Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

My Child: What Do I Do?


Guest CutieNaomi

Recommended Posts

Guest CutieNaomi

My Daughter is an Infant, 2 months old. My wife knows and everything, and she's supportive. Even takes me shopping.

so, my dilemma is: do I let my baby daughter know and grow up with this part of me shining through? or do I hide it from her, and tell her when she's definitely older, if I don't end up changing? I just don't want my wife or daughter to have a hard time, knowing the prejudice flating about.

Thanks!

~Naomi ♫

Link to comment
Guest CutieNaomi

Maybe I should have clarified more at the beginning... -_-;

My wife knows about my cross-dressing and everything, and I'm concerned about how my daughter's life will come around this?

Link to comment

Naomi,

Chill.... OK..... Kids are little people... I have five of them. To be perfectly honest I wish I had OUTED myself to the kids much sooner... As it turned out they were more supportive than my S/O. There is Lesbian couples who raise children... OK they don't use conventional means to procreate the child BUT two parents of any Gender who want a child and give them all your love has to be better than living in a single parent family... right ? At 2 months old your daughter has no concept of gender, by the time she is old enough to recognise gender she will have two Mums.... That isn't as big a stigma as you think. IF you are planning a Sibling for your daughter... and HRT for yourself don't forget to bank some viable sperm while you still can.... AS 6 months into it you will probably be sterile. Believe me now is a better time to get things under way if you are sure that is what you want to do.... WILL be a lot more confusing for her and any other subsequent children when she is older.

Don't underestimate kids.... they are SPECIAL little people who will love you no matter how you dress.

Regards, Tiff.

Link to comment
Guest Anna_Banana

Kids only perceive something as wrong if you tell them its wrong. Just look at how many kids are trying to stick their fingers into electrical sockets, or eat worms in the mud. Sure, while the two examples I just pointed out are obviously wrong and potentially harmful (though I've had people debate with me about the worms...), the point is, for a young child, you are God so to speak. You dictate the law of the land. If you say something is good, it's good. If you say something is bad, it's bad, mmkay? They aren't going to know straight out of the womb.

If you raise them to believe that being a crossdresser is natural, they won't see it as anything else. Peers may try to persuade them otherwise, but in the end, they'll still look to your years of guidance before making a decision.

.Anna

Link to comment
Guest rachael1

Your daughter is only two months old so there is no rush. I would talk it over with your wife and get her opinion on whether you should tell her once she is old enough to understand. My daughter is 8 but she doesn't know about me and doesn't need to know either. I would only ever consider telling her if I ever decided to transition.

I have read that it is better to either tell them before puberty or else wait until their late teens when they have finished with puberty and their hormones have settled down.

I will add that you should ensure your daughter is exposed to your female side from a young age and she will think nothing is unusual about this. I regularly plait my daugther's hair and recently made her some pyjama shorts during my sewing lesson. She loved them by the way. :D

Rachael

Link to comment
Guest ChloëC

Naomi,

There are no guarantees in life, which I'm sure you know. But I can offer an additional suggestion. Be there for your child (and any more children). I don't mean as a friend, but as a loving parent. Rachael suggested some things, but being there and showing in all the little things (day to day) that you care about her is probably more important then when you tell her.

It is a fine line, I know parents that are seldom there (games, concerts, open houses, conferences) and I know parents that look almost smothering of their children. Being there, showing that you care and love your child - which sometimes tough love (rules, restrictions, expectations!) is a part of it - will go far to make any announcement you make or perhaps even your child makes to you, that much easier for both

Hugs

Chloë

Link to comment

I think you should tell her. She'd likely be more upset to find out you'd been keeping a part of your identity secret from her than if this is just how you've always been. If you're secure with yourself, and that comes across in how you act every day, then she'll likely be fine with it. If you act like it's something to be ashamed of, then she will too.

Link to comment
Guest DeniseNM

Naomi I had some of the same questions you do in regards to my 5 year son, you are lucky in that your daughter is so very young. I will tell you the same thing I was told. It is a good thing that your wife supports you but you do need to talk with her and both of you decide if you want to let her know. If you are going to let her know then start while she is still young or wait until she is well into her teens (nearly out of high school if you go that route). My wife and i talked about it and we have let our son know and have talked with him about it on his level. I agree with Rachel that if you are going to let her know then expose her to your crossdressing so it isn't seen as wrong or strange. My son has seen me with nail polish, earrings and with my breast forms on so he doesn't see it as strange. Just my opinion.

Denise

Link to comment
Guest Anna_Banana

There really isn't anything to be understood here. This really is making something more complicated then it really is. She's two months old! There is nothing to understand. Go ahead and crossdress in front of her right now. She won't see anything as off or wrong. Kids do not start to grasp gender differences until about two or three years old, and they only grasp those differences because someone (namely the parents) tell them there is a difference. If she were seven or eight, you'd have a different story. It's not like you have to have a conversation with your child. You simply go ahead and dress the way you want to. She won't give a hoot, I promise. And when she starts interacting with other children, since you've introduced crossdressing to her at a young age as being morally correct, she might even stand up for you when others talk bad about CD'ers.

.Anna

Link to comment
Guest AlexiThink

The only concern that I have regarding our daughter knowing about Naomi's cross-dressing/gender identity is that once she is older and begins to talk to people, there's no way to tell her that she has to keep it a secret from certain people without her thinking there's something wrong with it. And as my wife isn't out to her parents or mine, that could cause complications. I really don't want to hide this from her throughout her childhood however.

Link to comment

Hi,

I hope I will get your problem soon as we plan to have a child too. My wife know me and I can dress whatever I want in front of her. but I also get the same thinking like you. What if we have a child? I have the same meaning as all otheres before me. For the child it is no matter what you are. They believe in all what you say so go ahaed. But on the other hand, if they get in contact to others and they can speak, time is over to hide your crossdressing from the society. They will out you sooner or later. This is the point you must handle.

Greetings

Nelly

Link to comment
Guest Emily H

Unfortunately, I can only currently think of a negative spin my girlfriend at one point put on it. this goes specifically for crossdressing.

You tell your child.

They tell their friends "My daddy where's girls clothes?"

"Whattt? Whyy?"

"I don't know..."

The kid's friend tells their parents. All of the other parents don't want their kids hanging around the crossdressser's kid, or going to their house.

Must be a bad influence, right?

:(

Of course, if you are always going to be mommy, that might not be a problem.

~Andrea

Link to comment
Guest rachael1
Unfortunately, I can only currently think of a negative spin my girlfriend at one point put on it. this goes specifically for crossdressing.

You tell your child.

They tell their friends "My daddy where's girls clothes?"

"Whattt? Whyy?"

"I don't know..."

The kid's friend tells their parents. All of the other parents don't want their kids hanging around the crossdressser's kid, or going to their house.

Must be a bad influence, right?

:(

Of course, if you are always going to be mommy, that might not be a problem.

~Andrea

Very good point Andrea,

It would be really sad for the child of a crossdresser to suffer socially due to inadvertantly outing her father.

Rachael

Link to comment
Guest Rebecca Quentin

My advice would be - be open as you can about it, as your daughter grows up. One of my friend's dad is a crossdresser, she tells me that she thinks nothing unusual of it, because its just her dad being himself/herself as she has always known him to be. She even helps make his femme clothes, corsets etc for him. He's mostly always dressed at home and still very happily married to her mum. So, that's why I would give you this advice.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 152 Guests (See full list)

    • Vidanjali
    • Betty K
    • Susie
    • Ladypcnj
    • Susan R
    • Birdie
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.7k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,079
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Sdelong
    Newest Member
    Sdelong
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Billie75B
      Billie75B
      (67 years old)
    2. Chloe Cloud
      Chloe Cloud
      (32 years old)
    3. Hannah Emma
      Hannah Emma
      (41 years old)
    4. Joan Arbour
      Joan Arbour
      (77 years old)
    5. Liz B
      Liz B
      (49 years old)
  • Posts

    • Susan R
      You want to hear coincidence? I just posted that and my neighbor just texted me and said she has been up early because there were Northen Lights outside. Then 2 seconds later I get an extreme weather alert. “We are experiencing Extreme Geomagnetic conditions observed and continued severe geomagnetic storms expected to continue through the weekend”.
    • KathyLauren
      No you aren't!!  There were reports from Texas, Arkansas and the Carolinas of spectacular shows last night.  This is a once-in-a-lifetime event, the best show since 1938, someone said.  Tonight is supposed to be just as good.  (OK, maybe a twice-in-a-lifetime event.  )
    • Susan R
      @KathyLauren That’s absolutely beautiful. Love those colors! That would be so nice to see some time. I’m too far South to ever see these spectacular events.   Very Nice, Susan R🌷
    • Susan R
      Welcome @AmandaJoy, It’s a pleasure to have you join us here on the forum. It does seem much easier to suppress this understanding of ourselves until one day, it’s not. It all suddenly hits you like a ton of bricks. Those puzzle pieces all suddenly seem to fit and there’s no going back. Like you, I waited until I felt there was no other choice. It was now or never! Never having the opportunity to be myself in this world was not going to be an option.   Words of wisdom there. Many of us try to make up for lost time or try to get results faster than a cis puberty but it just doesn’t work that way as you’ve learned. It’s difficult waiting for the changes but the good news…eventually you’ll experience many of them and the joys that come with those changes are wonderful and exciting. But like most good things, they take time. And sometimes it’s helpful things don’t happen overnight. Especially if you have others that need time to adjust to your physical and emotional changes.   I wish you the best on your continuing journey wherever that may lead you. I think you’ll enjoy this forum as there are great resources, advice, and people here that make it what it is. Hope to see you around.   Warmest Regards, Susan R🌷
    • KathyLauren
      I enjoyed my Saturday moka-pot coffee this morning while doing something I love: processing astronomy images.  I didn't stay up late to watch last night's spectacular aurora, but my all-sky camera did, taking pictures every minute.    
    • Susan R
      Trans Group Zoom Meeting Later Today!!   I’m a little later than usual getting this posted for this week’s Zoom Meet-up. This is an open invitation for members here to get together with others from our community. These meetings can last up to 4 hours or longer. Come when you can and leave whenever you want. The start times are listed below.   Trans Group Zoom Meeting Times: May 11, 2024 6:00 PM Pacific Time May 11, 2024 8:00 PM Central Time May 12, 2024 11:00 AM Australia/Melbourne   If you’re a member of our community, 18 or over and need a Zoom Link, Message me as soon as possible. I will try to get you a link ASAP.   Susan R🌷  
    • Willow
      Good morning.    I did not try to see the sky last night.  We watched tv and went to bed.  Cooler but dry this weekend it was 58 when I got up this morning.  Sorry Kymmie, no chance of white rain here. Although there is always a chance of hail.  Fortunately, the storms stayed west of us and dropped their golf all size hail elsewhere.  I do feel bad for the people that got the hail as that was in a poorer part of the state.   Even the county we live in is quite large and has socioeconomic issues that range from wealth to below poverty.  Very few good middle class jobs and a number of them are closing their doors every year.  Most workers are some way connected to hospitality and travel.  We are beginning to see some internet based jobs as the latest under sea internet cables to South America and other places are coming ashore here.  But they are not connected yet.  We have a rail line but it stops at the innercoastal waterway. The bridge was damage in a hurricane and there just wasn’t enough traffic to justify Corman spending the money to fix it.  So it is permanently in the raised position.     @awkward-yet-sweet I’m glad you got to spend some downtime away from the every day at home.  I can’t imagine how a household that large operates.  And I do think you deserve an upgraded commercial kitchen.  But,  you wouldn’t all be able to live together if you spent money buying new to you things instead of fixing the old with so much talent at home.   Well, I hope to spend time creating the outline of my paper today.  I’m sure I will have to refine it a couple of times before it is completed.   enjoy your weekend    willow    
    • Birdie
      A Lynyrd Skynard tee with cut outs, a pink button up blouse over it and my hot pink bra under it.    Below I'm wearing black tights and my Capris. 
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      We all have a hurt inner child, do you ever comfort that child and say it will be protected?
    • Heather Shay
      Working with internal Shay with love.
    • Heather Shay
      ELATION DEFINITION: In high spirits; a state of exhilaration
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...