Culture I Have A Trans 9-Year-Old. I Thought I Knew What It Would Be Like To Parent Him — But I Was Wrong. - "I don't know what the future holds, but to the parents who are just hearing 'Mom, Dad, I'm trans,' know that this is only the first phase of your journey."

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Last year, I wrote the story of my son, Rachel, coming out as trans. At the time he came out, I knew nothing about the transgender community, but I expected Rachel’s journey to include pronouncements to the general public that he was trans; pink, blue and white stickers and pins in his room and on his backpack; and a general acknowledgment from his classmates and teachers that he was trans because, obviously, he would tell them.
I thought wrong.

Rachel has short brown hair, big brown eyes and a sprinkle of freckles, and he wears athletic shorts, T-shirts and blue and white high-tops. At 9 years old, he has yet to hit puberty, so his only tell is his name, which we have found we can deal with by not saying anything or explain away with “We’re Jewish. It was his grandmother’s name.”

However, this still doesn’t satisfy some people because what they see doesn’t match what they hear, and we get a lot of “Ray?”

“No. Rachel.”

Then there is usually a frown before we can move on in the conversation. It is uncomfortable and comical at the same time to see people trying to figure out what is happening — it’s almost a “does not compute” moment. “See boy, hear girl name.”

I’ve vetted every activity or camp for Rachel since 2021 — part of the mama bear instinct that emerged when I learned the hard way that not every person or situation was kind to trans kids. Every organization claims to be LGBTQIA+ friendly; sometimes that’s just window dressing. Three years in, my mama bear instincts were tired, and I signed him up for a day camp without talking to the administration. As I sent him off the first day, I hoped that everything would go well. I hoped no one would ask about his name. “Please, be kind,” I thought as I watched him walk toward the smiling teenager in a bright yellow shirt who checked him into camp.

Rachel came home that day with some unexpected news: He had a trans counselor in art who talked about how he was getting top surgery Friday. The counselor had said how excited he was.

Rachel said that he had looked around the room and “decided that it was a safe place.”

“So, I raised my hand and said, ‘I’m trans, too!’”

As so often happens with parents, we react differently on the outside than we feel on the inside. I smiled and said, “That’s so great,” not wanting to make a big deal out of it because I could tell that he didn’t want to make a big deal out of it. But it was a huge deal: Rachel had never outed himself in a social situation.

Those who knew definitively that he was trans were people who knew him before he came out or whom I had told in an effort to keep him safe during my close examination of everything he did. Rachel had gone to great lengths to make sure that the kids at his school saw him as a boy, and knew him as a boy and only a boy. Because he was so passable, it wasn’t a huge ask.

So, while I continued to put together his after-camp snack, inside I was doing a happy dance.

When the camp week ended, our family went out to dinner. We walked around the neighborhood afterward, and there was a queer bookstore. By the register, the store sold pins — pride pins, rainbows, pins with sayings such as “Love Is Love,” and pins with the trans flag on them. I love a pin — especially a rainbow or pride pin — and I asked Rachel if I could get one.

“How about this one?” I said, picking up a rainbow.

Rachel shook his head. “This one,” he said. He picked a trans flag-colored pin in the shape of a heart, “and this one.” It was a pin that said “Love Is a Many-Gendered Thing.”

The small person in my head did the happy dance again. On the outside, I just smiled and said, “Sounds good.”

We found a place to put it on my cross bag, and Rachel adjusted the bag so that the trans pin was front and center.
“That looks nice,” he said.

The next week, he attended a ballet intensive at his studio, which concluded with a day of parent observation. He suddenly had some instructions on what I should wear to parent observation day.

“Please wear your jeans shorts, your white T-shirt, and make your hair wavy.”

“Is that all?” I found this new interest in what I looked like amusing, as if he were trying to get me to match a mom he had seen on TV and thought pretty.

“Well, can you wear your trans cross bag? And have the pin in front. But don’t make it a thing.”

I wore the cross bag with the pin in front. And I didn’t make it a thing. But this small action was enough to make me take a step back and examine what my journey as the parent of a trans child had looked like — what it was, what it wasn’t, how it was different than what I’d expected. As I reflected on these past three years, I came away with a million little moments that led to only one certainty: There is no wrong way to be trans.

You can be a trans kid who from day one wears pins and ribbons on your backpack proclaiming your part in the queer community, or you can be the trans kid who just dresses in the clothes that match your gender and has no interest in being a standard-bearer for the trans community at your school. Or you can be both — maybe one in a certain area of your life and the other in a different area. Both are fine. There is no wrong way to be trans.

There are trans kids out there who love labels and surrounding themselves with kids who are also part of the LGBTQIA+ community, and that’s great. Rachel, at this point, isn’t the type of kid who wants or needs to be labeled as part of the queer community, and he doesn’t have a lot of LGBTQIA+ friends. One day that might change, but both ways are fine. There is no wrong way to be trans.

And, as I look back over our family’s journey with Rachel, I realize that it’s not our responsibility to make people comfortable with what they hear versus what they see. They hear a girl’s name, they see a boy, and it’s not our job or Rachel’s job to explain that away. Rachel is Rachel. He currently has no interest in changing his name; that’s not true for all trans kids. And that’s fine. There is no wrong way to be trans.

Finally, three years in, I have learned that there is a wrong way to be a parent of a trans kid, and that is to parent with anything but total support. This is going to come easier for some than others. For example, I didn’t have a problem accepting that Rachel was trans. I was caught off guard. I was scared because I didn’t know anything about what it meant to be trans or nonbinary. I didn’t have the answers to a lot of questions that were immediately thrown my way by other adults. (“Isn’t he too young to know?” “Don’t you think it’s just a phase?” “What happens when Rachel hits puberty?”) But I believed that Rachel knew how he felt and went with it.

It was harder for my husband to accept; however, he never showed his skepticism in front of Rachel. He always expressed total support for Rachel, but there was a strain on our marriage until he finally understood that it wasn’t a phase, I wasn’t making Rachel trans, and just because Rachel didn’t talk to him about his challenges with kids at school, that didn’t mean they weren’t happening.

It took almost a whole school year for my husband to finally realize that Rachel being trans wasn’t going away. He needed to do a lot of work to wrap his mind around what this “new Rachel” was, but he did it. He read books. He listened to podcasts. He educated himself. Our marriage healed.

Our journey as parents of a trans kid has come in three phases. Phase 1 was the initial panic, scrambling to figure out what was going on, trying to ignore the anxiety and the small person in my head screaming: “ALERT! SOMETHING IS HAPPENING THAT I DON’T UNDERSTAND!” It was telling school administrators, teachers, family and friends about Rachel’s new pronouns and giving lectures about things we had learned about being trans. It was almost a year of the ground shifting under our feet while we dealt with school bullying and learned how to get ahead of the next obstacle, the next cruel comment, the next ignorant kid.

Phase 2 came when my husband and I were finally on the same page regarding Rachel’s gender identity. This was the time we realized that being trans isn’t the most interesting thing about Rachel — that it is just part of who Rachel is, not all of it. It was a time of establishing normal routines with a heightened sense of a need to protect our son. It was the mama bear period.

Now, we are entering Phase 3: the exploration. Rachel has settled into himself, we have moved on as a family, and little things that are actually big things happen all the time, such as the parent-teacher conference where Rachel being trans was not even mentioned. Phase 3 is where, for the first time, Rachel has found a safe place to out himself. I like Phase 3.

I don’t know what the future holds, but to the parents who are just hearing “Mom, Dad, I’m trans,” know that this is only the first phase of your journey, and that it will pass. Read a book about parenting trans kids, listen to the podcasts, learn. Know that the small person panicking in your head will quiet down and, one day, will probably perform a happy dance when your trans kid does something special and brave, and it makes you so proud that you could burst.

Note: Some identifying details have been changed to protect the privacy of the individuals discussed in this essay.
 
I'm still confused as to what is actually happening in this story. Is this a gayden or a molested boy?
It's Transhausen by Proxy. The mom is an activist who "discovered" her daughter was a They/Them, then a Zane, and now apparently back to Rachel but He/Him (to prove names have no gender and reassert the Kosher tradition of genderbending, or something).

When your 8 year old tells you that they are trans, you tell them "no", if you're a good parent.
What 9 year old kid knows wtf being trans actually is? Something tells me this is the human version of a vegetarian cat i.e. it ain't the cat making the decision.
Apparently this started at age 6, around 2020/2021. What an amazing coincidence that the little girl had fully formed ideas about sexuality, right at the height of the Post-Floyd AIDSfest, that the mom was able to spin into a multi-year freelance writing gig as well as becoming the main character of her synagogue, school system, etc.
 
My 3 year old boy has, today, variously been a doctor, a teacher, a dinosaur and a bus driver. I don't see why "I'm a girl" should be treated with any more credulity.

Give him a rusty pair of scissors and let him setup practice to treat troons. After all identifying as something is more important than actually being that thing to them.
 
The problem is that “puberty blockers” and cross-sex hormones effectively render children fat and docile. Just like getting your dog or cat “fixed”. Look at Jazz Jennings.

We have the ban this barbaric practice and prosecute anyone who does this to their kids. Strip the doctors of their licenses, put the parents in prison, and place the children in homes where they are safe from abuse.

My possibly most schizo belief is that trans kids could never have happened without society first landing on "spay and neuter your pets" as a no-ifs-ands-or-buts idea.

If you love your pet, sterilize them. No, Fido and Fluffy do not need a litter in any way to help them mature, dumbass, just sterilize your pets! Do it because you love them. Do it even when they're little puppies and kittens, it's better that way, takes out the risk. People who don't spay and neuter are animal abusers.

Well, we all know pets are kid-surrogates. The next step was when people started having their first adult pets before marriage and kids, to ensure that people having their first kid had already made the choice to sterilize their favorite creature in the universe out of love.

A depressing number of kids getting these procedures talk about them in pet terms, "getting fixed." And this cultural fixation (pun unintended) means that parents have a way to justify permanent sterilization. It's already something we do to the creatures we love, who depend on us to know what is right.
 
There is no wrong way to be trans.

there is a wrong way to be a parent of a trans kid, and that is to parent with anything but total support

And there it is.
Now bow to them and only show utter devotion and support.
Don’t you dare say they aren’t a true man/woman. There is no wrong way to be a man/woman. Now shut up and let me tell your children about why I’m chopping my tits off.
 
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I am so thankful to God that neither of my boys have any interest in this tranny bullshit, and my oldest thinks it's just as ridiculous and creepy as I do. One of my friends from high school, their oldest boy recently came out as a troon. Of course my friend is doing the whole "I'm so proud and supportive of my beautiful daughter!" shtick, and it's just so pathetic and sad because he's clearly still just a boy who is Autistic and likely just gay.

I had to end my friendship with another friend, because he also came out as a troon. He's not feminine in the least, has never really had anything aside from masculine interests like firearms. He was gay, which was whatever, but when he came out he wrote me a message where he basically said I would need to walk on eggshells around him and watch what I say so as not to "trigger" him. Obviously he only wanted to continue to be my friend if I kissed his ass, "validated" his new "identity", and generally never be myself again in his presence. I told him that in no uncertain terms that I cannot sanction or support his transition and cut ties with him. I know far too much heinous shit about troons and the tranny community, and him trooning out was a bridge too far for me. I have kids and I don't want them being exposed to that or make it seem like I condone it. I could overlook him being gay and a furfag, but not a troon. I guess in hindsight I shouldn't be surprised, and now it seriously makes me question what other sexual shit he was into that I didn't know about. I think it's funny that he's decided to troon NOW when it's no longer the fad of the day and is well on its way to dying out now that more and more people are against it.

It's just all so tiresome, lads. I can't wait for the day when all of society looks back on gender transition bullshit the same way we look at goth and emo kids: as an embarrassing joke.

Trannies will be looked back even worse than being a goth or emo kid in my opinion. Trannies are out here medically destroying children and, in many cases, also sexually abusing them. They'll be lumped in with the same psychos that thought lobotomy was legitimate medical science. The courts are going to be dealing with this for years when more of these people realize how they were groomed into sterilizing themselves but many of the actual fiends involved in encouraging it won't be punished.

When this Trans hysteria is over, don't expect these assholes to backtrack and admit they were wrong.

Just like how much of the populace supported mask mandates and mocked those opposed saying they were not a big deal, nearly all have reversed their position and go about their lives mask free yet will never admit they made a mistake.

Article title: It's Time That We Discuss Amnesty for Parents That Mutilated Their Own Children's Genitals
 
Trannies will be looked back even worse than being a goth or emo kid in my opinion. Trannies are out here medically destroying children and, in many cases, also sexually abusing them. They'll be lumped in with the same psychos that thought lobotomy was legitimate medical science. The courts are going to be dealing with this for years when more of these people realize how they were groomed into sterilizing themselves but many of the actual fiends involved in encouraging it won't be punished.

This is how it will go.

Parents will say "we didn't know, those doctors lied to us and told us our child would die without treatment!"

Doctors will say "we didn't know, those researchers must have fudged their initial favorable results about child transition, we were following best practices!"

This buck-passing will be plenty to clear everyone of negligence except the most egregious cases where the doctors aren't even falling in line with WPATH or similar standards. Anyone who can show they were doing things by the book will be fine.

They'll end up pinning this all on one or two super old/dying/already dead researchers who can be the scapegoat everyone can blame. Whoever they pick to serve in this role won't be in any condition to fight back. If everyone agrees to point fingers at a few specific, seminal studies and their lead researchers, 99.9% of people involved in this stuff can just say "we were misled by fake science" and wiggle out of any negligence or malpractice claims.
 
Finally, three years in, I have learned that there is a wrong way to be a parent of a trans kid, and that is to parent with anything but total support. This is going to come easier for some than others. For example, I didn’t have a problem accepting that Rachel was trans. I was caught off guard. I was scared because I didn’t know anything about what it meant to be trans or nonbinary. I didn’t have the answers to a lot of questions that were immediately thrown my way by other adults. (“Isn’t he too young to know?” “Don’t you think it’s just a phase?” “What happens when Rachel hits puberty?”) But I believed that Rachel knew how he felt and went with it.

A number of adults asked me some important questions regarding my child's future and I just shrugged. My 9-year-old knows best.
 
@Exterminatus the thing is that lobotomy is a legit and valid medical procedure. There are certain extreme cases where it is the only option. They are rare, and it absolutely was overused in the past, but there is still a place for it even today. There is absolutely zero reason to allow sex change surgeries and transitioning in children. If an adult wants to get it done as an elective surgery and they pay for it, whatever. But children are stupid. They don't know what they want at that point in life and cannot make an informed, life-changing decision like that. Shit, when I was a little kid I wanted to be RoboCop. Thankfully I had parents who loved me and explained to little me that it was an impossibility, so that I can have realistic expectations in life. These parents are failing to teach their kids realistic expectations and when their children are grown and their bodies are ruined due to drugs, hormone therapy, and surgical butchery, they will resent and hate their parents for allowing them to do it.
 
OK who knows what the actual fuck is going on here, because "Kate Smith" (obviously and stated up front, not her real name) also published the following article on Huffpost, a little over a year ago:


In May 2021, I sit on the couch, filling out registration forms for my children’s new school. After writing their names, birthdates and addresses, the school wants to know each child’s gender and pronouns: he/him, she/her, or they/them.
I roll my eyes and smile. This is so woke. So ridiculous.
“Hey, Nathan!” I call to my then 9-year-old son. “What do you want your pronouns to be at school? He/him, she/her, or they/them?” I smile as I hear the expected answer ― he/him ― and fill in that bubble.
“Rachel ― what about you?” I ask my then 6-year-old daughter. “He/him, she/her, or they/them?”
She runs into the room, and looks at the form, her brow furrowed as she reads the words.

“They/them,” she says.
I look up at her. “No, I mean seriously,” I say. “She/her, right?”
She shakes her head. “No. They/them.” Then, she runs out of the room to continue listening to one of the Harry Potter audiobooks that have been on repeat since the pandemic shutdown.
I slowly fill in “They/Them” for Rachel, thinking that I can always change it later to “She/Her.”
A month later, Rachel says that she doesn’t want to wear girls’ clothes anymore.
“What do you want to wear?” I ask. “Boys’ clothes?”
“Are there clothes for neithers?” she asks.
I don’t know, but I tell her that of course there are, and ask her what kind of clothes she wants to wear.
“Longer shorts, shirts that aren’t pink. That sort of thing,” she answers.
I learn that if you go on any children’s clothing website, you have your choice of “Girls” or “Boys” clothes. I also learn that long shorts and shirts that aren’t pink are only found in the boys’ section ― girls, evidently, just want to wear short shorts, and pink or purple shirts with sequins on them or rainbows or kittens or witty little sayings like “Girls Just Win.” So, I buy Rachel boys’ clothes, tell her that they are from the neither section, and see her face light up as she tries on her first pair of athletic shorts and a T-shirt without sparkles or some sort of unicorn.
She asks for boys’ underwear, and I tell her that boys’ underwear probably won’t fit her, but that I can buy white underwear that looks like boys’ underwear. This satisfies her, but takes some doing on my part. Again, look online: Almost every pair of girls’ underwear comes with a pattern ― hearts, wavy purple lines, flowers. Most of them are “bikini cut.” So many things that I never noticed before, I notice now. I have to notice now.
August comes, and Rachel asks me to call her “they/them” in public. They say that they don’t feel like a boy or a girl. My husband is not on board.
“Who put this idea into her head?” he asks. “Did you start the conversation? She hasn’t talked to me about it.”
I examine the timeline and feel guilty. I did start the conversation when I was filling out the school forms. I tell him that I think Rachel felt like this before, but didn’t have the language to express it. They’re only 6.
“Fine,” he says. He seems unconvinced.
At school, Rachel goes by “they/them” and wears their “neither” clothes. This does not go well. First graders live in a black and white world, and their classmates ― especially the girls ― don’t know what to do with a long-haired person who wears boys’ clothes and doesn’t seem to have a recognizable gender. Rachel uses the boy’s bathroom or the girl’s bathroom, and their classmates want to know if they are a boy or a girl.
“If you’re not a boy or a girl, then you’re a monster,” one little girl says to Rachel. Rachel comes home and tells me things that have happened at school, but begs me not to say anything to the teacher or school counselor. So I don’t. I do tell my husband.

And so on.
 
If your kid tells you they're trans, you punch them in the face and send them to do laundry or clean the house. Then laugh at them. It's the actual human think to do instead of destroying their bodies for good.

My 3 year old boy has, today, variously been a doctor, a teacher, a dinosaur and a bus driver. I don't see why "I'm a girl" should be treated with any more credulity.
Simple. Your kid thinking he or she is a dinosaur doesnt make you a heroic parent who gets invited to TV shows or to meet the president.

Some time ago, maybe it could have been of your kid memorized all dinosaurs because kids like this were treated as geniuses and the parents were congratulated for it, but now kids are dumb so all they can do to stand out is to say they're the opposite "gender".
 
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