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SWHOH's avatar

This is what I want to say, but I feel like I need my daughter to be okay with me putting it out there publicly:

I am the parent of a child who, as of a few weeks ago, identified as transgender. This identification lasted for over 3 years, from the age of 12 to 15. The primary questions I was navigating were: why is she suddenly concerned with her gender when she’s never been gender non-conforming? Has she been hiding it all this time? Is she caught up in a social movement? Did she have some kind of trauma that we don’t know about? We were familiar with trans identified kids (friends and neighbors) but it just didn’t seem to fit for her; I felt 99% sure about this. But the question that was always in the back of my mind was: are my instincts wrong about this?

So, the answer to your question about whether I was able to find the information I needed: is Yes, and No.

No, I could not find information from doctors, therapists, schools, healthcare organizations, or the media that allowed for any alternative beyond no-questions-asked-affirmation. That just didn’t seem right to me: How do you get answers to the important questions without dialog? How can we come to an understanding before taking medical steps?

But, my answer is also Yes, because, by 2022, I found information online that offered an alternative viewpoint. I saw a chart about the skyrocketing number of teen girls questioning their gender, I found Lisa Littman’s work on ROGD kids, and I wound up on sites like 4th Wave Now and, most importantly, on the Podcast: Gender: A Wider Lens. It was the work of these two women, in particular, Sasha Ayad and Stella O’Malley, that helped me hold on to my instincts and to gently explore the topic of gender with my daughter when nobody else would.

Eventually, my daughter asked me if she could go to therapy to “solve this gender thing”. I really believe that something in her had already shifted by the time she asked, and that she was ready to do some work on her identity in a more holistic way. I found a therapist through an organization called Therapy First, whose member therapists agree to practice ethical therapy that neither aims to change someone’s gender identity, nor to blindly affirm it.

I can’t go into her reasons why she went down the gender road and then returned, but I can say that, in our case there were two main factors that brought her back to herself: one was simply time, and the other was us (her parents) maintaining a close, loving relationship with her, while also laying down firm boundaries– which was only possible because I had access to viewpoints on gender distress that are not currently ‘fashionable’, and which have been suppressed for years.

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Amy's avatar

Unable to use my name openly at this point in time (for my daughter's sake), I opted to send an email explaining our situation instead of leaving a voicemail. I hope they may consider using some of the information from those of us who cannot, at this time, stand publicly. I also hope that it won't be long before my daughter and I can stand side-by-side and fight this together!

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