Anonymous wrote:OP: I would like to hear what therapists and other resources you have found. I have a teen who is wondering whether he/she is trans or cis, but wants a therapist who isn't going to push or presume in either direction, just be open to the questions.
That's exactly what I am looking to find! I wish my teen was still wondering, but the public persona is that this is what they are. I'm hoping there's still some uncertainty, because if my child is open to exploring a little further with a therapist, I can feel more confident that it's for real and not social influenced or trying out things and seeing where they fit in.
Op again: Finding a therapist seems tricky. psychologytoday.com allows you to put in what you're looking for, and even spits out therapists. But it's hard to tell if the therapists are just checking boxes to maximize the chances of getting a new patient or really are knowledgeable and/or specialize in that topic. At this stage, I'd like the therapist to be covered under insurance as well, so there's that limiting factor. So how to find one? I don't really know. The place we used for a few months, I explained the issue and what we were looking for, but it seemed the therapist, although having worked with one or more trans individuals before, really wasn't that well versed. We weren't discouraged and the limitations weren't explained to us. I called another place recently, and also explained the situation. This place seems to have younger therapists, and they have different types of degrees. (the first therapist was a LCSW.) Don't know if it's better, or just different. Yeah, I have no magic solutions. So then there's waiting lists. We're waiting for a spot at a new place, we'll see how long that takes. We were offered a spot at 4 on a monday, which would have been great except that's when my child has an after school activity, so any other day of the week would have worked!
I also finally got through to Children's National Medical Center's gender and sexuality development program. They have an extensive packet to fill in before they will offer an appointment, and a waiting list to boot. We're not in DC, so distance is a problem, but the appointment seems to be for a 2 hour evaluation of the child - are they trans? What actions would they suggest? and if you aren't located locally, they will suggest resources where you are. So I want to get that filled out because I feel any help would be good, if not for my child then for me.
Good luck! This is a hard thing I think for a parent to help a child with. I know in my day I wasn't typically female, but it would have never occurred to me to think trans - did we even know what that was? Who knows today...