Anonymous wrote:They’re 12. Friendships change. Even if her friend weren’t trans, the friendship may have changed or ended as they get into middle and high school. I’d start by pointing out those things.
I have a trans son. It’s hard for him to be close to early childhood friends sometimes because a lot of “girly” activities they did stemmed from him trying to fit in and do “girly” things to appear to be more feminine. A lot of that felt unnatural and sometimes even painful for him, so being with those friends and trying to recreate those bonds and activities brings back uncomfortable feelings. It isn’t anything the friends did, it’s just the circumstances. Also, reminiscing can be tricky because the memories come from a time when he wasn’t being his authentic self, and he’s not ready to relive those memories or look at photos of himself as a girl.
As the friend’s interests have changed and he feels open sharing them, your DS needs to realize that while the friend participated, he probably felt like that a lot over the years when they were doing lots of “girly” things. She can participate in what the friend wants or not, but he may not be open to doing feminine activities. It’s not so much that he feels like he has something to prove, but it’s more like he’s been conforming for so long, and now he’s free to explore the other side, so the pendulum has swung the other way. Eventually he’ll probably find some balance.
I know she’s 12 and everything revolves around her, which is normal for kids that age. However, this isn’t her life changing event, her trauma to live through, or her emotional crisis. She’s a supporting player from last season who’s possibly making a guest appearance this season. Being upset that she wasn’t allowed to be part of the transition is overlooking everything he experienced during the transition and makes it all about her instead of the friend. Sometimes being a supportive friend means stepping back while someone goes through a crisis.
Also, she’s probably mourning the friend she lost, rather than being able to celebrate the person who came out on the other side. It’s normal and natural to mourn that loss, but that person was a character the friend was playing and now he’s being his authentic self. Your daughter might not enjoy being good friends with him as much as who he used to be, and that’s okay.
It’s awesome that she wants to be supportive, she just needs to remember it’s about him, not her.
I disagree that " it’s about him, not her" -- basically the trans friend has not been a good friend and ditched someone who has been a good friend. It would have been thoughtful for the trans friend to make some sort of contact. Even to communicate that he was changing schools. I think both kids deserve to be treated kindly.