat injected into the labia and urethra repositioned.
Dr. Thomas in 2020 FEMLAR
  • skype:Rachel?call
  •  

Eva Marie

My kids just graduated out of their teenage years so I am hesitant to reply, but maybe someone can get something out of this. I have two daughters aged 20 & 21. Both are away at college now. I recently came out to both of them.

The older one was like "that's cool" when I told her. She has some very good gay friends and she surprised me with some rather strong feelings that she expressed about equality; I never had a clue that she felt that way. She has not seen me in person in female mode but she has seen pictures.

The younger one is more of a "deep" person and she had to think it over for a little while but she eventually reached the "that's cool" attitude too. She's seen me in female mode and we've been shopping together as females. For father's day she sent me some jewelry. She recently went to the pride march in the town where her college is and apparently had a good time. She has expressed to me the same strong feelings about equality that my oldest daughter did.

Who knew that they were so cool? I have found that kids in general are generally more accepting than older generations because to most of them it's no big deal - they grew up with it (except for the overly sheltered kids).

Speaking of sheltering kids - we did not shelter them from the world (but we did shelter them from danger of course). We talked about various things that happened in their lives and in the news and we discussed why people are like they are.  I encouraged them to be who they are and to accept people as they are. Now they are doing the same with me.

Me coming out as trans has actually brought me closer to the youngest one. There was miles of separation between us when I was pretending to be a man because I was angry and drunk all of the time. As Jill said - better a happy trans parent then a miserable one pretending to be someone else.

  •  

Gina Taylor

Quote from: suzifrommd on June 27, 2014, 06:30:06 AM
In this situation, here's what I would do:

1. Honestly and straight forwardly answer any questions your niece asks. It's not fair to you or your relationship with your niece to ask you not to give simple facts about yourself when she's curious.

2. However, for all other communication, run it by her mom (your sister).

I wish I felt as certain about CPS not caring about a transperson in your niece's family, but with some of the wacky stories I've heard lately...

Thanks Suzi for your excellent suggestions. I will talk to my sister and my niece, because my life is just as important to me as she is to me, and losing her will never be a part of the equation.

Quote from: Cynthia Michelle on June 27, 2014, 07:10:57 AM
Gina, I would discuss what you wanted to say to your niece with your sister. Also, I would abide with her wishes.

Thanks as always for your kind and sweet word Cynthia. I plan to be discussing these things with my sister and my niece.  :) And hopefully it should come out good  :)

Quote from: Amy The Bookworm on June 26, 2014, 09:38:22 PM
I'm pretty sure that child protection services can't remove children from the home because someone is transgender. So, you could try discussing it with your sister.

Thanks for your excellent input Amy. I do plan on talking with child protection services and finding out for myself where I stand, so I at least have something to fall back on  if my sister has a rebuttal.  ;D
Gina Marie Taylor  8)
  •  

Samantha Rogers

This is interesting to me since I have not yet crossed this bridge but know I must soon. My kids are son 22 and daughter 18. I expect my daughter to be easier than my son, but who knows.
Not looking forward to it but I know its overdue. Sigh....

Amy The Bookworm

Quote from: Samantha Rogers on June 28, 2014, 12:51:13 PM
This is interesting to me since I have not yet crossed this bridge but know I must soon. My kids are son 22 and daughter 18. I expect my daughter to be easier than my son, but who knows.
Not looking forward to it but I know its overdue. Sigh....

If that picture is you, you should show them that. You look very happy in it (and cute too!). I think that's something that people need to see from us sometimes. They don't realize how down right happy we are being ourselves. I went to visit my mom recently, and she walked me through putting on makeup. The pictures she took of me are probably the happiest I have ever looked in my entire life.
  •  

Samantha Rogers

Yes thats me, Amy (thanks)
I know the conversation is coming and I am pretty sure my daughter knows something is up. I had already raised suspicions by gradully adding skinny jeans, longer hair, and jewelry such as bracelets and a neck chain or two  to my drab attire over the last year, blending the lines quite a bit. But it really raised her eyebrows when I had my ears pierced not too long ago. Lol
Sigh...can't put this off much longer, I am afraid.
Of course, between his video games and controlled substance appetite my son would probably not notice if I was wearing a LBD. :D

Felix

My kid is atypical. A little bit intellectually disabled, a little bit schizoid, very ticcy, and entirely dependent on me. But here's how it was for us - I told her when she was 11, accidentally blurting it out in frustration after she cracked up laughing when I suggested I might try on her nail polish. I should have told her years before that, but I thought she knew. My outward transition by then was happening gradually but was very obvious.

Her initial reaction was sobbing. She had thought I was a gay woman (we had been involved in lgbt and civil rights stuff all her life) and she had her heart set on my marrying another woman so she could get a mom who wore dresses and makeup. I never knew before that she thought that, or wanted that, and so my years of trying to be reasonable and acceptable only set her up to be confused and disappointed. I regret waiting so long.

I tried to comfort her at the time, but all I could give was hugs and reassurances I wasn't going anywhere. Her tears subsided almost instantly when she realized that she could have a DAD, omg a dad. She thought I would instantly become a hulking manly man and all danger would be null and void. She rambled half that night about how powerful I was and what problems I could solve. I thought I had raised her to be less rigid in her gender definitions, but I can't control society. We had only recently left alabama.

I told her she could call me mom as long as she needed to, but she quickly switched to 'dad' of her own volition. She would use mom occasionally, and the only pattern I could see was it seemed if someone knew I was trans she would use mom and if nobody knew she would call me dad. When we were alone it was dad all the way.

She was sometimes embarrassed of me, but that depended on who was around. We have since stopped hanging out in places where gender or sexuality is overpoliced. Transpeople on the radio these last few years seem to have helped her see my "problem" with gender as a real and global phenomenon. She is much more accepting and willing to treat my being trans as more than a weird secret when other people have the same problem, and the problem is framed as normal people facing barriers to being themselves.

-

All that is a whole lot of words about my own child (who is different), when what I mean is your kid will accept and respect you if nobody important to your kid doesn't. Your children will follow the lead of the coolest kids in their classes and the most-liked family they know. I do agree with what's been said about kids these days being more aware of the variety of human experience than most of us were growing up, and that it's not fair (to other transpeople's existence or to cispeoples' intelligence) to treat gender identity as shameful or unimportant.
everybody's house is haunted
  •  

Silver Centurion

As a few others have mentioned it's good to tell the kids rather than to hide it/avoid it because it just doesn't work well. It's not so much about how they find out or when as to what life is like if the parent can't be open with how they feel. My son had very little of a relationship with his father and part of that was because his dad was struggling with being transgender and none of us knew this. We only saw how depressed, angry and closed off he was and it was getting worse over time. Coming out to both me and our son has done wonders for their relationship as they have started to communicate with one another and do things and it's awesome! I'd hate to think of what could have happened to both of them if my husband hadn't come out. The risk is well worth taking so that both the parent and the child can have a chance at being happy and having a better relationship :)
  •  

Gina Taylor

I've done some research in the past week, and I've found that by me being around my niece as a woman is not going to change her because she is who she is and I know how much she loves me as a person and my influence on her will only be as a person and won't be reflected because of my chosen gender.  :)
Gina Marie Taylor  8)
  •