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Telling My Mom

Started by tori319, November 18, 2010, 01:30:02 AM

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tori319

I want to come out to my mom. She's a single parent and I'm her only child which I feel complicates things. Ever since I can remember she has bent over backwards for me. She's been through a lot, she;s kind, quiet, and introverted. I want to be selfish and live my life, but I do feel like this is one of the last barriers (aside from my therapist) for me. It's moments like this when I wish she had had other children maybe it would be easier. I know I want to tell her before January. I don't want to go into another year lying to her. I don't know If I should sit her down and talk to her,leave a letter or what. Another thing that scares me about telling her is that she's very religious and we have a large religious family. I kind of fear that she'll except me until my aunts and uncles say something.
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carolinejeo

Tricky. I think face-to-face is the best way to break such news.

A letter is so formal and doesn't answer all the questions.

I told my father (my mother had passed away) by letter as I lived away from home but he accepted it much better when we talked together.

Religion will colour your mother's views, but as you say she has done everything she can for you, I am sure she will accept your decision.

Good luck.

Caroline
Procrastination is your worst enemy.
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joann c

Hi Tori,
I know it must be very difficult for you right now. I agree we must  be true to ourselves and lead a happy and fulfilling life and I am sure your mother would want that for you as well. Don't leave a letter if you can help it. Talk to her, she may already know more than you suspect. I don't think living a lie fairs well in the long run.
Joann









l
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annette

Hi Tory

Coming out is allways very hard to do but it's something you can't avoid.
I would ask your mother to sit in a chair first so she can't fall over.
There is no easy way to do suchs things but you love your mother so she has the right to know the true about you.
I'm not religious but I've heard that sometimes God is proving someone when he or she is having a hard time.
maybe this is your prove and is there a meaning for it.
you are not selfish only because nature made a mistake and you are wanting the life you deserve.
I wish you a lot of strenght and I"ll hope she takes it well.

love
annette
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spacial

Quote from: tori319 on November 18, 2010, 01:30:02 AM
I want to come out to my mom. She's a single parent and I'm her only child which I feel complicates things. Ever since I can remember she has bent over backwards for me. She's been through a lot, she;s kind, quiet, and introverted. I want to be selfish and live my life, but I do feel like this is one of the last barriers (aside from my therapist) for me. It's moments like this when I wish she had had other children maybe it would be easier. I know I want to tell her before January. I don't want to go into another year lying to her. I don't know If I should sit her down and talk to her,leave a letter or what. Another thing that scares me about telling her is that she's very religious and we have a large religious family. I kind of fear that she'll except me until my aunts and uncles say something.

In other words, you don't want to hurt her. That sums you up. Like most people here, I've read your posts and that is what I would expect from you. That is why your mom loves you so much and why she is so very proud of who you are.

I am pretty certain your mom wants you to be happy. I also think she will be pretty upset if, something that is making you unhappy, you are too scared to tell her about.

I am also pretty sure you mom raised you to live your own life and contribute to the world, as she has.

You are going to live your own life. You are going to be happy and do your best. You are going to succeed, as a woman.

Your mom will always be part of your life. A big part.
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Jalene E.

If you can sit face to face with your mama. I wish I could have done it that way but I had a great distance to all of my family. My parents and seven siblings all live in different areas it would have been a 3 week road trip to come out to each one in person so I did it by letter the best I could but that really only created other issues. So if you can have the strength to sit face to face with her that would be the best. You have a right to be selfish with your life because it belongs to you and you must live for you first. Taking care of ourselves first allows us to take better care of others.
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Angela

Tori, you should tell her in person. Its 1 thing to tell a friend, by letter or e mail. But for your mom it should be done in person. She sounds like the kind of person that will accept.
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JohnR

Tori, is it possible that your Mum may be less likely to disown you on the advice of an aunt/uncle BECAUSE you are an only child? You must have a very strong bond, if she is as kind and good as your post suggests, then she's not likely to turn her back on you.
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tori319

Thanks everyone, I guess I'll tell her in person.I guess I just fear seeing her reaction. I don't think she'll disown me, I just  think she'll stop me from taking hormones. I'm hoping it will be easier after having told my childhood friend.
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spacial

Really looking forward to hearing how it goes tori
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sarahm

I don't think the approach I used worked.

This is one that has not been proven, but from a psychological point of view, it's probably the most direct, and yet passive approach I have heard of.

"Mum, I'm so sorry. I have been lying to you my whole life. I know this to be true now, I have known for quite some time, and I just needed to tell you. I am a girl on the inside. I can't stand living as a man."

Maybe that might help.
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Rock_chick

i Found myself in a similar situation, though I'm the eldest of 4 not an only child. however my Mum is a vicar in the Church of England and my dad's a prison chaplain. They both struggled with things to start with, especially my mum, though from the word go they both expressed how much they loved me. Please don't be disheartened if you mum takes things badly at the start, because beginings are always a little rocky and fraught. Be patient, let her come to things in her own time, and please remember that even if she doesn't accept you to start with, that really doesn't mean she doesn't love you.

I hope it goes well when you tell her

Helena x
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spacial

Quote from: sarahm on November 18, 2010, 05:26:11 PM
I don't think the approach I used worked.

This is one that has not been proven, but from a psychological point of view, it's probably the most direct, and yet passive approach I have heard of.

"Mum, I'm so sorry. I have been lying to you my whole life. I know this to be true now, I have known for quite some time, and I just needed to tell you. I am a girl on the inside. I can't stand living as a man."

Maybe that might help.

I can see the logic in this. But may I suggest that your mom probably knows you better than anyone. Trying to tell her you've been lying all your life might be a bit difficult for her to accept all at one go.

I have to say, I think most mothers know. But since they are just humans like the rest of us, they can be affected by self deception as much as we can.

If you leave out the bit about lying all your life. Later, as you, (hopefully), discuss the situation, you can tell her about when you first realised and what you've been doing about it.
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sarahla

Hi Tori319,

Having gone through the "coming out" thing, or should I say forced to go through the coming out thing in 2005, I would tell myself, if I could go back in time several decades, that coming out is the best thing that one could do, no matter what the result.  The earlier you come out in life, the less time as a male you have, and the easier the change will get.

IMHO, you cannot have a real relationship with family members, if you hide things and they do not know you.

Personally, I would recommend sitting down over a nice hot tea and coming right out with the topic.  Your mom probably suspects something already, mine did.  You should spend as much time with your mom with no baggages as possible.  I would not write a note or other similar thing, as that makes you look less mature and less confident.  If you are sure that you are a girl, then just say so.

I started wearing nail polish, and I do not mean a clear coat, in 2005.  I guess my inner self had enough of male anything.  I guess that I was about 42 at the time, maybe 41, depending on the month in question.  I think at the end of 2004 was when I started that.  I had come out to a couple of people earlier.  I had a TS friend, who suggested coming out to the person that I came out to.  That was the wrong person to come out to and the one that was the right one, my sister, was the last that I came out to, but ho hum.  My ex=stepmom, a therapist, was not transphobic by any means, but not helpful either.

I was scared to death of telling my sister and brother, scared to death, and after a month or two of thinking on the topic, they were okay and like me better this way.  My father, well, we never had a great relationship, so nothing is changed.  God, did I worry about telling him.  I wasted several decades on that worry.

My step mom, father's third marriage, told me that she thought that there was something odd with me, when she first met me (at age 17).  She thought that I was gay.

Question:  What does it mean to be gay / lesbian if you are trans, especially pre-op?  That label to me says didly.  One can look at a pre-op M2F with a guy as being heterosexual or gay and vice versa.  I knew Susan Moses, Talking ->-bleeped-<- fame, and I never thought of her and her boy friend as a gay couple.  She was the female and he the guy.  I never saw anything else.  I still do not, although she is post op now and married.

My step-mom is totally cool with things, even calls me now by my female name.  If she is not cool with things, she definitely hides it from me well.

I side stepped myself.  I never got to tell my mom, because she died before I got to tell her.  She always talked badly of lesbians.  She did not talk that highly of African Americans either, so I kept quiet, sadly.  My sister told me how stupid I was in my thoughts.  She was right.  My mom's best friend was African American.  I have the sketch that he made for my mom.   It is quite touching still to look at it.  My mom's views changed in other areas too.  I was just so busy being negative in my thoughts that I did not bother to see the reality.  She went to my stepmom and asked her if anything is odd with me.  My mom thought that I was gay too.  My father insisted that she is imagining things, a literal quote, and that I am normal.  I found out about the conversation years later, recently.

I never got the change to really be open with my mom and I regret that.  My vote is for taking a deep breath and telling her like it is.  She probably already suspects.  Mothers do know their children, especially if they love them.  Even Cher is coming along and has a good relationship with Chaz from what I read.

At least from my experience, I worried for decades for nothing.  The friends that left were not friends at all.  Now I have real ones.  Okay, I would not say a lot of them, but I have real friends.  Did I lose things?  That is open to opinion.  Everything was hidden and a lie, not real.   I rather have real and no clouds over my head.  I feel infinitely better now, no lies of any kind.

Best of luck!

I am new to this forum.  I all!
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sarahla

Question:

Why does my name say visitor?  How does it change to Newbie?

Also, how do I set a photo?  All I see in Profile is "Group Membership", nothing more.

Thanks in advance.
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Kairi

Quote from: sarahla on November 18, 2010, 07:31:29 PM
Question:

Why does my name say visitor?  How does it change to Newbie?

Also, how do I set a photo?  All I see in Profile is "Group Membership", nothing more.

Thanks in advance.

You need 15 posts to set a photo and change your account profile.
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