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!

Transgender Parent - Special Needs Son


Piper

Recommended Posts

  • Root Admin

I posted this as a blog on another site that didn't have a lot of traffic, so I thought I'd update it a little and post it here. It's more of a vent than a question, but I thought it might be interesting to some here.

I have a special needs son.

He doesn't have Autism Spectrum Disorder or anything like that but does have a speech delay. We also are currently investigating if he might have a sensory processing dissorder.

At various times we have had help from a Physical Therapist (when he wasn't crawling well), 2 different Developmental Inverventionists (when he wasn't hitting his milestones quite on time) and he's currently with his 2nd speech therapist (the first had to stop practicing for several months for a reason of a personal nature). Now we are waiting to start Occupational Therapy (OT) as well as another round of DI (Developmental Intervention).

When we start work with a new DI/PT/Speech Therapist, or Coordinator, or Testing Evaluator, we always get to have an at times awkward, sometimes difficult talk with our practitioners.

I'While all our "friends" know, there are family members that don't know on both sides, so I spend much of my time outside of the house, inside of the closet. But the issue is, I AM out inside my house, which means to my son.

He doesn't call me Daddy, and that's always a trigger word they look for. We get to discuss "why he doesn't say daddy".

I'm not going to lie and say I'm dressed fem every day at home. I'm not. Especiually If I know I'm going to have to be dressed drab again for something later in the day. But on the days we talk with new practitioners, I try to be "half way there". I'm often wearing swets and possibly a simple t-shirt (from either side of the wardrobe) but I will always be shaved as smooth as I can manage (without killing my face) and usually with my hair down.

It's a difficult problem to broach for us, and we've never had anyone have issues with me/us. Most recently we got "how would you like me to teach him to address you" and I got to tell the story of how we started off referring to me as "Mommy Piper" and then he kinda picked up "MayMay" or "MeMe" somwhere and we adopted that, and as his speech has recenly exploded, he just started saying "Ommy Pie-Pah" out of the blue. It brought tears to my eyes, and made me so ecstatic.

As our son progresses we get to deal with the unique issue of my gender status will be on record at his grade school. Why does this matter to them? Well see as he progresses from "Early Intervention" he will next test for the possibility of entering "Preschool Disabled" and various special needs programs after that. Each one will cary the records from Early Intervention and all the things that have been documented about my gender by all the various practitioners, and while that scares me a little, I know it's important for others to know so that they don't think he has some kind of "block" against saying daddy.

Now you may be wondering "what is so unique about this?" I mean, even I have assumed it had come up before, exspecially since our Very First coordinator and EI nurse both separately warned us that it would happen. Well the issue comes up with the fact that my Fiance's Mom, and mother of my Son, works as an Aide for Special Needs children in the local school district. Because of this I get to wonder "just how much access does he have" to our Son's records, because that part of my Fiance's family is on the list of "doesn't know, would rather them not know at the moment".

But things go on, and will go on. Things may come out, or not. I know it's not a good idea to dwell on thoughts like this, and instead worry about my son in the present, and help him continue down his path of life, and also continue down my own.

While I don't know what tomorrow will bring, I do know that today, I'm doing well. I'm feeling good, and I don't see a dark cloud lingering near by. So that's a good thing right?

Kirstyn Amanda Fox, -Piper

Link to comment
  • Admin

Piper, I can't offer any advice (and I am not sure you were after any), so I just want to thank you for sharing your situation and that of your son with us. It sounds like he has a wonderful advocate in you, and you're doing your best to ensure he gets the treatment he needs to thrive. I do know that from talking to many other trans parents here, that kids, especially young children, adapt to such situations with ease, and never give much thought to "male" and "female" until someone points it out to them that its any different than anyone elses parental situation. What's most important is for him to know you're there for him, and love him. What others may think of your situation is their problem, not yours.

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Thank you for sharing that Piper. I'm glad you feel comfortable enough to vent here. Your love for your son is so good to see. As Carolyn mentioned i think any young child accepts us for who we are. Unfortunately adults can be more difficult but i'm sure it will work out for both of you as your getting the help he needs.

I love his name for you. My grandkids call me Grandi. That works for me.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

An interesting situation Piper!

Working in special needs to some extent here, although in a health context rather than being in education, I often visit special schools and see how things are run, getting to know staff etc.

My experience here in the schools I visit is that they are small friendly places in which most people are known and any facts such as yours would likely be disseminated fairly rapidly. Parents tend to work closely with staff and things tend to have a 'family' atmosphere. This might sound worrying to you but I am accepted well (except on one occasion a few years ago when a group of teenage girls were amused at my makeup :D ). That said I live in a 'less busy' part of the UK in which the schools tend to be pretty small by big city standards. It's really a case of getting to know each other well, as you will be aware.

Here if a child is in special needs in a mainstream school then I think a lot of the support is sorted outside of the specific schools system (on to ones etc).

I think all I have said is an insight to the system here but on your specific point it would well depend on information governace standards where you are and if she were involved with your child's records in any way. In the healthcare system I work in I could theoretically look someone up but with audit trails etc it would be very risky for my job. If she were to see your childs's name in passing it would likely be just one of a number of names so mean little but just be ready?

Tracy

Link to comment
  • Root Admin

Here if a child is in special needs in a mainstream school then I think a lot of the support is sorted outside of the specific schools system (on to ones etc).

I think all I have said is an insight to the system here but on your specific point it would well depend on information governace standards where you are and if she were involved with your child's records in any way. In the healthcare system I work in I could theoretically look someone up but with audit trails etc it would be very risky for my job. If she were to see your childs's name in passing it would likely be just one of a number of names so mean little but just be ready?

Tracy

The biggest thing I'm worried about, is my Fiance's Mom can be a bit of a gossip. So since my son carries my last name and not my Fiance's I'm more worried she will hear something in passing instead of directly. I hope I'm just paranoid and nothing else.

We've actually had our first meeting with the local Preschool Disabled. They have been receptive and said they can't speak of parents but that the staff will do everything to be respectful of the situation. It didn't seem to be anything "new" on them but our meeting was with a child psychologist.

I recently just "stopped" my fiance from telling my son's Physical Therapist the whole story, as I just wasn't feeling in the mood of explaining things. I did tell her he refers to me as meymey (we've still not decided how to spell it, but we pronounce it consistently) or "Piepah" but didn't offer an explanation.

We've also run into the newest complication of my son's speach is getting clearer. As of January of this year he was barely saying 2 words phrases, and then only when prompted. With the help of friends we managed to take him to Disney World for a week and his speech has just exploded since then. He said his first 3 word sentence there "My Turn Now!" :) Recently he saw me looking around the room and asked "Are you looking for your keys?" and I was floored :)

And while this is great, the issue becomes that his Grandparents, my soon to be inlaws don't know why he doesn't call me daddy. They know he calls Grandpa "papa" and when he says "PiePah" it sounds close enough to "PaPa" that I think they just accept that. But now his PiePah is starting to sound much more like Piper, and for that reason I've started to stay away from my in-laws more.

I know children pick up on a lot more than you expect them to, and I might even be able to explain to him (even at 2 1/2) that I need him to call me something else in front of Grandma and PaPa, but honestly, I want to be selfish and only hear his special words for me from him. Is that wrong of me?

-Piper

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

A tricky situation to be sure and one in which I don't envy you!

Obviously things depend on details of your persona; situation but I get the impression that you are steadily digging yourself deeper in the mire, which in the end will be no good for anyone.

Going through the parties involved (and making the odd assumption):

Your son obviously needs your full support and if he has learning issues then anything which may confuse him will retard his development. The more relaxed his environment the better. It will really help!

Your Fiance will be feeling some stress as will be caught in the middle and may have difficulties coping.

The school staff and professionals need to know your son's background such that they may provide the best possible help to him (otherwise they may be in the position of having to make assumptions which may be wrong).

Your Fiance's family really need to know and accept things.

And finally you need to be relaxed and confident to co-ordinate all this communication.

To me it appears that the main issue is your Fiance's mom / family. When you get them onside then things will be better for all concerned.

My appraoch would be to work closely with your Fiance to gently raise your profile with them. It is very similar with me. I don't always dress fully femme, generally having three states - Male when at work or working on the car etc (manual stuff) - femme female when out for the day, shopping etc - somewhere inbetween with female wear (usually jeans and t shirt (ie fairly unisex / androgyne) when I am visiting people who don't know of my trans side. As such there are a lot of people who see me dressed fully female but are not too stressed about it. They get used to my appearance, and then steadily to me. Because my dress is based more on task rather than social structure there is quite a bit of overlap (my mother does sometimes comment on my makeup but I am not out to her as such. She is elderly and forgetful so I don't think complex explanations would work. She just accepts me as I am, and it works).

If you could move stealthily like this then if anything did come out before you are ready it would perhaps not come as such a shock (which would provoke an ill considered indeterminate reaction).

Just a few thoughts which you have probably been thinking anyway

As in your last paragraph - It is not wrong of you - it's a loving parent but, as I have found with my son, savour the moment as time moves on. They grow up into adults to be proud of. I remember laying on my son's bed reading 'Three Billy Goats Gruff'' as if it were yesterday and wishing I could again but that was of one period in time. There will be others for you. Things to look forward to and times to remember fondly from the past. Not all good but the bad will make the good seem better!

Tracy

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   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 100 Guests (See full list)

    • MaryEllen
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • Cindy Lee
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,056
    • Most Online
      8,356

    kristinabee
    Newest Member
    kristinabee
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. ciara
      ciara
    2. Jamieleann
      Jamieleann
      (62 years old)
    3. Lukey19252
      Lukey19252
      (22 years old)
    4. Maye
      Maye
      (66 years old)
    5. Spirefreedom
      Spirefreedom
      (21 years old)
  • Posts

    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Umm.... if a post is ignored, live with it?   My stuff gets ignored sometimes, and its OK.  My life is different, and may seem kind of wacky to others.  Some folks just can't relate, or if I'm needing advice they just don't have it.  Diversity is like that sometimes.  If your post gets missed, don't take it personally.  Also, stuff that is new on weekends seems to get ignored more, since most folks are busy with family or other stuff during that time.  Overall, I think people here are pretty helpful. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I'd really love a professional stove.  There's actually one I want at Lowes, but its like $6k.  I've got plenty of money, the issue is that I'm not the queen (king?) of my den.  Or even of the kitchen.  My partner (husband's wife #1) owns that territory, and she's very attached to what she's got.  One of our stoves has 6 burners and a large oven, the other has 4 burners and a regular household sized oven.  And of course, there's always the wood-burning equipment.    Today was interesting.  We had the first campaign fundraiser for our sheriff and my sister.  My sister is running to be constable of our township.  Pretty sure she'll win, as her opponent is an old dude who is mostly running on "Don't elect a woman for a man's job"    What's weird is our sheriff is running as a Democrat, but he's conservative.  And his Republican opponent sounds like a leftist.  Welcome to Upside-down-ville   And of course all the kids got the chance to sit in a sheriff's car, and play with the lights.   We had a barbecue lunch and a dessert auction.  I baked three apple pies for it, and I was shocked that they sold for $20 each, since my cooking isn't that great.  My partner made her famous "Chocotorta."  It's like a chocolate layer cake with cream cheese, sweetened condensed milk, and it tastes amazing.  Usually we have it for Christmas and other really special occasions.  Two guys got into a bid war, and it sold for $175!!!    Yep, this is politics in the South.  Barbecue, pies, and police cars.  A great way to spend a Saturday
    • Davie
      Yes. That report is part of a conspiracy to torture and murder trans people. It is a lie. It is evil.
    • Ivy
      TBH, I have no idea where to start with makeup.  
    • Ivy
      It seems plain to me, that this thing is simply a cherry-picked excuse to persecute trans people - especially trans youth in the UK.  And it will also be used here in the states to legislate against trans care here as well.   The right wing has already made up their mind about us, and they are just looking for "evidence" to legislate against us.     Seems like if they were really for "freedom" as they claim, they would leave us alone to live in our personal "delusions".   I mean, I have no problem with cis people.  Some of my best friends are cis people.
    • Timi
      I am so happy with Maybelline products. For my basic needs, I love their Magic Eraser. I used the app to dial in the best shade and it works great just -- even as a very light "foundation"
    • Vidanjali
      "THE CASS REVIEW NEEDS TO BE THROWN OUT ENTIRELY. THIS IS WHY."  https://whatthetrans.com/cass-review/    
    • MAN8791
      Oof, this hits hard. Thank you 
    • April Marie
      I think this can be a big part of it. There are times when I just don't have the experience or expertise to respond.   Is there a specific post we've missed @Ladypcnj?  I remember that my intro post had less than 10 responses. Some of that has to do with timing, too.    I've also found that the more I posted to various threads the more responses I've received. But, I can tell you that there are times when almost no one responds to my posts. Don't take it personally. Keep posting where you feel comfortable and people will get to know you.   It really is a friendly and accepting place.
    • April Marie
      Oh, the guilt can be overwhelming, can't it? It's kind of like the joke about the difference between Protestants and Catholics.   Protestants have sex without guilt.   Catholics have guilt without sex.   It seems as if guilt is just a natural by product of our gender identity confusion whether we have any awareness of it or not. We feel different and so we blame ourselves for not feeling as others say we should.   What a tremendously uplifting moment it is when we can finally shed that guilt. Bask in the relief, M.A.   And having the right therapist seems so crucial to me. I had, fortunately, a very quick and strong connection and trust in my therapist. She was a life saver for me. Literally.   Again, welcome to TGP!!
    • Petra Jane
      Perhaps no one knows how to reply?  
    • MAN8791
      For me, with my former therapist, it was almost more like a frog in a pot slowly coming to a boil - I don't think either of us realized the scope of what we were dealing with until fairly recently. And she helped me find my new practitioner, which was incredibly helpful too <3 It feels very strange and new - I've framed this, whatever this is, as 'being bad at being female' for literal decades, since puberty really, and the idea that maybe it's not my fault, that I've never done anything 'wrong,' is a little overwhelming.
    • Lydia_R
      I had fun doing this a few weeks ago.  This is how I got rid of -money:     This music player code of mine is really working out nice.  My music collection is all mp3 files.  I put them on my server and then code things like that to play them and loop them.  And then I coded an app while I was in the mental hospital in 2009 that I use to transcribe my music with.  It's a Windows app and you can browse to an mp3 or use a URL to an mp3.  Once it is in the program, it looks like a normal music software timeline and there are sliders to slow it down and speed it up by octaves, semitones and cents, so you have complete control over what key the music is in.  And you can create loops in it and I added a feature a few years ago where it remembers all the settings so when you open it again, you still have the same loop set with the pitch settings.  I've been putting my favorite recordings in it lately, setting the funkiest loop I can find and then slow it down an octave or more.  Then I play drums to it and piano stuff, or pennywhistle.  I like playing drums on the floor.  Even though I got rid of money and well, I should have done that decades ago, I had a good time the other day hitting my bin of GO stones with my drumstick.   I don't know if I'll get flagged for self promotion here or not.  You know, I'm a musician and I'm just sharing ideas for how to listen to and enjoy learning to play music.  I'm not the only one who has made tools like this.  I'm really geeking out on my roommates drumset.  I learned to play in the 90's, but I haven't had a set since then.  I've been playing 5 gallon plastic water bottles as hand drums for 30 years.  They are relatively inexpensive and common and they sound great.  Very fun to play along to your favorite music.  And if you can slow the music down, it can make it easier to play to for some songs.  As advanced as I get as musician, I still enjoy just meditating on playing some simple pattern over and over.  Lately I've been playing an Emin7 chord going to an Fmaj7 chord on the piano.  It's all white keys.  You just play an E and then skip a key etc...  Every other key for 4 notes and then just move that all up one key for the Fmaj7 chord.  I just like the droning quality of it.
    • EasyE
      Welcome to the forums! Writer and graphic artist (and photographer) here as well, though most of my life has been spent in the sports realm... bless you with three teenagers!! I have two and they are a handful ... I have found a lot of encouragement and help on this forum... Hope you do as well... Blessings on your journey ahead ...    Easy
    • EasyE
      During COVID lockdowns without any place to go, some neighborhood buddies and I would play Life for hours (imagine a bunch of middle aged men playing that game, it was a hoot - all sorts of 'house rules')... anyways, as much as I could get away with it, I would choose a pink peg to represent myself... sometimes even had a female name to go with it... this was before I even really pondered whether or not I was trans ...   I was very determined to do this ... so interesting to look back and see all the threads pointing me to where I am now, though it has come as such a surprise as well...   Easy    
  • 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...