Hi all! I’m a trans woman who’s known since I was a kid. My classmates brought up the topic of being trans once in class, and I remember mentioning my desire to “maybe become a woman when I grow up”, as I put it. I can’t remember the reaction clearly, but I must’ve been pretty put off since I didn’t attempt to talk about it for quite a while after.

Fast forward to me being about 14. I get a deep episode of dysphoria and instead of hiding away like I usually would, I go to my mother, entirely pale in the face. We talk a bit in private and the only thing I can get out of my mouth is that I don’t feel like a boy. She takes it as me not feeling like I live up to the gender norms and tries to solve that. Meanwhile I can’t keep talking. My brain stops producing words at all and I just can’t say anything.

This happens a lot of times over the years every time my mother asks me to buy new clothes for myself, every time the same complete shutdown. I really just want to continue working this out, and I’m in desperate need of new clothes, since I haven’t bought any in years. I hate buying men’s clothes, but if I continue boy-moding when I go back home, I’d have to buy new ones.

Thank you for reading this, whoever you are. I’m running on practically no sleep so I apologize if this is wordy, or unclear in any way. I just need to be done with this.

  • Mouselemming
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    6 months ago

    As a cis mom who came here from All, I agree with the suggestions of writing to your mom. If you want to email or text, type it out, make all the changes you think you want, and send it to yourself first. Then you’ll probably have another edit or two when you read it. After that you can copy paste it into a message to her and send it. Then it’s only fair to give her some time to figure out how to reply to you. A delay isn’t necessarily a bad sign, it can mean she’s trying to find the best words to show support and love. And since she’s gotten the wrong end of the stick already, it’s going to take her a minute to wrap her head around how wrong she was. She may still fail you. But at least in writing you both give each other the space to complete your thoughts.