Quote from: MeTony on January 14, 2018, 01:25:44 AM
I have a 16 yo and a 13 yo. I will tell my 16 yo son today. I have been waiting for my husband to be ready for this step. But he never is. I need to pu->-bleeped-<- a bit.
My 16 yo son is genderfluid. I gave him the S.A.G.E. test. He loves tests on internet. When he is done I'll show him my results and then we go from there.
I'll soon tell my other boy too. My husband wants to keep it a secret. But secrets are painful. It's like he is hiding me.
He has said that when I become a guy for real we need to go separate ways. He is not gay.
For me it works with just saying it. I don't write letters or have a special ceremony. I just tell people straight from my mouth. But that is right for me. Maybe not for you.
How to tell teens? Just say it. They will need time to digest what you tell them. Give them time and answer questions honestly. There is nothing worse than being lied to.
Your wife does not support you very much, that can have effects on your marriage in the long run. Don't let the teens be last to know. Now is the time to get them to know the real you. Not if you break up and all the emotions go wild.
Tony
Hi Tony, thanks for the reply.
I hope everything went OK with telling your 16 yo.
I tried several times over the weekend to tell my 15 yo daughter, but kept losing courage. I'm hoping that she will be a barometer for how my 13 yo twin girls will respond, but my 15 yo is by far who I'm closer with and I'm afraid to jeopardize that. Especially since she finally trusted me enough to tell me that she is pan romantic /asexual. I know that was hard for her. I don't get to see her that often, she lives with my 2nd ex wife and nobody in that house is accepting of anything they see as different from their all white all right beliefs, accept for my daughter. I couldn't tell her this weekend, so I guess it will have to wait at least another two weeks until I see her again.
My wife has been trying to be accepting. She has allowed me to wear nail clear nail polish all the time and keep my toenails painted. She also allows me to wear women's underwear and women's pants. Basically I can do anything that can be kept invisible.
Like I mentioned in my bio/introduction, she has always been a very liberal and an ardent supported of all LGBT+ people, just not her husband.
I dont want to push her and force her to leave because I still believe (maybe foolishly) that we can still make this work.
Anyway, thanks for the reply. I hope everything works out for you and your kids.
Jessica
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