News and Events => Opinions & Editorials => Topic started by: suzifrommd on July 13, 2016, 02:21:55 PM Return to Full Version
Title: UFAPs, UMAPs, and the Power of Language
Post by: suzifrommd on July 13, 2016, 02:21:55 PM
Post by: suzifrommd on July 13, 2016, 02:21:55 PM
UFAPs, UMAPs, and the Power of Language
By Suzi Chase
7/13/16
https://www.susans.org/2016/07/13/ufaps-umaps-power-language/
There's no name for what I am, and that's a problem.
I am a female parent, but I am not my children's mother. They have a mother, someone they have known as Mom from their birth. I cannot claim to be their mother or ask them to refer to me that way.
But that leaves my role without a name. I am an unnamed female auxiliary parent or UFAP, an easy to understand concept that is apparently impossible to come up with a word for.
By Suzi Chase
7/13/16
https://www.susans.org/2016/07/13/ufaps-umaps-power-language/
There's no name for what I am, and that's a problem.
I am a female parent, but I am not my children's mother. They have a mother, someone they have known as Mom from their birth. I cannot claim to be their mother or ask them to refer to me that way.
But that leaves my role without a name. I am an unnamed female auxiliary parent or UFAP, an easy to understand concept that is apparently impossible to come up with a word for.
Title: Re: UFAPs, UMAPs, and the Power of Language
Post by: Asche on July 14, 2016, 01:56:54 PM
Post by: Asche on July 14, 2016, 01:56:54 PM
Personally, I don't like the term "auxiliary parent." It suggests somebody who just kind of gets hired in as needed, like a mother's helper or something, not someone with whom "the buck stops." Even "step parent" sounds more related. Not only am I connected to my children by genetics, which has meant that they have many of the same issues that I and people in my family have, but I was involved in raising them from the beginning.
Some families end up calling the transitioned parent based on their original sex and some based on their current sex and some make up new terms -- I'm told that the series Transparent came up with "Moppa."
So far, I'm still okay with being called my children's father (I did "father" them, after all.) I don't have any plans to change that, either. I'm not expecting to hide my history from people I have an ongoing relationship with, anyway, so the idea that my children's father is a woman is only one of the many non-cisnormal things they're going to have to get used to. And casual acquaintances can make whatever assumptions they want. (Insert Bronx cheer.)
Some families end up calling the transitioned parent based on their original sex and some based on their current sex and some make up new terms -- I'm told that the series Transparent came up with "Moppa."
So far, I'm still okay with being called my children's father (I did "father" them, after all.) I don't have any plans to change that, either. I'm not expecting to hide my history from people I have an ongoing relationship with, anyway, so the idea that my children's father is a woman is only one of the many non-cisnormal things they're going to have to get used to. And casual acquaintances can make whatever assumptions they want. (Insert Bronx cheer.)