Anonymous wrote:I would rather err on the side of being a supportive parent than a parent that rejects their child. Growing up and finding your own identity is a hard process.
My best friend is trans and I think he is a lot happier and at ease living as a man than as a woman. His parents are incredibly supportive of him.
I believe that the percentage of population of people who are gay is around 4 to 5% (it's difficult to get an accurate census since people will lie about it) and people who are transand even smaller population but trans issues are in the news more. Likely because being gay is less and less of an acceptable target for conservatives but they can still pick on trans people to make the Christian conservatives happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I went through a phase of wishing I was a boy, dressing like a boy and cutting my hair short. Thank God it was before the "trans" fad. I grew out of it and I'm a married mother of two.
This complete thing is so overblown and extremely confusing and potentially harmful to children and adolescents.
I agree. It's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:or you could reach out to PFLAG, the gender clinic at Children's https://childrensnational.org/news-and-events/childrens-newsroom/2015/childrens-national-opens-youth-pride-clinic-for-district-lgbt-youth or any number of other resources.
Jut because your child's announcement seems "sudden" to you doesn't mean that it hasn't been well thought out by the child over a long period of time.
Trans kids are at huge risk of suicide and other self-harming behaviors. Family support is a tremendous protective factor.
Whether your child eventually decides to transition or not is less important than whether your child is happy, healthy, and alive.
+ infinity
Anonymous wrote: I went through a phase of wishing I was a boy, dressing like a boy and cutting my hair short. Thank God it was before the "trans" fad. I grew out of it and I'm a married mother of two.
This complete thing is so overblown and extremely confusing and potentially harmful to children and adolescents.
Anonymous wrote: I went through a phase of wishing I was a boy, dressing like a boy and cutting my hair short. Thank God it was before the "trans" fad. I grew out of it and I'm a married mother of two.
This complete thing is so overblown and extremely confusing and potentially harmful to children and adolescents.
Anonymous wrote:I think there are legitimate transgender people (Caitlin Jenner is a perfect example of that) and there is the YouTube generation of "transgender" kids who are most definitely jumping on a bandwagon. If you have a child who watches YouTube, you become acutely aware of how many kids out there find it fashionable. I feel for parents who have to figure out if something is a phase or not. Either way, I assume all parents are trying their best to make the right decision for their child and I feel nothing but compassion for having to make that call.
Anonymous wrote:Just Google detransition stories and you will understand why this transgender trend in teens is so serious.
Kids start taking hormones when they are CHILDREN. This causes IRREVERSIBLE SIDE EFFECTS.
This whole idea that if you don't support a kid who says they are trans by letting them take hormones, etc or they will kill themselves is bullshit.
Most kids who think they are transgender these days are really not. Transgenderism is rare. Most of these kids are often just gay, or confused, or have a host of other issues.