Social Security

Lee transitioned just about three years ago.  We legally changed his name about a year and a half ago.  But the legal name change was just a court document.  Until that court document was presented to the social security office, most official documents (think bank statements and insurance information) remained under the old name.  This wasn’t a problem in our everyday life.  The schools had changed everything.  Our usual doctors and dentists were able to note their files. Even our pharmacist changed the name in his system.

But on the rare occasion when we had to get blood drawn or see an unfamiliar doctor, I had to call ahead, or whisper to the receptionist, and plead that they PLEASE NOT CALL that name.

Nevertheless, it happened. And every time it did, my child’s eyes widened and his shoulders dropped and he looked at me with pain in his eyes as if to say, “How could you let this happen AGAIN?”

And then, my son would compose himself and lift himself out of his waiting room chair and defiantly walk up to a surprised-looking receptionist or nurse and say, “I prefer Lee.”

I honestly don’t know why it took me so long to get to the Social Security office.  I thought I just didn’t want to sit in that waiting room forever.  But maybe it was a bit deeper than that, and I was in denial.

Today we went.  We gathered our documents and stopped for breakfast and entered the address into the GPS.

When we walked in, we were asked to check in at a kiosk. For about 45 minutes, we sat anxiously on plastic government chairs in a waiting room full of other anxious people in plastic government chairs.  I had forgotten my book, so I did a little people-watching.  An elderly woman had apparently been waiting for some time, and she walked up to the window as someone else left.  It wasn’t her turn.  She hadn’t been called.  A security guard walked over to check in with her, and he kindly and patiently explained that she needed a number.  Even as she insisted she had one, but couldn’t find it, he checked in with the other people in the waiting room.  Does somebody have number 84?  85? As people raised their numbers, he used a little humor, took the paperwork that the woman handed him, and walked over to the kiosk himself.  He got her a number, and handed it to her with a kind smile.  He wasn’t rude or condescending.  He wasn’t impatient.  He went above and beyond to make sure that she was all set before he went back to his post.

It restored my faith a little.  My previous experience with government offices left much to be desired, and watching this interaction full of faith and compassion left me feeling hopeful.

We continued to wait. We played word games and had whispered conversations.  We played on our phones and doubled checked our documents.  And then it was our turn.

We walked up to the counter. There were two chairs in front of a plastic window with a small slit at the bottom for passing papers back and forth. The woman on the other side of the window was older, with long white hair pulled back into a low ponytail. She wore a green shirt and a layered necklace with white and gold beads.  Her face was impassive.  She wasn’t particularly friendly, but she also wasn’t rude.  She smiled one small smile in greeting, and accepted the paperwork I passed under the plexiglass.  I explained that we needed a new social security card because of a name change.  She nodded, conveying that this was something she could take care of.  And then she asked, “What is the reason for the name change?”

I’m not sure why I wasn’t prepared to answer this question.  I hesitated.  In all the official documents, the indicated reason was “common usage,” and as I mentally reached for this phrase, she noted my hesitation.

Then things began to happen in slow motion.  She looked at me first, trying to determine the reason for the pause.  Not noting any apparent cause, she glanced at my child sitting next to me.  Her eyebrows raised.  Her mouth opened ever so slightly.  Then her brow furrowed and she glanced down at the paperwork and back up to me.  I opened my mouth to answer and she quietly interrupted me by saying, “You’re just changing it.”  Definitively.  With a slight shrug.

I felt as if I had watched her surprise and her judgement move across her face and then I watched her wave it away and choose professionalism and compassion.

It wasn’t until that moment that I realized how vulnerable we were.  I had heard horror stories, of course, of name-change petitions denied. But we live in progressive Massachusetts.  We didn’t even have to appear before a judge. We submitted our documents and the courts supported our right to make this decision for our child.

I hadn’t considered that we would still be vulnerable to a clerk at the Social Security Office.  I hadn’t realized the power she would have in that moment.  She could have embarrassed us.  She could have pushed for answers to uncomfortable questions.  She could have scrutinized our documentation, searching for reasons to deny our request. She could have outed my child to everyone in that office.  She could have cited ‘religious objection’ and refused to serve us.

And for a brief moment, I felt the weight of my own privilege.  I had never felt this way.  I had never been afraid that a stranger had the power to publicly embarrass me or judge my choices.  I had never understood what it might mean to have someone invalidate your existence. And the weight of that was multiplied by the fact that it wasn’t MY selfhood at risk.  It was my child’s.

I sat there, focusing on the small beads in her necklace that wasn’t falling quite straight.  I tried not to stare at her as she typed, but I noted each time that her eyebrows furrowed, trying to determine what box to check or what reason to cite in her database.  She slowly copied information from our paperwork into her computer, and her face remained mostly impassive.

I’m not sure if I had been hoping for something unrealistic.  We’ve had so much support in Lee’s transition that I honestly wouldn’t have been surprised if we had a clerk who said, “Congratulations,” or “You’re so brave,” or even just smiled encouragingly.  In hindsight, I think I must have been expecting something like that.

But in the absence of any encouragement or connection, I began to question the decision to bring him at all.  What if this woman said something hurtful?  What if she outed my son?  What if? What if?

I clenched my hands, as if in prayer.  I glanced at my child, happily playing a game on his phone, oblivious to the tension around him.  I tried to breathe slowly and calmly.  I asked God to please let us make it through this interaction without causing pain to this brave, sweet, amazing kid.

The clerk began to pass papers back to me, one at a time.  First the birth certificate.  Then the name change order.  She quietly said, “I just need to get you a receipt.”  She stood up and walked to the back of the office, shuffled some papers, and returned with the same impassive look on her face.  She handed me the receipt and said, “All set.”

“That’s it?” I asked.

“Yes.  You should get your new card in the mail in seven to ten days.  If you don’t receive it by then, you can call this number.”  She circled the information on the receipt.

I didn’t realize I had been holding my breath, and as I finally released it, a single tear escaped my left eye.  I quickly brushed it away, but she noticed.

My voice hitched as I said “Thank you.”  I gathered our papers and hurried away from the desk.  Lee glanced at me.

“Are you crying, Mom?”

“Yeah.”

“Why?”

We crossed the threshold into the summer sun and I hugged him fiercely.

“Because nobody will ever call you the wrong name again.”

“So they’re happy tears?”

“Yes, baby.  They’re happy tears.”

 

 

 

 

Raising These Kids

I had some powerful conversations this week.

In several cases, these conversations started about Lee.  We have specific, important, weighty parenting decisions coming up because Lee happens to be transgender.  Right now, we are one hundred percent comfortable with the choices we’ve made.  He’s a boy. He’s living his life as a boy. Medically, we haven’t done anything irreversible.  He’s taking hormone blockers to delay puberty, but in order to “get our little girl back,” we would just have to change his clothes and let his hair grow and stop giving him the medication.  Early in this journey, I took some solace in that.  Like we were leaving our options open.  But now, it feels like a betrayal.  It feels like I’m minimizing him; reducing his very identity as if it’s just a childish phase.  If you have been on this journey with us, you’ve seen it.  It’s not a phase.  We have a happy, healthy, whole child.  Why on Earth would I want to change that?

But you can only delay puberty for so long.  At some point, we’ll have to take him off the puberty blockers.  And at that point, there are only two choices.  Option A is to do nothing.  Let him develop female secondary sex characteristics.  Of course, I can’t be sure how he’d respond to this, but I can make a reasonable prediction.  Knowing my kid, having been on this journey with him, having talked to other parents and read lots of books and consulted medical and psychiatric professionals, I anticipate that would lead to overwhelming dysphoria, suicidal ideation, and a destroyed relationship with my child. At the very least, he’d go back to being the unpredictable, depressed, self-loathing ‘girl’ he was before he transitioned.  So really, Option A isn’t much of an option at all.  Option B is to administer testosterone.  We can chemically manipulate his body to develop male secondary sex characteristics.  Irreversible changes will occur; deepening voice, body hair, facial hair, broad shoulders, square jawline, male musculature. He’ll be physically and psychologically healthy.  He’ll still love himself.  But he’ll lose his fertility.  He’ll never be able to have biological children.

How do I make decisions about my 12 year old’s future fertility?  Those are not my choices.  They’re HIS choices.  And of course, people will say he’s only twelve.  He’s not capable of deciding what he’ll want when he’s an adult. Right?  Right?

But we can’t wait until he’s an adult.  Do I risk my child’s potential teenage suicide to preserve his ability to biologically reproduce later in life?  Am I projecting my own values on him?  My own fears?

Here’s a secret.  I’m crying while I write this.  It’s terrifying.  It’s huge.  It’s sad. It’s scary.  How can we make these decisions?  As parents, how do we navigate this?

I can’t begin to tell you how often I hear a variation of, “God gave these children to YOU for a reason.”

I don’t believe that parents of LGBTQ kids are especially equipped to handle these kids.  I read stories of children who have been disowned by their parents, attacked by their families, shunned by their church communities… and my heart cracks open.  I don’t doubt that God has a divine plan, and I do believe that terrible things can be the catalyst for amazing good.  But I also can’t subscribe to the notion that God only gives LGBTQ kids to parents who are particularly suited to parent them.

But.  And.  Also…

I do think that some families, some parents, some churches, create environments where kids are allowed and encouraged to be exactly who God made them to be.

I’m pretty confident that we’re going to start our son on testosterone when the time comes. Honestly, a conversation about hormone therapy isn’t comfortable for me with anyone other than my husband, Lee’s doctors, and other parents who have been through it.  I’m not looking for input or advice or sympathy. Of course,  ‘Adult Lee’ would actually the best person to make decisions about his body.  But until he’s an adult, he needs a grown person to use reason and research and love to make the best possible decision, given the information and options available. Nobody knows this child better than his parents.  Nobody loves our child more than we do.  Nobody wants him to be happy and healthy more than we do.  So that makes US the adults best equipped to make the tough choices. When it’s time to decide, it’ll be our family’s decision, and not open for debate.

I’m not writing this to gather suggestions or seek opinions or solicit advice.  I’m writing this because it’s part of a bigger question.  The question that has come up over and over again for me in recent weeks is this: What is my job as a parent?

Following a few conversations, I wondered what the Bible has to say about the topic.  After a quick search, it didn’t really come as a surprise that most references to children (in the Old Testament especially) refer to punishing your kids.  “Spare the rod, spoil the child,” type stuff.

I looked through my Google search results, and one word kept popping out over and over and over again. Discipline.

My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of his reproof, for the Lord reproves him whom he loves, as a father the son in whom he delights.

 The rod and reproof give wisdom, but a child left to himself brings shame to his mother.

 Discipline your son, and he will give you rest; he will give delight to your heart.

 Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline drives it far from him. 

 Discipline your son, for there is hope; do not set your heart on putting him to death.

And as I read these verses (all from the book of Proverbs), I heard my husband’s voice.  I heard a man’s voice.  A man who loves his children deeply, and believes that his primary role as a parent is to discipline them.

But in that moment, as in so many others, I wished that I could turn to my holy book and hear a voice like mine.  A woman’s voice.  A mother’s voice.

The closest is the voice of Jesus himself, in the book of Mark.  “And they were bringing children to him that he might touch them, and the disciples rebuked them. But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, ‘Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.’ And he took them in his arms and blessed them, laying his hands on them.”

This voice connects.  This voice resonates with me.  Jesus appreciates the children for who they are, for what they bring.  He honors them just as they are; not for what they could be or might be.  He doesn’t discipline them or try to change them.  He just loves them.

It is our job to love these children as Jesus loves them. To celebrate them and welcome them and help them to grow into the best possible version of who God created them to be. God has given us artists and writers, musicians, pastors, and politicians. He has given us funny little people.  Or serious ones.  He has given us stubborn people, witty people, shy people, adventurous people, caring people, creative people.  But he has given us PEOPLE.  They aren’t blank slates.  They aren’t empty vessels for us to fill.  They are WHOLE PEOPLE.  They have gifts and passions.  They have identities and talents and personalities.

I believe that our children have been created beautifully, uniquely, and perfectly by God.  God has molded them.  Who are we to try to bend them, twist them, contort them into a mold of our own design?

Don’t get me wrong.  Discipline is important.  But in my mind, discipline is something we TEACH our children, not something we DO to them. I want my children to have discipline, not just receive discipline.

I believe it is my job to TEACH my children.  I am tasked with teaching my children love and respect.  I need to teach them how to treat others.  I need to teach them life skills and manners and kindness.  I need to teach them how to respect others and how to behave in a way that will earn respect in return. I am given the responsibility of instilling values and teaching them how to behave in accordance with those values.

Of course, we need to teach them how to behave.  But there’s a difference between trying to teach our children and trying to change them.

Our attempts to change who they are will be fruitless.  No matter how much you believe that your bookworm needs to play football, you can’t turn him into a natural athlete by sheer force of will.  Anyone who has ever tried to get a reluctant reader to happily curl up with a book on a sunny afternoon will understand the futility of trying to change WHO our children are.  Can you manipulate behavior?  Sure. You can make your kid sit and read for an hour.  But you can’t make him enjoy it.

You can get your child to take swimming lessons, but you can’t make him love the water.  You can prohibit your daughter from dating girls, but you can’t control who she’s crushing on.  You can make your son wear dresses and long hair, but you can’t change who he is on the inside.

My children were given to me, entrusted to me, by a God who already made them perfectly.  Their energy, their athleticism, their musical or artistic talent… those things are already in them.  Their enthusiasm, their love of animals, their sense of humor… I would never dream of taking those away from them.

In the same way, I can’t fathom a desire to change their sexuality or their gender or their infinite capacity for love.

My children show me who they are each day. They are growing and learning and ever-changing.

So what’s my job as a parent?

My Bible tells me my job is to teach them, to discipline them, to “train them up in the way they should go.”

My heart tells me it’s to help them become the best version of themselves, just as God created them.

But as usual, the most powerful message comes from Jesus himself.  What do I need to do?

Love them.

It’s that simple.

 

 

 

 

Camping

I’ve been camping all my life.  Not ‘hike through the woods to the top of a mountain and find a place for your tent’ camping… More like, ‘rent a square where you can legally set up a tent in a pre-designated spot near public bathrooms and showers’ camping.

Camping as a kid was vastly different than camping as an adult.  As a kid, we rode our bikes around the campground, made new friends, and experienced a level of freedom that wasn’t allowed at home.  We swam in the lake and bought junk food from the camp store and stayed up as late as our parents and played with fire.  It was awesome.

Camping as an adult is still awesome, but in a totally different, labor-intensive sort of way.

Preparing for camping is intense.  You literally have to pack every single thing you might need to care for a family. First aid kit?  Check.  Bathing suits, towels, underwear?  Check. Spatula?  Soap?  Salt? How about actual SHELTER?  Because you’ll need to pack that, too.  Games, matches, stove, pots, bowls, utensils… it’s an endless, mind-numbing list.

And that’s not even considering the FOOD.  Not only do you have to plan meals that can be prepared on two burners and a fire pit, but you have to pack all of the things that typically reside in your kitchen cabinets to help you complete this task.  Foil.  Oil. Butter.  Garlic.  Onion powder. Paprika.  Whatever.

Preparing for a camping trip is NOT a vacation.

And of course, the chances are, if you’re camping, you’re bringing your children. There’s an article somewhere in the Onion, I think, entitled, “Mom Spends Beach Vacation Assuming all Household Duties in Closer Proximity to Ocean.” The first time I saw that, I practically spit out my coffee.  Because, of course, if one’s children are ALSO on vacation with you, you don’t get a vacation from parenting.

But the cool thing about camping is that you can revert back to your PARENTS’ style of parenting. Remember?  1970s and 80s parenting?  You can send your children out to play and explore and basically not worry about them until they return looking for snacks.  You can let them be dirty without judgement because you’re camping, for goodness’ sake!  You can feed them hot dogs and potato chips for three days straight.  You can let them start the fire, because they’re learning a LIFE SKILL, goddamn it!  And all the while, you can sit by a fire with your choice of adult beverage and some friends because day drinking is encouraged at a campground.

I obviously enjoy camping, because we keep doing it.  I kind of enjoy that it’s a little bit of a challenge.  It’s like a test to see if I can remember all the things.  And if I forget something, it’s a challenge to see if I can improvise.  No pot for the beans?  Put the can on the fire.  No wine opener?  This screwdriver should work.   Short a pillow?  Roll up a towel.  And if that doesn’t work… If you forgot it, chances are, you can do without it. Camping is also a humbling exercise in realizing how much stuff you don’t actually NEED.

The best part about camping is that it really does help people connect.  Nobody remembers everything, so you rely on your friends. You borrow and lend without any sort of tally in your head because you’re all in this together.  You see each other’s sub-par parenting and campfire cooking fails and dirty pajama pants, and you love each other all the more. You don’t have the fallback of watching a movie, so you play games and sing songs and make s’mores.

And if the sun goes down at 8, you can spend a couple hours drinking and laughing by the campfire and still be in bed by 10.  That’s my kind of vacation.