Quote from: redhot1 on March 08, 2016, 09:23:56 AM
But what if they aren't supportive? I'm not sure yet if I even want to transition and when. I know my parents, at least my mom would say that they will never disown me for my gender or sexuality. Should I still trust them? And how does it all play out before therapy but not after? I always thought the point of therapy was to discover these feelings in the first place.
I wouldn't bring up transition or trans issues with your parents yet. Based on what you've written, it's
way too early to talk about transition, except maybe to
mention it to your therapist.
Your initial post talks about a
lot of things that would concern any parent, and none of them are obviously gender related. Most of them are probably pretty obvious to them, at least if they're looking. If you need to talk to them about why you need therapy, talk about how your life is being affected by those issues, like by depression, social anxiety, unrealistic expectations, etc.
What you need support for is going to a therapist
for those issues and, if the one you're seeing now isn't helping, finding another one who is better. "Support" meaning paying for the therapist (if necessary, I don't know what country you live in), helping you get to appointments, etc.
Once you start seeing a good therapist regularly, you can bring up your thoughts about transition (in therapy, not with your parents), if you like, but you should also talk about the other things. You should also be prepared to have some of those issues checked out by a medical doctor -- you mention motor skill and balance issues and coordination.
It may be that, after you and your therapist figure out what is going on with you, you all decide transition would help. Or you might decide that you need to deal with other stuff first. Or that transition wouldn't help. At this point, I don't think anyone can say.
Disclaimer: this is all based only on what you've said in this thread.