Quote from: KarlMars on January 23, 2018, 10:58:19 PM
I think your therapist asking about your sex life has nothing to do with your gender identity...
This is another mantra of the trans community that simply isn't true. How we engage sexually with others is intensely affected by how we see ourselves in terms of gender, not to mention the medications we might take or the surgeries we might have. I think what we mean to say is that a trans person can be heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, etc.--the whole "Genderbread Man thing--and that therefore one should never make assumptions about someone's sexuality based on their gender expression. This isn't quite the same thing. I certainly observe that there are far more transgender people who are non-heterosexual than in the population at large, and that many people going through gender transition are often reconsidering their sexuality at the same time. Sexual orientation and gender identity are not the same thing, but they are connected.
This being the case, I see nothing unusual at all about a counselor asking a client, whom they are seeking to help navigate transition, about their sexuality. Regardless of one's orientation, the process of identity formation and/or transition will profoundly affect sexuality in most cases. Steering clear of this topic ignores an important facet of mental health and feeds into the misconception that our sexuality, whatever it is, is somehow taboo, or worse, broken.
Quote from: KarlMars on January 23, 2018, 10:58:19 PM
If you don't want to tell them don't tell them.
Here I agree with you, but this is different from saying a therapist should not ask.