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I'm considering coming out to my father

Started by JosephKT, December 16, 2010, 09:58:50 PM

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JosephKT

It's been a while since I've logged on to this site, and it stems from a couple of reasons.  Firstly, I ran out of time, for a while I was working three jobs, with different degrees of being paid, and employment has been turbulent during and since.  Secondly, the site has been extremely helpful for me, finding people opening themselves to strangers for help and to help one another, and because of that I've learned more about what I'm going through and how I see myself.  So I needed time to step away from the on-line realm and live for a while with what I've taken.

Now I come back with a long extensive post.  It's long because it's a huge decision for me, and two because I feel the need to make myself as clear as possible.  Please excuse my gigantic post.

I've been living in Chicago for a little over four years for college.  I've graduated this summer, and the "openess" of being transgendered is different from a closed off educational atmosphere in an art school, and for lack of a better word "the real world."  And I need to start figuring out how I'll live. 

During college, I lived a lie by tellipng my arents one thing while doing another.  I compromised by trying to do what I wanted while making half-hearted attempts to also appease my parents wants, without actually communicating with them, in my mind so that I would not have to confront the issue and then possibly make things worse.  It made me extremely resentful of my own weakness and my parents, and regretful of wasted time at a very expensive school and time I would never have back.  In the couple days I've been back for a holiday vacation I have decided I will start the coming out process to my father, my mother is not yet ready to hear what I have to say, and I will wait.  But a couple anxieties strike me.

When I was in high school, I was "outed" for being bisexual.  It was a very traumatic experience and was really an attack from my peers and some people I thought I could trust, I still haven't fully recovered from it.  We don't talk about this, at all.  This is an emotional barrier I'm having a hard time getting over.

Another is cultural.  During college my friends pretty much fell into two categories: Korean, and not Korean.  Though they sometimes intermingled, there was an obvious difference of thought.  My "not-straight" non-Korean friends had one outlook in life, and it was do what you want for yourself, that is being true to yourself and that's what's important.  A bit of an exaggeration, but that's what it came down to none the less.  My "not-straight" Korean friends on the other hand said, I will try my best to have my parents come to terms with what I am, but in the end I am "the only child" or "the eldest son" or "add situation here" and I can't "break their hearts" or "force them to do that" or some variation of "yeah, it's a hard choice to make, but that's life, you make do with the hand dealt."  Once again, simplifying the matter greatly, but that's the gist. 

So where does that put me?  I found out I don't have it in me to just "do what's right by me" no matter what, but nor can I pretend to be what I'm not and put on a happy lie.  I'm wondering how much do I tell my father, and how much can I ask of him.  I've always been "daddy's little girl" in his mind, and I know he will say outwardly "I want you to be happy," but the true is far more complicated.  He wants me to achieve all my dreams and be successful in a world that is vicious and competitive, both corporate and/or art world which I plan to engage in.  He knows the hardship of being a minority in the corporate world, how much worse will it be for a trans Asian man. 

How do I tell him "I want to be a man like you" without it breaking his heart?
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Morgan

I don't think there's really an easy way to do it, sadly. If it's going to break their hearts, there is no way you can word it to change that. If they're going to be okay with it, no matter how you put it they're going to be okay with it. Sure, there are different ways to ease it on them, but it won't change the outcome that dramatically. The only advice I can give is make sure to stress that you're still you, this is how you feel and what would make you a happier being, and that you still love them and respect them very much and wish for their approval above all else.

But you have to remember... You're living for you, not your parents. Good luck if you choose to come out, we're rooting for you!




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JosephKT

Thanks Morgan.  I think I've decided to come out to my father in the next few weeks, I just really need some kind of game plan.  I know I can't super plan this out, but damn it, I need something or I'll never muster up the nerve to do it.
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Morgan

I don't know what to tell you as far as planning it out, man. My coming out was forced upon me by my therapist.  :-\ I wish I could help more but, yeah, I'm coming-out-challenged. Here's to hoping someone out there has better advice than I do!  :icon_drunk:




Spread the love rainbow
Like a wet cat on a windowpane
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LXY

Hi Joseph,
Don't know whether you've already made the step to coming out to your father as this post was from a few weeks ago already. If you have, how did it go?

I'm in a similar boat as you-- I'm Chinese American, and my parents are really religious. A few weeks ago, the day before my first gender therapy session, I called my mom and told her that I thought I had some issues with gender (although I knew very well that I am trans, I thought that I should try to approach this as a dialogue, rather than just telling her my decision to pursue some physical transformation). I asked her if we could do some research online together (I live/work in Beijing, she lives in NJ) to see how to resolve the issue and that I wanted her to be a part of my process. And she actually reaffirmed me saying that she knew that I always struggled with gender from a young age, but that she didn't think changing my body would help me, and then she went into her whole bible/god spiel. But, I think it was at least good that she acknowledged the problem and expressed some willingness to learn about gender identity disorder and transsexual issues with me (even though I have already done a lot of research on my own).

In our phone calls, I can tell that there is some strain, because she seems to want to bring up the subject, but doesn't know how, she just keeps telling me to not make any brash decisions. And that we'll talk when I go home in two weeks. I'll let you know how that goes.

Good luck man,
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JosephKT

Thanks LXY,

Well... Things have been interesting.  I didn't expect this, but my father has offered to help me realize my hopes to be a working artist, which is a big deal because I was pretty close to abandoning that because I didn't feel like it was acceptable.  But now that he's saying if that's the career i want to take, then he doesn't want me to waste my time putting in off as a hobby or on the side, and he'll do what he can to help me. 

My top priorities in no order because they are all interlinked and of great importance to me follow as: my family, my work, and my homeland (which includes my gods and my faith).  Everything else falls as less important.  I've always felt like my work didn't fit into this scheme, and for once it looks like that doesn't have to change.  Economic times have been hard on my family and this year my mother and father are trying some new ventures as well.  I'm so grateful I have one of my parents backing me up on what I want to do I feel unfair bringing in something else so completely out of left field. 

As my father and I are talking about what will be necessary for me to conceive an art career I'm starting to mention things like wearing men's clothing, and keeping my hair a certain way... kinda bring up stuff so it's not so out of no wear when I start the TG conversation.  He's taking it okay, better than when it would come up occasionally in high school.  We'll see how things happen.

Yeah, let me know how things are going on your end when you talk to your mother.
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