Quote from: AlexD on January 15, 2013, 11:18:40 PM
My doubts are still pretty real, though. I'm terrified that when I see a therapist about this, he or she will tell me that my brain sex was female all along. I'm hardly the "I knew since I was 5" sort, after all.
I'm think I'm derailing this thread, haha. Sorry.
I don't think you're derailing anything. FWIW, my son, though he's blissfully far more free of doubts (and radfem baggage) than I am, is not exactly in the "known since 5" camp either, but, while I see myself that way, when I first spoke to a therapist I was a lot more circumspect. And it did take me a few years, in fact, before I had to point out some of the things that I allowed him to imagine were true for me, that I realized I was saying to seek his approval (as a gay man... the therapist, not me).
One factor for both of us is that neither of us are the typical "straight" transsexuals that are still the textbook examples. I was strongly lesbian identified... my college advisor was a founder of the women's studies program at my college, a college that now is often said to be about 25% lesbian, 25% gay and some significant % trans. My son also identifies as queer, though he was seen as lesbian in high school, and took two different women to junior and senior proms. (Somewhat predictably, my ex is far more at ease with his former lesbian identity (even though he was persistently resistant to using the term, in part because he was struggling with coming out, and at the time, while the signs were pretty obvious, I was also not entirely out with him until fairly recently, much to my regret and perhaps even shame -- I had gone through a long depression that was amplified by my choice to follow bad advice and conceal myself to some degree from my children, on the misguided assumption that they were at an age when I was ready to come out where they might deal with it badly -- the baddest part was taking advice from a normative gay male therapist, in retrospect, though I probably did a lot to overinterpret his advice and do damage to myself that he hadn't meant to encourage?)
I think in many cases, it is understandable that some of us do not openly ID as trans so early, especially if it's complicated by other issues too? For my son it may have been that he had a model of a non-conforming "dad" that might have affected his own ideas about what a man is. I really do hope in some ways that I am not his model for manhood. We really haven't examined that in detail.
What I do know is that I've met his gender therapist, and she's on board with and doesn't seem to even question his trans identity. Then again, he went to her with a definite agenda in mind, since he really wants some form of top surgery (at the very least breast reduction) before he starts college this fall. Unless she is having some kind of unethical backdoor comms with my ex, which I have no real reason to suspect, his therapist is on board with his identity and sense of focus on what he needs and wants. I'm sure there may be some other things she will focus on with him as their relationship develops, but bargaining over his identity is not a part of it, and probably shouldn't be for someone acting responsibly.
I can't say I'm sure my former therapist was doing that, and he's no longer practicing at all, so the issue is moot, apart from time and money wasted engaged in what felt like a negotiation. Granted, it did leave me with many more insights, and ultimately a clearer sense of my identity, and of what I want, versus what I'm likely to be able to get in this lifetime.