Wowsers. This thread has suddenly become an example of why TOS #15 is such a good idea. I'll save you the trouble of looking it up, and just post it here for your convenience:
Quote
15. Items under discussion shall be confined to the subject matter at hand, members shall avoid taking the other users posts personally, and/or posting anything that can reasonably be construed as a personal attack.
Which brings me to this:
Quote from: ReaverMarcus on May 30, 2014, 05:27:07 PM
Now, try actually reading my post completely. Not just the parts you want to read. Then maybe you can begin to even understand everything that has happened, instead just posting and assuming things (BTW, assume = it makes an a** out of you and me. Mostly YOU)
Can we keep things civil and within the TOS, please?
Reaver, with all due respect, you started a thread saying that you feel your mother, whilst being supportive, is trying to make it seem like you're just going through a phase. You said that she isn't letting you look at guy clothes. You said that she thinks you don't know yourself, and she doesn't see how uncomfortable you get when you think about the girly things she wants you to. You alluded to her not wanting you to be male and trying to turn you into a girly girl. That's not my assumption - that's what you wrote. I don't have anything else to go on because I don't know either of you personally, but I'm here volunteering my support and I can only work with the information provided.
So I've offered you the benefit of my experience, both as a transguy who has experienced something similar (including a tumultuous upbringing and an absent parent)... but also as a parent myself. I've suffered Gender Dysphoria since 1976, and the eldest of the three people I've raised is in his 30s, so I have plenty of valuable experience to offer in both areas - and I've offered all of this to you free of charge. And like everything that's offered for free, it's worth exactly what you've paid for it and I'm more than happy to give you a full refund if you decide it's not for you.

Quote from: ReaverMarcus on May 30, 2014, 05:27:07 PM
Let's start with a person who never existed - I exist, being me isn't about my gender. I spent years not even knowing that I was transgender. Many miserable years with my grandparents and only ever feeling comfortable in school around my friends and teachers. The person that exists is the person inside. Just because he's not physically there doesn't mean the female me never existed.
I know you don't know me, but I'm not the type of person who likes to presume... so if I don't know a newish member very well I'll often go back to their early posts to see how they identify before replying. You've said the following:
Quote from: ReaverMarcus on April 09, 2014, 11:34:37 PM
I've never really been girly and I hate anything dealing with being considered female.
Quote from: ReaverMarcus on April 11, 2014, 11:01:29 AM
I guess I got lucky on most of my childhood photos and looking like a boy. I have to say that I hate my senior photo for high school. You can tell I'm a girl and it pisses me off.
Forgive me if I interpreted those comments incorrectly, but I took them (along with this thread, including the fact that the only time you used the word 'daughter' you put it in single quotes) as an indication that even though you've only recently realised that you're trans*, you've never felt female and have wanted to be perceived as male for most of your life but especially now. If I got that wrong, I apologise.
Quote from: ReaverMarcus on May 30, 2014, 05:27:07 PM
It's selfish and shows a lack of empathy - She has full support of me. ... If my mom was selfish and lacked empathy, she wouldn't be the least bit supportive and I'd have less support here than with my father.
It's selfish. My words, which you repeated. In other words,
this particular act you have mentioned is a selfish act. This one particular act shows a lack of empathy in this one particular area. That does not imply that your mother is a selfish
person, or that she lacks empathy in other areas, or isn't otherwise supportive, or is anything less than a thoroughly marvellous human being. It merely states that this one, specific act that you talked about is a selfish
act. Quote from: ReaverMarcus on May 30, 2014, 05:27:07 PM
Pain down the road for both of us - Yes, there may be painful memories, but there will be the fact that I tried it and she saw it wasn't me. The more painful memories would be the ones of me being forced to live as a female in my father's house because I refuse to tell the a**hole.
I understand - I grew up in an abusive home and I'd never tell anything like this to my abusers for fear of how they'd turn it into a weapon against me. I've offered you general advice here because I don't know the ins & outs of your situation... and as such I've advised you to consider whether dressing up as female again will reopen old wounds or cause you pain in the future. This is something only you could know.
Which brings me to the take-home, tl;dr message from my two posts after you offered to dress up in female clothing for one day, which as you'll recall I have twice called an act of kindness on your part:
It's entirely your choice - do what you think is right for you & your family.The good news is: after taking the trouble to create an account and post to this thread, I'm willing to bet your mother is much more aware of how uncomfortable you feel when she tries to make you do anything girly. Hopefully this thread has sparked a very fruitful conversation between the two of you, and perhaps you can both proceed with a better understanding of each other.
Oh, and SupportiveMom? Welcome to the family, and I hope you find us a useful resource in helping you support your son. There's a very helpful Significant Others section here that could be very beneficial to you. The fact that you're reaching out and trying to learn more about how to help him is absolutely brilliant, and as a fellow parent I applaud you for it.
And Reaver? The Spire is
mine.