In response to the OP's question:
There are many reasons that people do not come back. There are approximately 9 (?) or so trans* groups of various types in and near D.C. I have had a hand, large or small, in helping to start four of them. I have attended all of them. So here are some things I see:
In all but two of the groups, MtF persons dominate. One of the two that is not mtf dominated is an FtM specific one. If an FtM person comes into a group and does not see another FtM person, then they do not return. I have had some of them tell me how they won't return because there are no trans* guys the one time they visited.
It is also true that both FtM persons and non-binary persons have found themselves excluded. In the case of FtM people, there is usually a benign neglect. MtF persons in the groups tend to put on programs to meet their interests (make up, jewelry, etc) but have never, in the years I've been doing this work, had a single topic directed toward FtM persons. That neglect, plus a seeming inability to open the floor to FtM persons to discuss their issues, leads to there being no reason for them to attend. Non-binary persons are greeted in most groups with intrusive questioning, demands for explanations, and outright hostility. You know, the things that happen to trans* people so often. So they also do not return.
Then there are people who need support who come to a support group and find none. Their needs are not met, so they don't return. And there are people who just want a social experience and find a more intense environment. Their needs are also not met, so they too do not return.
There has been a bit of tension in some of the other comments, but it seems to actually be a fairly useful tension because it also illustrates some things. To wit:
Quote from: Hikari on February 25, 2015, 02:08:13 PM
Also if people really don't pass sonetimea it makes me uncomfortable.
When I attended my first trans* support group, I had a reaction kind of like this. I spent so much time convincing myself that being trans* meant more than just being a man in a dress. And I showed up at my first trans* group. Every single trans* person there was easily, immediately clockable, even to me as a person meeting my first trans* people. And it was because they seemed to my eyes at the time like . . . men in dresses. It scared the daylight savings out of me because I thought that might be what awaited me. I can't imagine that I am the only person ever to have that feeling. And I can readily imagine that it might scare a lot of people away.
Quote from: Devlyn Marie on February 25, 2015, 02:31:58 PM
I'm not impressed with that. I recently pulled away from the support community because someone told me crossdressers triggered them. As we always say if a person has a problem with someone, it's their problem.
I am not particularly proud of my reaction. But it was real and I am being honest in describing it. I think that one of the useful things about having support groups is that they allow a person a space to work on those issues like their reactions to other trans* people. It seems to me like an important function.
Quote from: Jayne on February 25, 2015, 05:44:47 PM
I'm a jeans and t shirt gal most of the time but due to running a support group I often have to clean up the mess these kind of comments can cause
The unfortunate thing about doing support is that it requires safety. The purpose of safety is, in my opinion, to make it safe for people to be honest. But honesty I sn't always pretty.
Part of my task as a leader is to spend time instilling an ethos that makes it safe to talk openly about the stuff that isn't pretty or popular or even especially nice. That's the purpose of the Trans*Unity principles that I am always talking about. And it is further reinforced by our meeting guidelines. And we try to reinforce it by what we do in meetings.
It works pretty well. People talk about things they don't talk about anywhere else and yet I virtually never have to clean up a mess caused by someone else's insensitive comments.
The alternative, of course, is to say that certain things are just off limits and cannot be said. That may keep certain things from being said, but it also quashes honesty.
Sometimes people need to be really honest and not worry about if the things they say are in compliance with someone else's views. If they don't find that, then that's yet another reason to not return.