Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it would be pretty difficult for a transgendered au pair. First off, I think this is something that should definitely be disclosed to host families, which might seriously reduce their chances of getting selected. Secondly, it is already hard enough for an AP to move to a new country and make friends and find their way. I think that being transgendered would only make this more difficult.
Why should this be disclosed? In what way do the genitals of an AP impact the host family? If you select an AP who identifies as a woman, do you ask to see her vulva for confirmation?
And why the assumption that trans people automatically have a harder time making friends and going through life? Please check your biases, of which there seem to be several.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I consider myself liberal politically and generous with my APs, but I admit I probably would not take this on knowingly. When I ask myself, why?, its because it seems like an additional layer of complexity that I don't want to take on. If the transition is relatively recent, I'd be concerned that there were lingering emotional challenges, I'd worry that my AP was running away from a less accepting family at home, I'd worry that she would need expensive medical care (hormones) that would be expensive, and that its hard enough to be a young person in a new place and foreign culture without adding any additional challenges to the mix. May be shallow, but that is my honest reaction.
+1. It easy to say you would do it in an anonymous forum and judge other people.
I am liberal and a minority and I know how discrimination feels like but I also understand the complexity of this situation.
I have 2 boys and 1 girl, they are pretty young and for now I only hire female APs. I might be open to BroPair when my kids are older. With that said:
- I will hire a female transgender AP if she is fully transitioned and live as a women 100% of the time. My kids already ask difficult questions about every days stuffs that I have challenge answering, like PP i don't want more layers of complication. When they are older and understand we will have the conversation.
- If the transgender AP has just recently transitioned or it is still obvious they were male, I am not open it, because of reasons I l already listed. Also the emotional stress that come with transitioning and the medical protocol they have to follow.
In order words you could have already hosted a fully transitioned AP without knowing. I don't think they need to disclose that unless they are still transitioning.
Anonymous wrote:I consider myself liberal politically and generous with my APs, but I admit I probably would not take this on knowingly. When I ask myself, why?, its because it seems like an additional layer of complexity that I don't want to take on. If the transition is relatively recent, I'd be concerned that there were lingering emotional challenges, I'd worry that my AP was running away from a less accepting family at home, I'd worry that she would need expensive medical care (hormones) that would be expensive, and that its hard enough to be a young person in a new place and foreign culture without adding any additional challenges to the mix. May be shallow, but that is my honest reaction.
Anonymous wrote:With a liberal family, it may still be a difficult sell. She may run into “it’s ok for someone else, just not in my house.” And it’s a hard no for conservative families.
Anonymous wrote:I think it would be pretty difficult for a transgendered au pair. First off, I think this is something that should definitely be disclosed to host families, which might seriously reduce their chances of getting selected. Secondly, it is already hard enough for an AP to move to a new country and make friends and find their way. I think that being transgendered would only make this more difficult.