Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guessing you live on a coast and have a loving home. This is normal for tween and teen girls now. It may last, it may not. It didn’t for my DD. She is an older teen now, only dates and talks about boys and never mentioned it again. So absolutely you said all the right things and it’s great to be supportive but unfortunately there is an epidemic of gay and trans “coming out” in girls of your daughters age.
You are correct (coast/loving home). Interesting to hear regarding so many kids coming out.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a school counselor who has talked to dozens of students, male and female, about this over the years. It really makes no difference how they self identify at this juncture, what matters is that you tell them you love them and appreciate them sharing their feelings with you and that it’s also ok to try on different identities until they find the one that feels right, as sexuality can change over the course of a lifetime. Oddly enough, some kids are upset when their parents are too lackadaisical, as it feels momentous to them. It’s a tough line to walk, trying to convey unconditional love, respecting them as knowing who they are, while also explaining that sometimes it’s an evolving thing, and treating it with some gravity while not overreacting. Anecdotally, I will say that many middle schoolers wonder about their sexuality, and while quite a few end up being straight, some are not, and so it never hurts to err on the side of assuming they are lgbtq and being clear that it doesn’t matter to you who they love. And OP, you did great.
Anonymous wrote:Agree that it is great that she feels like she can say this to you OP. But at age 11, I would gently explain to her that what she is likely feeling for these girls is admiration, rather than a "crush" in the way that she may think of boys. I would be concerned about an 11 year old who had a concept of sexual feelings either way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many girls have always had crushes on both girls and boys at that age, it's just that no one talked about it or labeled their experience. Assure her she is perfectly good the way she is, and that people grow and change over the course of their lives. Between now and around 20+ she will figure out who she is.
+1. She is not "coming out," OP. Please don't use that term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guessing you live on a coast and have a loving home. This is normal for tween and teen girls now. It may last, it may not. It didn’t for my DD. She is an older teen now, only dates and talks about boys and never mentioned it again. So absolutely you said all the right things and it’s great to be supportive but unfortunately there is an epidemic of gay and trans “coming out” in girls of your daughters age.
+1 - except I am not convinced it's confined to the coasts. A friend of mine related a similar story from Texas.
Anyway, both my daughters -14 and 10 - are in the middle of this. My reaction is similar to yours. While I would not say this to them when they are sharing their personal feelings with me because I will accept them no matter what, I have injected into the larger discussion that I think this is a part of figuring out growing up and they don't have to commit (for lack a of a better word) to what they are feeling right now.
To be honest, I simply don't believe this huge portion of the youth population is gay, bi, pan, trans. I'm glad that kids can come out with acceptance that they might not have had a generation ago, but I think it's also a trend right now as much as anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Many girls have always had crushes on both girls and boys at that age, it's just that no one talked about it or labeled their experience. Assure her she is perfectly good the way she is, and that people grow and change over the course of their lives. Between now and around 20+ she will figure out who she is.