Guarded

Parenting this week was Hard.  Capital H hard.  There was yelling and eye rolling.  There were tears and accusations.  Awkward silences and dirty looks.  Long letters and heart-to-hearts.  

I don’t like to disclose too much about my kids without their permission- that’s why you don’t read a lot about Bea.  She’s intensely private.  She guards her heart with a formidable wall.  

And sometimes that wall is fortified by a powerful offensive.   There are soldiers perched on the top, shooting daggers at anyone who dares to come too close.  

That’s me. 

 I’m always a little too close.  I’m a little too pushy and a little too affectionate and a little too engaged.  I’m too much of everything that she needs but doesn’t want.  I’ve had the blessing of watching small chunks fall from that façade over the years that she’s been here, but I always want her to be more open, more trusting, more honest and vulnerable than she’s capable of.  

Parenting is hard. Parenting a teenager is harder.  Rumor has it, parenting a teenage girl is hardest.  But parenting a teenage girl who didn’t grow up feeling safe and loved and cared for? A child who hasn’t always been yours, and hasn’t learned to trust or love without holding back?  Someone who doesn’t believe in forever because she’s never seen it?  It’s beyond hard.  It’s heartbreaking.  

This week, after the latest argument, I hit a wall.  I was feeling defeated and sad and helpless.  I kept wondering if I was really doing her any good.  If she hates it here and doesn’t trust me and doesn’t think I care about her, then what am I accomplishing? 

But some advice came at the perfect moment.  A colleague (who happens to be a specialist in human behavior) reminded me that we lash out at the people closest to us.  

She’s not nasty to other people.  She’s grateful and sweet and affectionate.  And I often take that so personally.  WHY is she so good to everyone else?  Why is it that I get the anger and the frustration and the tears from her, when I’m the one who has welcomed her into my family and given her safety and stability and unconditional love?  

And therein lies the answer. 

What am I accomplishing? I’m giving her someone to trust.  I’m the safety net and the sounding board and the receiver of all things awful… not because she doesn’t trust me, but because she does.  

She’s a kid.  She’s a kid who has had a difficult life.  I don’t need anything from her.  I don’t need her adoration or her gratitude or her sweetness.  I’m fine. I’m a grown-ass woman.  

I will insist upon respect. I’m not a martyr.  But if she needs someone to receive all of that hurt and anger; someone who says they’re not going anywhere and keeps their promises; someone strong enough to walk right up to that wall and get hit again and again? 

Well, that’s me, too. 

Letting Go

I went to church today, mostly full of nerves because I play in the bell choir, and today’s anthem pushed me just slightly beyond my comfort zone as a musician.  I was focused on the song, and the ringing, and the counting. I was rehearsing in my head as a family entered the sanctuary.  They were there to baptize their twin daughters.  Those little girls were gorgeous and innocent and wide-eyed in their frilly white dresses.  I cried. 

Those moments take me by surprise and they take my breath away.  I was crying because I remembered Lee’s baptism.  The frilly white dress.  The white patent leather shoes.  The little flowered headband that wouldn’t stay where I placed it.  The baby smiles and the baby eyes and all of the dreams and hopes that I had for this child… they flooded my memory and my emotions went into overload.  

What moment is more beautiful and hopeful than the baptism of a baby?  On that day, we imagine the most inspiring version of what we hope for our children.  A loving community.  A strong faith.  An abiding hope.  A future full of ups and downs, of course, but hopefully more ups.  The love of family and friends and community and God. 

And there I was, overreacting to the baptism of children I didn’t even know.  I stepped out of the sanctuary.  I found a safe place to cry in the church kitchen, with friends who held me as I felt all of the emotions that I so rarely allow myself to feel. And even now, I feel guilty writing about it.  I have nothing to grieve.  I have a son to celebrate and honor and love.  I have a happy, healthy, thriving child who is growing perfectly into who God created him to be.  

So I wiped away my tears. I snuck back in to the sanctuary, and sat in the last pew with a friend who just happened to be there.  I got there just in time for the sermon.  And my pastor delivered the exact message that I needed to hear.  She spoke about letting go.  Letting go of expectations and grief and fear.  Letting go of our children when it’s time.  Releasing our tight grasp on certainty and security and taking a leap of faith towards the path that we’re meant to travel.  My friend held my hand through the prayers and handed me a tissue as all of those bottled up emotions squeezed out through my closed eyes.  

Lee’s baptism dress still hangs in the back of my closet.  It’s the one clothing item I wouldn’t let him give away.  I’ve been hanging on to it; holding tight to a memory that’s so tightly interwoven with the hopes and expectations I had for my child. Those tears and that sermon and that beautiful baptism helped me to see that I need to release them.  I have photos and memories, but that dress and those expectations?  I need to let them go.  

After the service, I sat in the pew, reflecting for a moment on the emotions that had flooded me.  And this amazing child walked in and rolled his eyes, and with his most exasperated voice, he smirked at me.  “Mom, were you crying in church AGAIN?” I wrapped this growing young man into a hug, and I was overwhelmed with love and pride and gratitude for the gift of being his mom.  I’m going to hold on tight to that, and let all the rest go.  

Safe Folder

Do you know that parents of trans kids are advised to have a ‘safe folder’?  This is a file containing the documents that would be necessary to defend your family in court, should it ever be needed.  Included in the file, it is recommended that we have: 

– relevant doctor’s notes

– a letter from a therapist

– character references from teachers, pastors, or community leaders (or preferably all of the above)

– documentation of any medical or mental health treatments or concerns

– photos, artwork, report cards (showing a happy, well-adjusted kid)

– copies of legal documents (name change, passport, birth certificate, social security)

The purpose of this file is to prove your fitness as a parent should you ever be accused of neglect or abuse for supporting your child’s gender identity. 

The need for a file like this terrifies me.  

I like to think that I’m relatively safe here in liberal Massachusetts.  But there are families all over the country who get reported to CPS (child protective services) or DCF (department of children and families) for ‘brainwashing’ their children into ‘being transgender.’  There are families all over the country fighting in court for the right to support their children.  

I can’t even type that without seething.  

I think I need to back up a step.  

*************

I have some pretty well-intentioned people in my life who have referred me to articles reporting parents ‘forcing’ a gender transition on elementary-aged children.  These articles, if taken at face value, are upsetting.  They paint a picture of a parent pushing an agenda.  They talk about medical transitions occurring as young as 7 or 8 years old.  They talk about lax standards of care. They talk about kids who change their presentation in different circumstances.  

I read these articles and I cringe.  I cringe because they play on our tendency to believe the worst about each other.  They paint a partial picture intended to engage our fears.  

Incompetent medical professionals? Scary.  Irreversible medical transition for a 7 year old?  Frightening.  Adults manipulating children?  Terrifying. 

So, please.  Stay with me for a minute while I reframe this story for you.  While I don’t personally know the families referenced in these articles, I do know families whose stories parallel these.  This story could easily have been our own, had I been married to a less amazing man. 

Imagine: 

A young child, aged 4 or 5, self-harming.  Beating her head against the wall.  Saying things like, “I hate myself” and “I want to die” and “Something is WRONG with me.”

Parental searching. Therapists.  Counselors.  Maybe medication.  Maybe not. 

A child who seems sometimes happy and sometimes so, so incredibly sad.  The reason is never clear.  

Overreactions to small things that don’t make sense.  A ponytail. Tights.  Pink icing on a cake.  

Marital discord. Nobody can fix it.  Each parent blames the other.  She’s too lenient.  He’s too harsh.  

An epiphany. This child declares, “Actually, I’m a boy” or asks, “When will I grow a penis?” or proclaims, “I just don’t FEEL like a girl.”

One parent (let’s say it’s the mother, for argument’s sake) embraces it. She’s figured out what the problem is.  The search begins for a solution. 

The other parent (the father, again, simply for argument’s sake) rejects this idea.  

Mom researches.  She finds support groups.  She finds a doctor and a therapist familiar with the issues at hand.  She buys new clothes and starts using new pronouns.   

Dad turns to church. He’s told he can fix this.  He needs to teach his child how to behave. He needs to reinforce appropriate behavior and punish inappropriate behavior.  He needs to stop coddling.  

The child is aware. With dad, the child conforms to gender norms. With mom, the child experiments.  Both parents are convinced that they are right.  

Eventually, the differences become too much.  The parents can’t agree.  They separate, and then divorce.  The courts are involved.  A media circus ensues.  

What gets reported in the media depends on the source.  

The liberal news will tell you:

– the conservatives hate transgender people

– the father is rejecting his child

The conservative news will tell you:

– the liberals are providing medical transitions to 7 year old children

– the mother is brainwashing her child

Even as I acknowledge that there are two sides to this, you know where I stand.  I chose to support and affirm my child.  I made my decisions based on research and faith and grounded in love and I don’t regret them for a single second.  

But the truth is:

This is tough stuff. We’re in uncharted territory in a lot of ways.  We need to remember that we are not alone. There are transgender adults who have travelled this path.  We need to listen and learn from their stories and those of their families.  There are doctors and researchers and therapists who have been in this field for decades.  We have much to learn from them, too. 

None of us knows everything. If your first reaction is to reject something because you lack knowledge, please… pause.  Educate yourself.  Just because you don’t understand something, doesn’t mean it’s not real.  

If the answer to a complicated issue seems obvious, it’s probably oversimplified and designed to play on your emotions.  Consider the source of your information.  

Nobody is providing cross-gender hormones to a seven year old.  I promise.  If you’re really interested you can do some research about puberty blocking medication and gender affirming care and hormone therapy.  There are lots of options, but none of them involve irreversible physical changes before puberty.  

ALL parents are making tough decisions.  Every day. Grant each other a little grace. Instead of making accusations or assumptions, ask thoughtful questions.  

All of us are beloved children of God.  ALL. OF. US.  

********** 

In all of this, I think what scares me the most is how quick people are to judge.  

Given the stories I’ve heard and read, given my own experience as a parent, it would be naïve to say that we don’t need a safe folder.  Because you never know.  Sometimes people who appear to be supportive are not.  Sometimes, people’s fears overwhelm their grace and they attack what they do not understand.  Sometimes, parents disagree so fundamentally that their story becomes a cautionary tale. 

******

It took me a couple of days to get around to writing this post. The catalyst was an old friend’s comment on an online article.  It wasn’t addressed to me.  But I reacted.  I vaguely responded to this friend online, but then decided I didn’t really have the energy to engage.  Deep down, I was afraid.  This person once meant a lot to me.  Even all these years later, I can’t shake the desire to maintain that relationship. I wanted to prepare what I would say, and I needed to brace myself for the loss of a friendship if it didn’t go well.  

And as I sat with all of that, as I mentally rehearsed a conversation and composed a hypothetical response, I had a chance to chat with my son.  

He opened up a little. He’s 13, so that’s becoming more the exception than the norm.  He talked about the peers who constantly ask if he’s a boy or a girl, and then ‘correct’ him when he answers.  He shared a story about the kid who wouldn’t park his bike ‘next to a tranny’s bike.’ He vaguely mentioned the kids who won’t let him join the boy’s table at lunch and those who snidely ask, “Who invited YOU?” when he rides downtown after school.  

For the most part, this kid doesn’t complain.  He knows that some people just don’t understand; he sees that some people are judgmental.  And sadly, he accepts that there will always be people who see him as ‘less-than’ simply because he is trans.  

On one hand, I’m proud of his strength.  I love that he doesn’t rely on others to establish his self-worth.  I want him to be resilient and aware and confident.  

But then he broke my heart. He said, “Mom, I’m just afraid that it’s never going to get better.  There’s always going to be transphobic people.  In high school.  In college. When I get a job.”

He talks about wanting to go ‘stealth.’  He could just start over in a place where nobody knows he’s trans.  But there’s fear involved there, too.  Because secrets can’t be contained forever, and there’s danger inherent in hiding your truth.  

I listen to him and I marvel.  I am amazed by this child.  He is thoughtful and kind and creative and strong. 

The guilt comes in waves. I had been feeling afraid and overwhelmed.  Afraid of what?  Losing a friend I haven’t talked to in decades?  Overwhelmed by what?  The possibility of someone arguing with me?  

And I realize that… EVERY DAY…. my amazing son laces up his high tops and slips into his hoodie and enters a reality so much more intimidating than the conversations I avoid. He doesn’t have the luxury of choosing when to engage.

So I’m trying to learn from him.  I’m trying to be braver.  I’m holding on to hope for a future for him that is so much brighter than the one he imagines.  I hope you will help us create it.  Until then, I just have to keep sharing our story and loving my children and protecting my family.  

Excuse me while I add the doctor’s note to our ‘safe folder…’

Grace

 I’ve set a writing goal.  One blog post a week, plus another thousand words that I don’t post.  This is week three.  

The thousand words I don’t post come pretty easily.  They’re not necessarily focused or organized.  They’re a bit rambly and full of emotion and they pour out of me.  

But the blog posts? They’re hard to write on a deadline. Because my best posts come from an emotional place.  They come when I’m going through something that I need to process or share or work through.  But it’s got to be just the right thing.  It can’t be something too sensitive.  It can’t be something too raw or recent.  

I’m realizing, as I write this, that I don’t post anything that I’m even a little ashamed of.  I’m inspired by Brene Brown’s work on shame and vulnerability, and her perspective has helped me be a little more authentic. But none of us likes to be judged. 

When I write online, I am open to sharing some pretty raw and vulnerable stuff; partly because I know and trust most of my readers, but also because, deep down, I’m pretty proud of what I share.  

I’m proud that we brought Bea into our family; I’m honored to be a part of this loyal, strong, smart young lady’s life.  I’m proud of Lee and who he is; not only his identity, but his artistic talent and his sense of humor and his inquisitive mind.  I’m also proud of the way our family has supported him. I’m proud of Cal’s quick wit and kind heart. I’m proud of my stepsons; their loyalty and their work ethic and their willingness to shift their beliefs and expectations to make room for the changing dynamics of a family.  I’m proud of my musical, handy, impulsive husband, who is the reason anything big ever gets done around here.  

I’m proud of this chaotic, messy, beautiful life we’ve built.  And even when I’m sad, or frustrated or lonely or afraid … I can tell you that, too.  Because it’s real, and honest.  

But it’s hard to share shame.  When you know you were wrong.  When you know you didn’t give your all.  When your negligence or laziness or messed up priorities led to someone getting hurt.  

And what I’ve learned about all that is that it isn’t necessarily the EVENT that’s so hard to deal with.  It’s a reconciliation of yourself.  It’s figuring out what to do with a juxtaposition that has you questioning your own identity.  If you believe yourself to be an honest person, and you did something dishonest… what do you DO with that?  Do you blame others?  Pretend it didn’t happen?  Hide under your covers?  Give up and become dishonest always?  

If you consider yourself to be responsible, but you made an irresponsible choice, the hardest part is figuring out who you are now.  Are you still the person you thought you were?   

It is in this vulnerable place where I find my faith to be so valuable.  If I can convince myself, in that agitated state, that I am loved and beloved, JUST AS I AM, then I can find the next step.  

I can look at who I am and who I want to be and know that, even while I am improving, I am still whole and valued and loved beyond measure.  That’s the power of faith and forgiveness.  

I think it’s easier said than done.  I think it takes a lot of mental and emotional work.  But it’s so worth it.  We do it for our kids, right?  Think about it.  We don’t tell them they’re BAD KIDS.  We tell them that they’re GOOD KIDS who made a bad choice.  We tell them that we love them no matter what and that we’re going to help them make better choices.  

That’s what grace is. So today, I’m going to extend myself a little grace.  I hope you will do the same.  

Pronouns

I’m working on some longer pieces of writing.  I’m trying to tell the story of our family, but I’m struggling.  How do I tell our whole story without messing up Lee’s pronouns? These stories go back in time, to moments when I experienced this child as a girl.  

Have you seen him lately? He’s not a girl.  I was wrong.  So how can I look back and use the wrong pronouns?  Wasn’t it Maya Angelou who said, ‘When you know better, do better?” Well, I know better now.  

Early on in his transition, my husband and I fell into this habit of switching pronouns.  We were okay in the present… but how do you talk about the past?  There was a point where it felt like two different kids; the girl-child and the boy-child.  So we spoke about them differently.  

In the first few months, there were also times when we did a cost/benefit analysis.  I’m a little ashamed to say that there were times when I used the wrong pronouns because it was just easier.   A customer or a former neighbor or an old acquaintance from high school would ask, “How’s your daughter?”  I would mentally calculate.  Should I explain?  Is it worth it?  In the grocery store aisle or at the gas station or in passing at a party?  “She’s fine,” I sometimes replied, to save myself the time or the aggravation or the emotional investment of an explanation.  

But over time, that little white lie, that dismissal of my child, that choice of convenience over honesty became more than I could handle.  The little white lie felt bigger and bigger. It wasn’t okay to negate my child’s identity for my own comfort and convenience.  And that’s what you do when you knowingly use the wrong pronouns.  I couldn’t do it anymore.  It felt wrong.  

I got to the point where I could quickly correct people.  “Actually, it’s Lee now.  HE’s transgender.”  It happened at the bank and at PTO meetings and at backyard barbecues.  The more comfortable I became with my child’s transition, the easier it was for me to smile, state the facts, and move on.  

You know what else? The more I learned, the more I researched and talked to other parents and doctors and therapists, the more confident I became.  I knew better, so I could do better.  I worried less and less about how people would respond, because, quite frankly, I didn’t care. 

My job… my first priority… is to love my kid.  Misgendering him for convenience or comfort?  That’s not love.  That’s betrayal.  My son will get enough betrayal out there in the world.  He’s going to deal with a lot of tough stuff.  There will be a lot of people making weak excuses for their poor behavior and treating him like his existence is an inconvenience.  

I’m not going to be one of them. 

There’s something else that has changed since those early days of struggling with pronouns.  It’s a little hard to explain if you haven’t been through it, but I liken it to learning a new language.  At first, when you learn new vocabulary, you think the word in your native language first.  Mentally, you translate.  There is a brief pause between the thought and the speech as it passes through a mental filter.  When Lee first changed his pronouns, my speech slowed.  Every time I was about to say the words ‘she’ or ‘her,’ there was a tiny pause.  Is this the right word?  Nope. Adjust.  

During those early months, I messed up pronouns everywhere.  My brain was adjusting to this new filter.  I misgendered my dogs and sisters and my students, because my brain was SO hesitant to use female pronouns. I couldn’t trust myself to automatically use the right word, so I overcorrected.  

It happened slowly, so I can’t pinpoint the moment… but I no longer do that.  My THOUGHTS are happening in the new language.  Mentally, I’ve categorized Lee as ‘male.’  I THINK of him as male, so the pronouns come automatically.  

Lee has been living as a boy for more than four years now.  He LOOKS like a boy.  He ACTS like a boy.  His friends are boys.  If you met him in town, you’d never know.  

Yet, he still gets misgendered.  

Of course, he gets misgendered by peers; the ones who mock him or harass him or intentionally exclude him. That’s a separate issue, and one that we (unfortunately) have to deal with.  

He also gets misgendered by family.  That is accidental.  Nobody does it on purpose.  But the family members who make mistakes are the ones who don’t see him that often. They probably have more memories and associations with a female version of this kid… and so they slip.  I know it’s not intentional.  I know they’re trying.  They just haven’t yet gotten to the point where they actually think of him as male.  They’re still translating. 

He sometimes gets misgendered by teachers.  There’s this one teacher who sometimes slips and uses the wrong pronouns.  He’s not malicious toward my kid.  He corrects himself.  But what’s fascinating about this is that this teacher NEVER KNEW a female version of my kid.  So why the mistakes?  It makes me wonder what he really thinks about trans people.  In his mind, is Lee a girl pretending to be a boy?  Is he still mentally translating, because he actually, deeply believes that Lee is female?  

I hate that I have to wonder about these things.  

And, so, back to the original question.  What do I do about the pronouns?  The ones that tell the stories of our past?  I guess I’ve known the answer all along.  I’m not sure why I’m asking all of YOU.  What I need to do is simply ask Lee.  Because after all, it’s HIS story.  

Sewing

Probably about 10 years ago, my mom gave me a sewing machine.  I think she might’ve found it at a garage sale.  Or maybe she just had it lying around and never used it.  I don’t recall exactly.  But she remembered that I made curtains for my first apartment, and she thought I might want a sewing machine.  

I DID want a sewing machine. Or maybe more accurately, I wanted to be the kind of person who uses a sewing machine.  So I eagerly brought home a gently used Singer.  

That sewing machine has been in my spare room, my basement, my garage.  It’s been all over the house.  But it’s never actually been USED.  

I guess that’s not entirely true.  About five years ago, my husband and I took it out to try to sew new boat cushion covers. But we couldn’t figure out how to wind the bobbin.  We also realized we’d need heavy-duty needles and probably more sewing experience than NONE to make those cushions actually happen.  So we covered the torn cushions in pretty layers of red duct tape, instead. 

And the sewing machine got relegated, once more, to the basement.  

Recently, I was looking at a bunch of dingy, flattened throw pillows on my couch.  I love throw pillows.  But every time I buy them, I cringe at the price tag.  Why are pillows so freaking expensive?  They’re fabric squares stuffed with fluff!  

Then, of course, I tell myself, You can make pillows.  How hard can it be?  I remind myself, You made those curtains.  And they were almost even!

And I so desperately want to be the kind of person who sews, that I pick up a few fabric squares and I carry my Singer up from the basement.  This time, I watch a few bobbin-winding videos on YouTube.  I realize that the bobbin needs to turn COUNTER clockwise, and it feels like I’ve solved the problem.  Until I break the needle.  

It took a few more videos and a trip to the store, but GUESS WHAT?  I made a pillow!  I actually made TWO pillows.  Maybe they’re not store-quality, but they didn’t come out too bad!  

A few days later I hemmed a curtain!  

I’ve got big plans now, guys.  Pillows! Tablecloths!  Curtains!  Dog bed covers!  I’m pretty sure I am now capable of sewing lots of square and rectangular things.  

But aside from my obvious bragging, I have another reason for sharing this with you.  I think, sometimes, as we get older, we get stuck in our routines. We know what we’re good at, and we do those things.  We’ve already defined ourselves.  

You are either ‘a runner’ or ‘someone who doesn’t run.’  A ‘muscian’ or ‘not a musician.’  Creative. Funny.  A writer.  A fitness buff.  Or not. 

And then, slowly but surely, we shrink to fit our own definitions of ourselves.  We forget the joy of learning something new.  And guys, it is so freaking fun to learn new things! 

My challenge to myself this season is to keep growing.  Keep learning.  Keep trying new things.  I’m trying to stretch myself beyond my own vision of who I can be.  I know that I am a teacher, a reader, a mother, a musician…. I’ve been all of those things for so long!  

But I can be more.  I can be SO MANY things!  I’m taking a writing class now.  I’m learning so much, and loving every minute of it.   And with the help of a great technological advancement called YouTube, I feel confident that I will eventually be able to sew things that aren’t square!    

With a little bit of effort, I am going to become an author, a person who sews, and maybe even a woman who can curl her own hair.  The sky’s the limit! 

Will you join me? What have YOU always wanted to learn? 

Injections

So, if you follow my blog, you probably know that Lee started testosterone back in April.  It was a big step for him (and for us), and was accompanied by much celebration and good-natured ribbing. 

“Is that a moustache I see?” asked his dad on day two.

“Yeah, but I’m still the only one with a penis,” remarked a smartass brother. 

“Wait.  Is that an actual muscle?” teased an older sister. 

The testosterone we chose was administered in patches.  They basically looked like big round band-aids, with a bubble in the middle that slowly released medication into his bloodstream throughout the day. 

Shortly after he began, we noticed changes.  A slight broadening of the shoulders, a squaring of the jaw line, a lowering of the voice.  Increased agitation and moodiness.  Some of this was clearly the testosterone.  Some of it was typical teenage behavior… maybe enhanced (or maybe not) by the newly administered hormones. 

But after a few months, we were a little disillusioned.  The patches frequently fell off.  They caused skin irritation and were easily forgotten in the hustle and bustle of a typical day.  They couldn’t be applied before or after a shower.  They often stuck to the sheets at night.  

To me, all this simply seemed like the price we had to pay for an easy, painless administration of a necessary medication.  

But my son thought differently.  At camp this summer, he spoke with some of his transgender friends.  These kids insisted that injections were more effective and worked more quickly (this rumor was debunked by our doctor).  But these kids also managed to convince my needle-phobic, fainting-prone son that a shot was actually quite simple and pain-free. 

At our next appointment, he asked the doctor about trying weekly injections instead of daily patches. To say I was hesitant would be an understatement.  I had watched this child faint after a blood draw.  He would have a full-blown panic attack when he had to get a shot at a well-visit.  I once caught his clammy head before it hit the floor in a doctor’s waiting room; he had just had an injection.  That was right before he threw up. 

So when we talked to the doctor, my doubt was apparent.  But she encouraged us to try it anyway.  “Sometimes they surprise you,” she whispered to me, knowingly. 

We agreed to order injectable testosterone, continuing with the patches until the new medication arrived. The doctor gave us the name of a mail-order pharmacy in Oregon, where we could get a full year’s worth of medication without insurance for about $80.  A local hospital pharmacy could bill over $1200, with our co-pay nearing $150 per MONTH.  

We were lucky to be working with experienced medical professionals who were able to point us in the right direction.  If you’re navigating this for the first time, I STRONGLY suggest you explore several different options for your medication, as the cost can vary significantly between sources.  

We ordered the medicine, and it arrived at our doorstep within a week, complete with needles and syringes and alcohol wipes; everything we would need to do at-home injections. A few days later, we packed up all of this paraphernalia and brought it to the gender doctor, so the nurse could teach us (read: ME) how to inject testosterone safely and efficiently.  

The steps seemed easy enough; the nurse demonstrated each part of the process, and Lee was a champ. He was super anxious and near tears until the nurse said, “All done!”  His eyes widened and a smile broke out and he proclaimed, “I didn’t even FEEL that!” 

 Once the nurse had completed the actual injection, then I had a chance to practice with a silicone bubble and an empty syringe.  I felt like I might be capable of this, after all.  

Before we left, the team offered to have us come back in a week, so I could complete my first actual injection with support and supervision.  I really liked that idea, but it seemed a little extreme to drive two hours to have a nurse WATCH me do the injection.  When I got home, I called our primary care doctor, hoping for a more convenient solution. 

Our pediatrician has been incredibly supportive throughout Lee’s transition, and my hope was that a nurse in her office might be willing to provide this service for us.  It would save me a few hours of driving and provide tremendous peace of mind.  After a bit of initial confusion and a few voicemail messages, I got to speak to a nurse who assured me she’d be happy to help us out.  

While I was grateful for her agreement, I was also a bit skeptical about her motivation.  In my experience, most medical providers haven’t had a chance to work with actual transgender people.  And while they are well-intentioned and interested in learning, I often feel like my child is being used as a guinea pig; for educational or research purposes.  They seem more intrigued and enthralled than capable and professional.  

So when we walked into our pediatrician’s office, I felt a combination of relief and wariness.  The nurse called us into a room in the back, and I clutched my bag of syringes and needles, trying not to let my child notice the nervousness that I felt.  The nurse was encouraging and friendly and obliging.  She brought in a second nurse to help and my radar went up.  There’s no way we need two nurses to WATCH me do a shot. Why were they both here?  To see something they’d never seen?  Just to lay eyes on the trans kid?  I was skeptical.

Ultimately, my fears were unfounded.  Regardless of why they were both there, they walked us through the process with encouragement and professionalism and a few helpful hints.  They were kind and enthusiastic and helped the experience go smoothly.  

In the months since, Lee and I have become an impressive injection team.  He’s no longer nervous and he handles it like a pro.  I’m still learning, but each time gets a little better. Lee gives me feedback.  “That time it stung.  I think we needed to let the alcohol dry longer.”  “Today it hurts a little.  I think maybe the angle was too deep.”  “Mom, that was the best one yet!  It didn’t hurt at all!”  

And much to my surprise, the injections ARE easier than the patch.  There’s less to remember and less chance for something to go wrong. There’s less reminding and less worrying and less chance that he’s forgotten or lost his medication.  

But there’s something else, too.  Although the administration is easier than I thought, there is something that’s harder. Maybe harder is the wrong word.  More intense, perhaps?

When my kid was wearing a patch, it was easy to forget (or ignore) the fact that we are administering a drug that will change him.  While the effects were not reversible, the patch itself somehow felt reversible.  It was a sticker.  A band-aid.  We could take it off or stop it at any time. 

And of course, we still can. But with these injections, this choice feels more intentional.  Every time I fill a syringe, I need to be confident in our decision to manipulate his hormones. 

I look at this young person, growing up, and figuring out who he is… and my emotions go haywire. He’s going through so much.  He’s so strong.  What will his life be like?  Will he ever regret this decision?  Will he ever resent me for the choices I made on his behalf?  Of course I question myself.  I think that’s the hallmark of a good parent.  We all want to do what’s right for our kids.  And most of the time, we can’t be one hundred percent sure of what that is.  

I don’t really know the answers.  I can only have faith.  I am diligent and observant and prayerful.  I trust in God and I trust my child, and I know that I am making the absolute best choices that I can with the information that I have.  

And at night, when he crawls into bed and sleepily confesses, “Mom, I don’t know what I’d do without you,” my heart swells.  He tells me he didn’t really know how lucky he was until he talked to friends whose parents were unsupportive.  He tells stories of kids stealing or trading or sourcing illegal testosterone.  He tells me that this medicine is saving his life. 

I choose to believe him. 

Summer with teens

I haven’t written at all this summer.  When I write, I want to be grateful.  I want to be optimistic and centered and I want to conclude with an answer.  I write to process my thoughts and to work through problems.  But this summer, I keep thinking and trying and processing, and I still can’t find a resolution in my mind.  

Overall, it wasn’t a bad summer.  I mean, I went to Jamaica with my girlfriends, for crying out loud.  The two youngest boys both went to sleep away camp for a week.  We went camping with friends, spent time on the beach, and this weekend, we’re headed to the lake house for our annual trip.  

But summer is always hard for me.  I crave the structure of the school year.  I do better with routine.  I accomplish more when I have deadlines and limited time frames.  So summer always leaves me feeling like I should have done more. It gives me too much time to analyze every decision and leaves me with guilt about all the lazy days.  

The solution to this has always come to me in the form of scheduled fun.  Beach trips.  The zoo. Swimming.  Fishing.  Sleepover parties.  Bonfires. Camping.  Until this year, those things have been my saving grace.  They always made me feel like I was making the best of the summer days.  If I wasn’t accomplishing WORK, at least we were accomplishing FUN. But things are changing. 

Teenagers are so freaking hard.  Their emotional roller coaster becomes YOUR emotional roller coaster when you spend too much time with them.  And the mood swings leave me reeling and raw.  

We went to Old Orchard Beach- we spent one night in a motel, after picking up Lee from camp, and on our way to drop off Cal.  Bea wouldn’t go near the water.  She sulked on the shore, occasionally throwing a blanket over her head to check her phone.    

We went camping.  Lee just wanted to lay in his tent and listen to music. S’mores?  Swimming?  Ping Pong? Nope.  

We planned a day at Canobie Lake Park.  Cal was thrilled to go.  Lee was ambivalent but whiny.  Bea was miserable and vehement.  And that left me with a choice.  Do I make them all go?  Do I risk ruining a lovely day with my youngest with bitching and moaning from the older ones?  Will I regret it if I let them stay home?  I let them stay home.  I regretted it. 

Every day, over and over again, I have these choices.  Should I be loving and kind?  Joke them out of it?  Tell them it’s not a choice?  Yell at them to snap out of it?  Let them sulk, knowing they’ll eventually get over it?  I do all of these things, but none of them ever seems like the right answer. I don’t know what the right answer is. 

They have a few things to do every day.  Chores. Reading.  Math practice.  And then they have to spend a few hours out of their bedrooms and off of screens. You’d think I was having them tarred and feathered.  It’s freaking exhausting.  

Then I think about all the things I SHOULD do.  We should do more family game nights.  I should get them back on a schedule to cook dinner.  I should stop yelling.  I should start yelling more.  God.  I don’t freaking know.  WHY IS THERE NO MANUAL?

I keep trying things. There are new rules now.  Rules about screens and family time and laundry and chores.  When they’re lazy or sneaky, I’m doing a new thing.  I used to take stuff away (no screens, no phone, you’re grounded). Now, every time they make more work for me, I’m adding a chore for them.  Didn’t do your laundry this week?  Today, you’ve got to do yours AND mine.  Left dirty dishes in your room again?  Today, ALL the dishes are your job.   

I’m writing this today because I need to know I’m not alone in this.  PLEASE tell me that the rest of you with teenagers are navigating this rough new territory with me.  

I’m finally back in therapy. I need some freaking therapy in my life.  I think we all do, really.  But you know what my therapist asked me last week?  She wanted me to tell her what I had planned just for ME.  And you know what?  I couldn’t answer.  Manicures? But I’ll take my daughter. Camping?  With kids and friends.  A party?  That I’m hosting for my husband.  

I’ve come to associate fun things with family things.  And maybe with teenagers, that’s just unrealistic.  Maybe what I need to do is worry about them less, and worry about me just a little bit more.  

It feels selfish to write that.  Selfish, but honest.  

I didn’t realize I was doing it, until my therapist pointed it out.  But when things get crazy and I have to pull back or change plans or cancel something, I always cancel the thing that’s for ME.  Because that’s the thing that feels frivolous or selfish or unnecessary.  This summer, I cancelled a motorcycle ride with a friend and bailed on book club with my girls.  I said no to lunch with a colleague and did my toenails at home instead of getting that pedicure.  

Part of that is probably because I feel guilty about that Jamaica trip.  That was the ultimate in selfish indulgence. But looking back, it was good for me.  It was good for all of us.  

There’s a lesson in there somewhere.  Put on your own mask before you try to help others, or some such gem.  I’m not sure I’m qualified to write about that one just yet. But I’m going to work on it.  I promise. Wish me luck. 

Ripples

Lee starts camp on Sunday.  It’s a sleep-away camp for transgender kids, and it was a godsend when we first found it.  Lee spent his first week there when he was just barely 10 years old, and I was afraid that he was too young to be away from home for that long.  He had been living as a boy for a little less than a year.  Looking back now, that seems so long ago.  This year, he’s going for two weeks.  He’s got lots of friends there, and he’s no longer one of the little kids.  It’s still a godsend, but in a ‘this-place-is-part-of-who-you-are’ sort of way.  

And that shift? That change in perception? It’s just one tiny piece of our puzzle.  It’s just one small example of how things that were so scary and so unfamiliar have become part of our beautiful, new ‘normal.’  

When Lee first came out, my understanding of what it meant to be transgender was limited and biased and riddled with stereotypes.  I was confused and scared and afraid that I was going to do this all wrong.  I reached out to a friend; the only person I knew who I thought might be able to help me understand.  She did even better.  Much to my surprise, she put me in touch with another mom who was going through the same thing.  That night, I cried to this stranger on the phone.  She listened and encouraged me and affirmed my feelings and she made me feel less crazy.  She gave me advice and assured me that, in fact, I was totally capable of supporting my child and adapting to this new parenting twist.  

I had gone from feeling totally alone and ill-equipped to having a new friend and confidant and purpose… in only a few hours.  I was shocked and relieved to find that there were other parents like me and that there were ways to find and connect with them.  I attended PFLAG meetings.  I did a ton of research.  I joined Serendipitydodah for moms on social media.  I discovered Facebook groups for parents like me.  I researched GLSEN and GLAAD and began attending conferences like First Event. I found a great therapist, who was as much a resource for me as she was for Lee.  I read books. So many books.  

And along the way, we shared our story.  Some of these disclosures were planned and thoughtful, like our ‘coming out’ Facebook post or the early blogs on this site.  Some were nervously anticipated conversations with family and friends.  Some were public speaking events at our church or conferences.  All were sanctioned and supported by Lee, because it has never been my story to tell. But then there were the awkward ones. The parent I ran into at the grocery store who confused my children and asked about my ‘daughter’ while HE was standing right there.  The visiting neighbor who asked my boys what happened to their sister.  The family members who wondered if it was because ‘she’ wanted to be ‘just like her older brothers.’ 

In most of these situations, I was able to use what I had learned to clear up a misconception or educate someone I loved.  

I’ve never been an advocate or an activist in the way that some other parents are.  I know amazing moms who have entered public debates and sat with public officials.  There are parents who are meeting with senators and representatives, petitioning for equal access and rights, who are out there really FIGHTING for our kids. Sometimes I feel guilty that I’m not more actively involved in advocacy.  Sure, I volunteer for an occasional phone bank or shift petitioning in a park, but I’ve always been a little afraid of putting my kid in a bigger spotlight.  

Early on, I questioned the decision to publicly ‘out’ our child.  While he had transitioned in school, and lots of classmates were aware, he could also ‘pass’ as a boy in unfamiliar public spaces.  I know plenty of families who ‘go stealth’ and keep that private information private.  Telling his story was certainly a risk.  But so was keeping it secret.  Ultimately, we let Lee lead the way on this one.  He was proud of his transition.  He’s proud of who he is… and so are we.  As a family, we’re out and proud.  And it was a good decision for us.  We received a ton of support and mostly, people who disagree have kept their opinions to themselves. 

At first, I was glad we told our story because I saw how it impacted Lee.  I saw how he was able to be himself and own his story.  Which is not to say he hasn’t endured hate or bigotry. He’s in middle school.  He knows kids talk about him.  He sometimes feels judged.  He sometimes feels angry or sad or confused because of it.  But what he doesn’t feel is shame.  This kid is not ashamed of who he is.  He’s not hiding.  

And isn’t that what we want for all of our kids?  We can’t protect them from everything.  We want them to have ALL of the emotions, even the negative ones, so they learn how to deal with them before adulthood.  We want them to be comfortable knowing that not everyone will like them.  Not everyone wants to be their friend.  But your people?  They’re out there.  And you will find them.  

Recently, I’ve begun to understand another benefit of Lee’s pride.  You see, what happens when you share your story, is that people listen. People connect.  It happened slowly at first.  Our pastor at church advised a woman to come and talk to me when she found out that her grandchild was transitioning.  A friend suggested to another friend that he read my blog.  A parent asked if she could pass along my contact information to a cousin/sister/friend.  

And before I knew it, I had become a resource. I was now the first phone call for a confused mother, trying to process that her son was really her daughter.  I became the colleague that people approached for clarity on question 3.  I was the writer whose description of parenting trans kids got shared over 2,000 times… because people going through it could really CONNECT.  I began to feel as though I had come through to the other side. 

Which of course, isn’t true. There is no OTHER SIDE of parenting.  There’s just a new phase.  And then another.  And another. 

But this phase became comfortable.  Maybe I didn’t need to do more advocacy.  I was obviously making some impact.  Telling our story was helping people.  I saw the effects.  

And just when I thought I was fine with that, some more amazing things happened.  

I found out that my aunt had printed out a blog post and anonymously left it in the teacher’s room where she worked.  She wanted to clear up some misconceptions she had heard.  And it worked.  There were thoughtful, respectful conversations at the lunch table that day. 

A close friend began working with her company to create more inclusive policies.  She explained to me that Lee was her inspiration when she talked to her colleagues.  

The school changed their policy about segregating kids by sex. 

A friend had a conversation with her fifth grade class, who wanted to understand what it meant to be transgender.  Thanks to Lee, she was able to explain. 

A gentleman at church proudly donned a transgender flag sticker in support of pride month. “Thanks to you, I know what this one means,” he said.

A friend contacted me recently with a link to a podcast that she thought Lee and I should hear.  We hadn’t talked in a long time.  It was nice to connect, and she sent me a long text. In it, she explained a little about her job.  She, too, was working on improving inclusive practices, especially around gender-related concerns in a healthcare environment.  She wrote this: “I want you to know, and tell Lee, that every time we are working through something that could be problematic, I think to myself, ‘How would that make Lee feel?’ or ‘How would that make Amy feel?’ If it’s anything less than terrific, it least me to my next question, ‘What would make Lee feel affirmed and supported in this situation?’”

Guys, I cry every time I read that.  Do you see what’s happening here?  Do you see how our stories have the power to make things better for all those who come after us?  This friend has met my amazing child only a handful of times.  The last time she saw Lee, he was probably 9 years old and just beginning this journey.  But she has held this kid in her heart and kept him on her mind as she makes decisions that impact SO MANY PEOPLE.  

Sometimes it’s scary to tell our stories.  Nobody likes to feel vulnerable.  But it is exactly that vulnerability that allows others to connect with us.  

That vulnerability and the bravery to share it?  That is what changes the world.  

I know there are other parents out there, just at the beginning of this journey.  Please know, that no matter how you choose to navigate this, there will be ripples. If you start with “I love my child” and let love be your motivation (not fear… never fear), those beautiful, rainbow ripples will reach farther than you can imagine.  

Adrenaline

I never really thought of myself as an adrenaline junkie.  As a kid, I was a straight A student who was super involved in my church. I played piano and worked as a waitress and babysat to make a little money.  

Of course, like many of us, I look back at some of the stupid things I did in my teens and early twenties, and I thank God that my bad decisions didn’t have lingering (or lethal) consequences.  

Yeah… I did some dumb stuff. In high school, it was illegal bonfires and lying to my parents about where I was spending the night.  Parking with my boyfriend to ‘check out the view’ from the mountain lookout.  Dancing in the Denny’s parking lot at 2am.  Camping in the woods with kids I had just met.  

In college it was frat parties and spring break trips.  It was stumbling home drunk and pizza at 3am. It was smoking cigarettes and venturing out on the railroad bridge at Letchworth State Park, praying a train wouldn’t come through.  

https://fingerlakes.fandom.com/wiki/Letchworth_State_Park?file=Letchworth_rail_bridge.jpg

In my twenties, the big risk was moving to a new city by myself.  I made a new group of friends and found myself hosting late night house parties, making out with strangers in bars, and cliff jumping at the quarries on the North Shore.  I got my motorcycle and loved the rush of scraping my knees against pavement around a tight turn.  

But somewhere along the line, little by little, the risks began to change.  I fell in love.  Got married. Had babies.  Bought a house.  All risks, but a different kind.  

Over the last few years, we’ve gone through a couple of new jobs, our son’s transition, and bringing our foster daughter into the family.  We fought through a rough spot in our marriage and some tough times financially.  There were a lot of adrenaline-inducing events. 

But recently, things have calmed down.  I no longer feel as if I’m preparing for a battle.  We’re all doing well.  And instead of being relaxed and grateful, I find myself missing something.  I think it might be the adrenaline.  

Don’t get me wrong.  I have zero desire to jump off a cliff or go camping with strangers. But I also know that my natural tendency is to hang out squarely within my comfort zone. 

The thing is, there’s JOY in my comfort zone.  There’s friendship and security.  There is laughter and fulfillment.  This life that I have?  It’s pretty great.  It’s full of date nights and book club and bedtime stories; family dinners and church gatherings, guitar lessons and movie nights; good friends and camping trips and family vacations.  

So when I find myself missing SOMETHING, my first tendency is to dismiss my own yearnings.  What could I possibly need?  I’m not 23 anymore.  I’m incredibly blessed.  

But the more I ignore that inner voice, the more persistent it becomes.  And eventually, I have to spend a little time listening to myself. For me, that just means I need to notice the places where I’m stuck.  I need to notice what’s become too comfortable and remember that even a beautiful path traveled too frequently becomes a rut.  

I know what I like. So it’s easy to stick with it. Date night?  Let’s go to the usual place!  Family vacation?  We love camping!  Need some girl time?  Book club every third Saturday! 

But maybe the easy choice is taking the place of the more fulfilling choice. Sometimes the harder thing is the more rewarding one.  That doesn’t mean I need to get a tattoo or go sky diving (although they’re both still on the table). I might need to try a new restaurant.  Volunteer for a new cause.  Make plans with a friend I haven’t seen in a while.  I might need to turn off Netflix and write a little bit. 

At this point in my life, my adrenaline comes from socializing, from creating, from trying something new.  My motorcycle is still an important outlet, although I’d rather feel the wind in my face than my knees on the pavement. 

I’m not a kid anymore. I don’t need to take stupid risks to feel alive.  I don’t need to do something dangerous to get a little rush.  When this beautiful life of mine starts to feel like a well-worn path, I just need to step into the woods, notice the birds, and smell the flowers.  I have to be mindful of the things that make me feel like ME and remember to do them.