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!

How To Make My Mom Accepting?


PurpleBlue

Recommended Posts

I have a few questions to ask. 

 

I went to a doctor's appointment today and asked if I can go to therapy. My doctor said she has a therapist she thinks will be good for me. So I'm going to be seeing a therapist soon. I want to tell the therapist about being questioning. 

 

How could I bring up the topic of gender in the sessions? What could I say to the therapist? 

 

I am extremely anxious and scared. My mom is against LGBT people. I'm afraid of her being angry at me , never speaking to me again , hating me forever or not letting me explore my identity or transition whenever I come out to the therapist. 

 

How can I make my mom accepting of LGBT people?

So she won't hate me or be angry when I bring it up in therapy? 

 

I'm afraid that my mom will just dismiss my feelings and just say I'm confused. Because last year around Christmas time I had mentioned something about questioning my gender and even showed her information about nonbinary genders. She got really angry at me and kept saying that we need to go to church more and she kept calling me a girl and her daughter. 

 

I'm so scared and miserable. Please help me. 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
  • Admin

You are just starting your journey and your nervousness and fear are very understandable. You do not have to have your mother present in your therapy sessions and in fact the therapist cannot discuss any of your issues with her.  Gender Dysphoria has a bunch of things involved in it that all by themselves would be a good reason to get some counseling, for now, use those as your reason to see a therapist.  You probably are having trouble with school work since the GD is taking up your mind, the school work stress though is why you need help.

 

I am afraid that your mother is going to be a tough nut to crack since she thinks a church is the answer to this, which, unless it is one of the Trans Accepting Churches, they will be reinforcing her views against your needs and probably going to be thinking that pray hard enough and it will go away, which it will not.  Coming out to her is a ways down the road.  Your mother needs education on what type of person she has as a child. 

 

Your mother thinks you are female because of what the doctor or midwife said when you were born.  Her expectation for what a girl is to be like rules her life, and for now your life.  When she does find out, she will need to grieve the daughter she expected she had for a while and will need space from you in all likelihood.  I am not "on her side" and telling you not to do this, but I am a grandparent who, as a parent had enough trouble accepting the changes in my THEN teenagers who were Cis Gender, and I am well educated in behavioral sciences.  (All are in their 40's today.)

With GD, you do have to make your changes, you  just do.  Taking it easy and with the help of a therapist who can even help you choose a time and method of telling your mother and other family members.  Take little steps such as changing your hair cut or even wearing T-shirts with a more male logo on them and other little things.  If your mother sees you are happier like that she will go along.  Eventually she will see a happy, but more male child, and start to soften.  Keep coming here and talking to us which will help you put dreams together into a plan of action for when you can do more for yourself.  Get your grades up so that a college or technical school away from your mother will give you a safe space. 

 

Be a little careful on this, but there are a group of  mothers of Trans Children who are happily referred to as Momma Bears for the children.  Stories they have written could be something you can find, and let your mother find them and come to you. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Vicky gives you some good thoughts.  My therapist was very helpful in helping me find a path towards coming out to my family.  

There are no magic spells to make your journey easy but my experience has shown me that being open and honest with my therapist helped me find peace with myself.  

We are here to help as we can.  You are not alone.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Your session with your therapist cannot be discussed with anyone else unless you say so. I just came out recently to my counselor and feels great. I have been seeing her for several years. My way of bringing it to her attention. I just wrote a letter outlining my thoughts and my apprehension about coming out. It was fantastic doing it. I learned a lot. She even introduced me to a therapist whom I have my first appointment with today.

My wife is like your mother she seems to hate the non Natural genders. I have yet to come out to her. I just hope our love will still bind us together. In a month it will be 33 years for us.

 

Good luck on your journey

 

Hugs

Kymmie

Link to comment
51 minutes ago, KymmieL said:

Your session with your therapist cannot be discussed with anyone else unless you say so. I just came out recently to my counselor and feels great. I have been seeing her for several years. My way of bringing it to her attention. I just wrote a letter outlining my thoughts and my apprehension about coming out. It was fantastic doing it. I learned a lot. She even introduced me to a therapist whom I have my first appointment with today.

My wife is like your mother she seems to hate the non Natural genders. I have yet to come out to her. I just hope our love will still bind us together. In a month it will be 33 years for us.

 

Good luck on your journey

 

Hugs

Kymmie

 

Writing a letter is a really good idea! I'm going to do that. Thanks. 

❤️

Link to comment
9 hours ago, VickySGV said:

You are just starting your journey and your nervousness and fear are very understandable. You do not have to have your mother present in your therapy sessions and in fact the therapist cannot discuss any of your issues with her.  Gender Dysphoria has a bunch of things involved in it that all by themselves would be a good reason to get some counseling, for now, use those as your reason to see a therapist.  You probably are having trouble with school work since the GD is taking up your mind, the school work stress though is why you need help.

 

I am afraid that your mother is going to be a tough nut to crack since she thinks a church is the answer to this, which, unless it is one of the Trans Accepting Churches, they will be reinforcing her views against your needs and probably going to be thinking that pray hard enough and it will go away, which it will not.  Coming out to her is a ways down the road.  Your mother needs education on what type of person she has as a child. 

 

Your mother thinks you are female because of what the doctor or midwife said when you were born.  Her expectation for what a girl is to be like rules her life, and for now your life.  When she does find out, she will need to grieve the daughter she expected she had for a while and will need space from you in all likelihood.  I am not "on her side" and telling you not to do this, but I am a grandparent who, as a parent had enough trouble accepting the changes in my THEN teenagers who were Cis Gender, and I am well educated in behavioral sciences.  (All are in their 40's today.)

With GD, you do have to make your changes, you  just do.  Taking it easy and with the help of a therapist who can even help you choose a time and method of telling your mother and other family members.  Take little steps such as changing your hair cut or even wearing T-shirts with a more male logo on them and other little things.  If your mother sees you are happier like that she will go along.  Eventually she will see a happy, but more male child, and start to soften.  Keep coming here and talking to us which will help you put dreams together into a plan of action for when you can do more for yourself.  Get your grades up so that a college or technical school away from your mother will give you a safe space. 

 

Be a little careful on this, but there are a group of  mothers of Trans Children who are happily referred to as Momma Bears for the children.  Stories they have written could be something you can find, and let your mother find them and come to you. 

 

This is so helpful! Thanks for the advice and I will be posting more these forums. ☺

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I found writing easier for me to get my feelings across. I have done it a couple times before when I was having some issues with my wife.

 

Kymmie

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...

Hey! I came out to my parents and it didn't go well.. It hurt, I'm not going to sugar coat anything, but it got to a point (through the wonderful ppl on here actually) to where I am not going to let it stop me from seeking my chance at happiness whether it be as me or who they want me to be, happiness should always come first. never forget that. Best of luck to you, dear friend. Message me if u ever need to talk.

-Trevor

Link to comment

For myself, there was definitely some distance created when I came out. It was almost a year until we talked again. After that the distance is a little less, but there may be more than just me coming out that caused it.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hi,

 

In my opinion and based on my experience if you hit it off with your therapist, you will find it easy to talk to him or her and regardless of why you said you made the appointment, the Dysphoria will become easy to bring up.  Now, here is the don't do what I did.  I became so relaxed talking about my dysphoria with my therapist I started working out how to tell my wife.  (similar personality as your mother regarding GD) I spend all night one night writing her a letter because: I could edit what I said and how I said it before she saw/read or heard about it;  I had no idea how she would react but I felt I needed to tell her.  Bad Idea, it was way too soon.  

 

So, my advice is see the therapist.  Work out your GD to the point where you understand about yourself, your dysphoria and if possible determine if you are non-binary, or transgender or something else.  Finally, let the therapist help you with when, where and how to talk to your mother.

 

Your mother will always be your mother.  Yes, she might be difficult to talk to and may not be accepting to begin, but I think if you give her time to think it through and a chance to work out her own issues, you will be able to live your life and not lose your family.

 

Willow

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   8 Members, 0 Anonymous, 121 Guests (See full list)

    • EasyE
    • SamC
    • April Marie
    • Abigail Genevieve
    • LittleSam
    • Adrianna Danielle
    • Mmindy
    • VickySGV
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      768.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,040
    • Most Online
      8,356

    GF2CD
    Newest Member
    GF2CD
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. April Marie
      April Marie
    2. daniela...
      daniela...
      (59 years old)
    3. Emily May
      Emily May
    4. Felixr
      Felixr
      (20 years old)
    5. Leann
      Leann
      (56 years old)
  • Posts

    • LittleSam
      Do you feel euphoria when wearing feminine clothes? I'm curious about why you think you are supposed to feel dysphoria in fem clothes. I totally get why you would feel dysphoria with masc clothes. For me what urged my transition forwards was the amount of gender euphoria I got from dressing like a guy , and my dysphoria from wearing anything remotely fem got worse and worse until i get rid of evey fem article in my wardrobe and all my makeup, so I could concentrate on just being me and chasing the euphoria. Dysphoria didn't go away though, because I've been misgendered constantly and it hurts more when dressed in my man clothes . However now I'm on T, my doubts and dysphoria have massively lifted and I'm excited to see the masc changes to my body happening. I do have to learn patience though lol.
    • EasyE
      You're still cool to this Catholic... no worries... ;-)
    • Abigail Genevieve
      https://www.foxnews.com/politics/desantis-touts-florida-lawsuit-seeking-block-biden-title-ix-changes   I did not find coverage of this on CNN or Reuters, so here is a Fox News article.   This expansion of Title IX definition will not make it through the courts.  Plenty of precedence exists for requiring this sort of expansion to have Congressional action. This was poorly done.  Biden should have pushed this through Congress to make it law, instead of using regulations that can be overturned when a different administration comes in.    
    • Mmindy
      Well that's no way to start off a birthday. Be sure to look at your frame just behind your rear axle to make sure it wasn't bent. When I was rear ended... At first look it appeared that my bumper was folded down, however the frame was bent which also bent the floor of the bed. I'm glad everyone is okay    Happy Birthday,   Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Ivy
      Well, I am a veteran.  I did manage to get an honorable discharge - just barely.  I was drafted to start with, and I wasn't wild about it.  But I figured it was my duty as a citizen, so there's that.  TBH I find it hard to stomach people who dodged the draft, going on and on about being such "patriots" and all, and literally hugging the flag. My egg hadn't cracked yet when I was serving, so I don't think being trans directly affected my time in uniform.  But there was most likely some subconscious stuff. Sorry, I don't think this is much use to you.
    • Ivy
      That was just one reference that came up.  I originally saw it somewhere else.  Technically, he did call for the eradication of "transgenderism".  But it would be hard to get rid of that (whatever it is) with us still here.     Yeah, later, when he got called out on it.   I don't really see how you can say this.  Sure he doesn't know what he's talking about, but the damage is real.   I will bend over backwards to give someone the benefit of the doubt.  But at some point…. I'm just not as limber any more.   They can say what they want, but actions speak louder than words, and when I see what is happening in red states it is obvious.  They do want to get rid of us.  I'm tired of pretending they don't.
    • Ivy
      For a time I would get an anxiety attack when I had to dress in male mode.  Haven't tried it in a while.
    • MaeBe
      Indeed! Most happiest of Birthdays to you!
    • Ashley0616
      Happy birthday @April Marie!
    • April Marie
      Thank for the birthday wishes, everyone!!!   It started great...and then I was rear-ended at a highway construction site this morning. I'm OK. The woman who hit me was shaken - was going fast enough to deploy her air bags. I was at dead stop. Her car had to be towed away. My truck too a hit to the tailgate and the bumper. It seems OK otherwise but I'll know tomorrow when they do the appraisal.   UGH!   Happy Birthday to Me!! :-)  
    • Abigail Genevieve
      "How did it go yesterday? Any trouble in Millville?" He shook his head. "Your biscuits and gravy are great." "Mama's recipe. She taught this girl to COOK." "Uh-huh.  Well, it rained the whole time.  We did the ground breaking in pouring rain.  Your friend, the former head of manufacturing, is now on the Board.  It looks like sunshine down there, he told me, with the missile plant starting up and they re-hired all the people they fired.  Millville Products is as it was.  And the Chinese money is still coming.  That was just an ugly rumor.  Gibson quit, but you knew that." "Missile plant, huh.  Yeah.  Gibson and I may go into business.  But I have been thinking-" "Yeah.  It's been declassified.  I can tell you they made missiles for Navy ships and planes during World War 2. It was shut down after Vietnam.  Several other supporting companies are moving in - paint, electronics assembly, a few others - that support missile production." "Okay."
    • Lydia_R
      That is, it's a great document in that it seems to clearly define things, not that I'm in agreement with it.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      https://www.digitaltransgenderarchive.net/col/cj82k733h   I am now dissatisfied with the thread title because it seems to exclude Catholics and maybe others .  I am not sure what to change it to, so I will fuss over THAT now. 
    • Lydia_R
      I'm on the ballot being mailed tomorrow for an open US Rep seat.  I have both an honorable discharge and an other than honorable discharge.  I told the Navy that I was smoking pot every day right after Y2K.  I told them that while I was in the Navy, I substituted alcohol for marijuana and that the alcohol was making me violently sick.  After 5+ years of that, I said enough is enough and I went back to smoking pot.  I got better and I felt like the quality of my work was improving.   I certainly wasn't the perfect military member, but I excelled at my job and earned a promotion in boot camp.  They drug tested our unit several times after I told them I was smoking pot and I may have never tested positive.  I was opening smoking pot in the Navy for 3 or 4 months before they decided to kick me out.  At my captain's mast, the captain tried to shame me by saying I looked bad in uniform and that I was a disgrace, but all my evaluations said that I looked great in uniform.  I took great pride in looking good in my dress blues and whites.  Sure, I had grown my hair out a little bit (you know, it's not like I became trans in my 50's all the sudden) and I was enjoying some green anodized eye glasses :)   I think that people get very emotional about these kinds of issues when they should be concentrating more on engineering things and work performance.  I think we should take the lead and talk about our professional lives more instead of focusing on this type of politics.  That's a great document and I saved the PDF to my hard drive.  I think we should have more respect for the production that China is doing instead of concentrating on raising a military defense against them.  I personally disliked the hazing rituals in the Navy and think our military would be better off with being more accepting and intelligent.  
    • Abigail Genevieve
      My snarky comment of the morning is that Trump may be the first president sworn into office from a jail cell.  He can't keep his mouth under control.  It's likely he may be serving time for contempt for violating gag orders in January if he keeps it up, and the judges are more than happy to slap fines and imprisonment on him.
  • 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...