The author of this piece is known to Mamamia but has chosen to stay anonymous.
It has been a year since I gave my 11 year old child my consent to change her name.
I imagine that most parents would think changing the name they chose for their baby would feel like a very big deal, but at the time it was the lesser of the many concerns I was desperately working to wrap my mind around.
You see, my daughter didn’t just want to change the name that was on her birth certificate. She wanted me to see her as she saw herself, and acknowledge that her gender wasn’t the same as the sex the that she’d been assigned on the first day of her life, and which had been printed in black ink on that same document, ‘MALE’.
Last year I chose to finally really hear her, I chose to believe that she knew who she was, that she knows herself better than I do, and better than the doctor who looked between her legs at birth and said ‘It’s a boy’. I needed to trust that she knew her gender identity in the same way her identical twin brother knew who he is. I had slowly come to the realisation that I never questioned or doubted him in knowing he was a boy, as his sex aligns with his gender identity – so there was an obvious double standard in the way I responded to them.
Top Comments
I'm sorry, but I do feel your child does not belong in the girls dorm, the locker room or change room. I applaud that staff member that asked her to change in the staff toilet. These children are all so young and don't need to be seeing her change. As a parent I would not have allowed my daughter to go to these events if your child was allowed to be considered a girl. I believe your child is trans, and that transgender people are not mentally ill, but I also believe that as a parent, I should be able to choose for my child, if your child's gender "issues" get shoved down my child's throat or not. I also know that my child would not at all be comfortable sleeping, changing or toileting with someone who is physically a boy, and shouldn't be forced to.
Luckily in Australia your attitude and actions would be illegal. You better stay in Texas with Trump.
As the parent of a child who transitioned to male at 15, I wouldn't be comfortable with you or your child anywhere near us. Your lack of comfort doesn't mean anything to the parent of a transgender child, they are too busy supporting their child to worry much about you. In my journey it was a case of " get on board or get out" - so that solves your dilemma of having something shoved down your throat when you don't educate yourself about being transgender and keeping you and your child in your bubble.
The blind bigotry of people who refuse to see being transgender as simply a way of being makes it hard for those of us who advocate every day.
Guest, It freaks me out to know that there are actually people who think like you.
This attitude seems to me that it's not your child who would have difficulties it's you who can't understand transgender and you don't want to have to discuss it with your child. You are putting adult prejudices onto your child.
You are a brilliant Mum xx