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He/She and/or Daddy/Mommy

Started by Venus, April 22, 2009, 03:10:38 PM

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Venus

I would not mind some information or opinions on what you and/or your loved ones like to be called and/or call you.

I am a woman who has a female partner (who is MTF).
A few months ago I got stressed out and told my partner I was no longer going to call her "Mommy" or "Daddy" but just "parent" because I was getting panic attacks.  If I tell the children to call her "Daddy" then I feel like I am lying and being disrespectful.  If I tell the children to call her "Mommy" then I feel like I am lying and being disrespectful.  I can not win either way.

I know that some children have a very hard time calling their Uncle, Aunt, now that she has switched or a parent calling their daughter, son, now that he has switched.  However the thing that I find the MOST confusing is sentences like "My DAD left HER purse in HER car because SHE was in a rush."  Or "My MOM left HIS cigarettes at HER friends house last night because HE was too tired."  I thought that maybe I was not being sensitive to trans issues and then it dawned on me that the reason I have such a big problem with this is because I am a writer!  I have never read a published book with sentences like this because a sentence like that would never get past the editor.  For the past year I have been taking courses on writing to become an editor and I find myself teaching proper English to the children.

Never in my life have I ever felt GUILTY before for teaching the children proper English!

If other words existed then I would use them for example:
She liked her new car.  He liked his new car.  Quee liked quis new car.

To make matters worse I THOUGHT I was being really helpful and supportive by helping my step-daughter remember to call her biological father -MOMMY until I found out that her biological mother actually punishes her if she does so!!!! 

On another note my oldest daughter has called my partner her step-mom several times out in public.
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Ms Jessica

Oh, wtf, I'll throw in for this one. 
First off, everyone is different.  Everyone has a different expectation of what to be called, and I'm sure your partner has different ideas and expectations than me, or anyone else here.  In general, go by that person's preference.  If your partner wants to be called she and Mommy and her then call her that. 

For the kids:
IMO, 'Parent' sounds too impersonal, and is too similar to the pejorative 'it' that gets used wrt many trans people.  If you're not okay with Mom or Dad, then pick a nickname.  There are other things to call people than just Mom or Dad.

In cases of dealing with children where custody is shared, things get a lot trickier.  You not only have to deal with kids used to calling her Dad, but now you have to negotiate the relationships with exes, too. 

About the mother punishing the child for calling your partner 'Mommy': some people can feel, and I think this might apply here, that their role is being usurped.  In this case, the mother feels that her Mommy role is being taken by her ex.  She might expect your partner to still be called Daddy.  There's at least one problem with this-- everytime that's done in public, your partner is outed.  Sometimes, that's not safe.  Hopefully your partner's ex would understand that much at least.  Punishing the child seems wholly inappropriate in this, but that judgment is based on the limited amount of information.  It sounds to me like all the adults need to work out the terms of an agreement on who gets called what. 

At the very least, your partner's ex should not be the sole decider of who gets a particular title. 
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Sandy

Nothing can change the fact that your partner was a father.  And nothing can change who the children's mother is.  Those are very specific and special honorifics implying birth.

It can be a little awkward to for children to refer to their father in the feminine pronoun, but it really is true.

I remain the father to my children event though I am now legally and physically female.  To reduce the awkward nature of referring to me as a female father, I asked my kids to call me Sandy.  But if they call me dad while out in public I really don't care.  It's for other people to figure out and their problem, not mine.

Another thing that doesn't change is the love that is between parent and child.  That will always continue.

Personally I do not wish to be called "Mom" by my children, that honorific belongs to their biological mother not me.  Though I am Grandma Sandy to my granddaughters.  Yeah, it is a bit confusing, but it really can all be worked out.

-Sandy
Out of the darkness, into the light.
Following my bliss.
I am complete...
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TamTam

They could just call her by her name, or a nickname. :) My [female] cousin and her [female] wife basically raised their children to do that.. so they are Mommy Mona [for Ramona] and Mommy Allie [for Alisa], or just Mona and Allie when the kids are in a hurry, which they often are.  Sometimes they'll also just call Alisa 'mom' since she's their birth mom, and continue calling Ramona 'Mona.'  The kids don't seem to mind or think it's weird, and neither does the rest of the family.  Granted there's no real gender-change issues at work with this situation, but still- nicknames instead of honorifics.  Why not?
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Nicky

I think you are putting in a huge effort. Well done for that. There is no standard way of doing things and putting in the work to sort through it all has got to be stressful.

This sounds like a bit of a mine-field. It is not uncommon, particulalry with the ex wanting something different and the kids getting stuck in the middle. My feeling is certain aspects of this would be much easier if you were completely comfortable with being publicly open about having a trans partner, or people knowing that you are in a lesbian relationship. Perhaps you still have some things to work through? These things are not easy especially when we are surrounded by messages saying that what we have is a bad thing. I'm trans and even I have internalised a lot of phobias about being trans, any discomfort you might have would be totally understandable. (correct me if I am wrong here, I am just working on a hunch)

Other words do exist, though they tend to be non-binary in nature. How about "My dad left THEIR purse in THEIR car because THEY were in a rush". What you wrote in your examples was correct too, you just don't see it normaly in writen and spoken english so they sound odd. They certainly could be pinging your editor sensibilities but I think familiarity will fix it.

Unofficially there are some non-binary words like Sie or Ze instead of he and she. Do a google of non-binary pronouns and you will find a heap of ideas around this.

I heard one MtF dad came to an acceptable compromise by being called Maddy (cross between mum and daddy).

What would your partner like to be called in all of this?

I think what your oldest daughter said is perfectly acceptable and correct. Could the problem here be about you being uncomfortable with being outed in public?

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imaz

My son still calls me Dad, or rather "Babbo", as we speak in Italian. Frankly it doesn't bother me at all whereas I didn't like it too much when he called me by my name, which I felt was kind of dissing me a bit.
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Jaimey

One of my roommate's and her siblings call their mom "ah-may" (...don't know how to spell it, but anyway) which is the Turkish word for Mom (they are white but spent a lot of time in Turkey when they were kids).  You could always find a word in another language to substitute. 
If curiosity really killed the cat, I'd already be dead. :laugh:

"How far you go in life depends on you being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak and the strong. Because someday in life you will have been all of these." GWC
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imaz

Quote from: Jaimey on April 22, 2009, 06:19:42 PM
One of my roommate's and her siblings call their mom "ah-may" (...don't know how to spell it, but anyway) which is the Turkish word for Mom (they are white but spent a lot of time in Turkey when they were kids).  You could always find a word in another language to substitute.

Hehe... how about "Mbak" (silent-ish k) which sort of means older sister or "Ibu/Bu" meaning mother? Indonesian to the rescue! ;D
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Jaimey

In Japanese:

Father: O-tousan (ou = a long o sound...like toe...o-toe-sahn)
Mother: O-kaasan (kaah-sahn)
Older Brother: O-niisan (knee-sahn)
                    Aniki (I really like this one) (ah-knee-key)
Older Sister: O-neesan (nay-sahn)
                  Aneki (ah-nay-key)

The first o is optional in all of them and "san" can be changed to "chan" for all of them.
If curiosity really killed the cat, I'd already be dead. :laugh:

"How far you go in life depends on you being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak and the strong. Because someday in life you will have been all of these." GWC
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Janet_Girl

Have the children be asked?  Let them pick what they feel most comfortable with.  I am ether Janet or Dad to my kids.  Always will be.  If a change happens it is up to them.  And I imagine that I am still Grampa to my grandkids.  I is just something that is.

Janet
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Venus

I definitely think she should pick what her kids call her NOT her ex.

My partner and I don't think it is an embarrassment issue because I will hold her hand and kiss her anywhere!  If she had a big sign on her that said I am trans I would still walk around with her and hold her hand. 

We need money for the house and she spend a lot of hours and money and pain on electrolosis.  At first I didn't mind because it is her body that is what she wants but then she said she didn't WANT to get it done because the hair was bothering HER, she only did it to PASS.  I told her honey EVERY TIME we have gone out with NO kids YOU HAVE PASSED.   When people do find out she is trans 1% of the time it is her telling them, 1% is maybe someone guessed by the way she looks or acts, 98% of the time the word "dad" gives it away.  She was so upset that she wasn't passing and I told her it doesn't matter how much make-up/surgery/electrolosis you get you will NEVER pass as long as the little one calls you 'daddy'.  I felt like a B**** for ruining her goal but I was just being honest.  Twice I have seen people meet her a couple of times without the kids and have NO CLUE but then they here the little one say "DADA" now they usually shake it off because kids often make mistakes when they are first learning to talk but now that the little one is getting older it has confused many people.  They all ask me the same thing why does she call her MOM 'dada' they have NEVER asked me why does she call her 'trans' parent 'dada' (because they don't know she is) they all say MOM because they HONESTLY THINK she IS the mom! 

Also I think for people with older children it is harder the thing that bugs me the most is that my girlfriend started coming out in 2004 and the baby was born in 2005 so the baby has NO memory of her LOOKING like a boy.  The baby has ALWAYS called her 'she' and 'her' and a 'woman' as soon as she was able to speak.  She is too little to understand and she is too little to be asked her opinion.  Whenever asked is dadamommy a man or woman 100% of the time she answers WOMAN.  If the child honestly believes she is a woman why can't the child call her mommy?  For ten months we had the little girl calling her mommy and they both seemed comfortable with it.  It wasn't until she spend 5 days at the ex's house and came back saying Daddy loud and clear.
When talking to my partner about the future she refers to her self as grandma but I just tell her 'honey to be a grandma you have to be a mommy first'.

I know you can't change the past but I don't see her being mommy as refusing to admit she is daddy I see it as she WAS a woman BEFORE the baby was born therefore she IS a mommy and when the baby calls her dad I feel that the baby has been taught to lie.  Also IF SHE will ALWAYS be DAD no matter what she does and never be MOMMY then she will also ALWAYS be my boyfriend or husband and never my girlfriend or wife.  Also she told me that if you are an adult and you release info about a trans person and out them against their will you can get charged because of some human rights law, (I found that out because we had an issue with a guy who was harassing us); but I make my children obey the same laws that I do.  So if I can teach my children at age 3 not to steal why can't I teach them not to out a person and not to lie?   

For the past 10 years I have been the one to challenge sterotypes and tell people not to sterotype and I just realize a few weeks ago that I truely believe something that I taught my children years ago "Not every man is a 'daddy' but every 'daddy' is a man" -so am I just teaching the English language or am I sterotyping and disrespecting my partner? 

She has no problems with me calling her mommy in fact I started to because it was her idea.  So why do I feel so guilty for calling her these names that she has wished she could have been called all her life...     girlfriend, lady, daughter, mother, wife, sister, aunt, grandma, niece, mam, Ms. ...
because society says she is not a woman and never can be, because her ex refuses to admit she is a woman even though she knew before they started dating, because other people call her he and man even if I correct them, because other people say I should be, because I am afraid of this issue stressing me out for the next 50 years it is NEVER going to go away so I am trying to find a way to accept it and I can't.  (or at least not yet)

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Ms Jessica

Quote from: Venus on April 23, 2009, 07:10:16 AM
I definitely think she should pick what her kids call her NOT her ex.

We are definitely in agreement here. 

Quote from: Venus on April 23, 2009, 07:10:16 AM
So if I can teach my children at age 3 not to steal why can't I teach them not to out a person and not to lie?   

Not to be, well whatever it might be, but I don't think it's quite so black and white.  Being trans is sort of a before-and-after phenomenon, he was a  man, now she's a woman.  There aren't a lot of clear cut rules about this is how you automatically must address this person.  As an example, look at any legal proceeding involving a trans person.  Look at the murder trial of Angie Zapata-- the prosecution consistently referred to Angie as she and her, in accordance with Angie's self-identification.  The defense, in trying to justify their trans-panic defense referred to Angie by her male name, and used male pronouns throughout the entire trial. 
I don't think you're encouraging your children to lie.  Whether they call her Daddy or Mommy or Bubbe, some of it is part of the way she was always known by the children.  If she's been Dad for 15 years of a 16 year old's life, you might not get much traction changing from Dad to Mom.  For the baby, who's always known her as a woman, well, she's Mom.  It's not lying.  Some of the word implies the relationship that the child has with that person.  That can change from child to child and as time progresses.  Some of these things are malleable, and what you decide today could be different in five or ten years' time. 

Quote from: Venus on April 23, 2009, 07:10:16 AM
...you will NEVER pass as long as the little one calls you 'daddy'...  For the past 10 years I have been the one to challenge sterotypes and tell people not to sterotype and I just realize a few weeks ago that I truely believe something that I taught my children years ago "Not every man is a 'daddy' but every 'daddy' is a man" -so am I just teaching the English language or am I sterotyping and disrespecting my partner? 
I don't think you're stereotyping.  The disrespect part I can't answer.  It really depends on what your partner wants to be called.  Part of the problem is that we live in a society where the gender binary is VERY strictly enforced.  Deviation from the societally accepted norm is not tolerated.  There are no words for a trans parent, other than to transition from calling Daddy Mommy. 

As Janet said, she's Dad to her kids.  Janet may not care about being outed in public, or whatever.  I guess what I've been trying to say all along is that it sounds like your partner might be putting a little too much emphasis on what others think.  Passing is important, but it isn't everything. 

Let me be very clear because I don't want you to misunderstand me.  I'm not trying to belittle anyone's choices or opinions about how important passing may or may not be.  I'm not trying to belittle your partner's choices (or yours) or what you both want.  The thing is, kids sort of change the game in unpredictable, and sometimes unavoidable, ways.  It might come out that your partner won't be able to pass perfectly when the kids are around.  Maybe everyone needs to think about what that life would be like, and whether they'd be willing to live it.  Life is messy, and sometimes you just have to deal with it.  For trans people and their partners, this involves settling on names, pronouns and what the kids call you, both in private and public. 

Quote from: Venus on April 23, 2009, 07:10:16 AM
She has no problems with me calling her mommy in fact I started to because it was her idea.  So why do I feel so guilty for calling her these names that she has wished she could have been called all her life...     girlfriend, lady, daughter, mother, wife, sister, aunt, grandma, niece, mam, Ms. ...
because society says she is not a woman and never can be, because her ex refuses to admit she is a woman even though she knew before they started dating, because other people call her he and man even if I correct them, because other people say I should be, because I am afraid of this issue stressing me out for the next 50 years it is NEVER going to go away so I am trying to find a way to accept it and I can't.  (or at least not yet)
First, I think you're getting trapped in essentialist ideas.  A male is not always a man.  The point being that sex =/= gender.  Society expects that sex and gender are interchangeable, which is why many official forms use one term or the other.  How many times have you seen gender with the words male and female?  Technically speaking, sex is biological, gender is psychological, and partly social.  Our concept of gender, if you buy into post-modern deconstructionist ideas, is a construct of society.  There is nothing 'real' about it, except for the fact that we make it real, and continue to perpetuate ideas like girls are bad at math and boys are aggressive. 
As your partner transitions, she will be (or already is) a woman, and a female.  She can get her birth certificate amended/changed/re-issued and get all of her legal documents changed.  She won't be able to conceive and bear children, but there are loads of cis-sexual women with that problem, too. 

As for the ex and other people being obstinate about using male pronouns: I consider that just to be rude.  It's like if I introduce myself to you as Jessica but you insist on calling me Kate.  My name isn't Kate, and it's not okay for you to call me Kate.  I might be forgiving if you forgot my name, or got me confused with a Kate who looks like me, but if you persisted even after I corrected you, I'd probably not associate with you any more. 

So that's an option-- limit your contact with people who stress you out.  My family isn't very accepting of me (and my wife's mother isn't, either).  My solution is to avoid those people as much as possible and spend time with people who accept me for who I am.  Because of the kids, and the ex, you won't really be able to employ this strategy with her.  Permit me to analyze a bit: the ex is probably trying to reinforce her control over the kids, over the custody arrangement, and over your partner by using pronouns and a name that your partner left behind.  It seems like she's trying to impose order and control in a situation where she might be feeling threatened or embarassed-- the meme of 'my girlfriend left me to be with another woman' is used to bring the great masucline man down a notch or two.  Maybe the ex feels sort of like that: "my husband left me, became a woman, and is now in a lesbian relationship."  She needs to get over it, but unless she sees a therapist or something, she may not have an outlet to explore that particular feeling, and the stress it causes her. 

To wrap up my novel, I want to look at your stress, and whether it will go away.  First, every relationship has stress.  When I first started transition, my wife would get emotional and cry around friends and others who had 'normal' relationships.  What I tried to point out is that even those relationships weren't perfect.  Everyone has their share of things to work out.  You might never have your stress about your partner's trans status disappear, but the thing to examine is that if you love each other, isn't it worth it?  Life is hard enough, and finding a good partner is hard enough, without having to worry whether they're the right sex or gender or whatever. 

You might want to consider some therapy or counseling.  Having someone to talk to about some of these issues is helpful, and I'm sure that a qualified professional might be better at helping all of you work through some of the problems you're having.  (We seem to be very big on therapy and counseling here.  I think some of us might even be addicted to it. ;))


@ Janet (an afterthought since I referred back to your post a few times):
Damn girl!  Your new pic looks goo-ood!  I swear you're getting prettier every time you post a new picture.  :)

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Venus

Thank you.
So I will continue calling my partner 'MOMMY' without feeling guilty (until/unless she herself asks me not to).  I was talking to my best friend about how I posted here and she said I will feel less stressed if I let myself think grey instead of trying to be black or white and then I read the post about "it's quite so black and white" lol! 
I am a rule follower; I have told my partner before 'I don't make the rules I just follow them'.
My partner broke up with her ex because her ex was controlling and abusive to her and the 3 children.  Her ex did know that she was trans before they started dating.
I do have a counselor and have A LOT of other emotional stuff going on which I think is why I have not had much energy or patience for this problem. 
As for limiting people who stress me, I feel like Cinderella's evil step-mom, I can't limit the time I spend with my step-daughter she can't be left alone she is little and needy and I love her but out of all of my mom's 10 gran kids this one stresses me out 14 times more than any of the others!  I know that's not a trans issue though it is a her REAL mom abuses her and I can't do a thing about it issue!!!   
As for love, I went to a funeral today for a 17 year old.  Yes I think loving someone is more important than all the other stuff.  Whenever my partner points out someone who 'might' be staring, I just smile, kiss her and keep walking.
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Ms Jessica

The important thing is that you and your partner are on the same side, on the same team, so to speak. 
If letting things be a little more grey helps you out, that might be just the thing. 
It's very interesting that you classify yourself as a rule follower-- I would call myself the same thing.  It is probably the one thing that kept me from being honest with myself for so long.  I'd dress in girls' clothes, but I wasn't a 'crossdresser' or a '->-bleeped-<-' because that was against the rules.  I finally just got sick of it all.  I figured if this was who I was then maybe I could find some peace with being myself, even if it meant moving past a strict adherence to rules (especially societal and religious rules).
I ultimately figured that if God made me, then He should understand what I'm going through, and would be (hopefully) charitable enough to judge my life accordingly.  There were millions of smaller steps before that final conclusion, but that's eventually where I had enough peace and confidence to start transitioning. 

It sounds like your partner's ex is VERY controlling (understatement much?!), and to know that she's trans and disrespect her the way she does is disconcerting.  I hope you get everything sorted. 

I'm very relieved to hear that you have a counselor, though I'm sorry to hear about all your other stresses.  I know how it is-- it seems like everything has been going wrong for my wife and myself for about a solid month now.  Things are just starting to turn around, and the stress has not been easy to deal with.  Having people to talk to is very important.  Not just a counselor, but friends, family, whatever.  People that support you and your partner are some of your most valuable assets.  :)

Quote from: Venus on April 23, 2009, 03:47:42 PM
Whenever my partner points out someone who 'might' be staring, I just smile, kiss her and keep walking.
That is awesome.  I'm sure your partner realizes how lucky she is to have you.  :)

Best of luck, and keep us posted on any developments!


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