Only you can say when enough is enough.
Your mom seemed supportive a few months ago. It seemed like she was finally getting it. Why the turnaround? If you got her alone, would she revert? Is it your father's influence? Did something happen between then and now to make her shift?
This is a big change for them, too. Right now, they're probably feeling like failures. Their "little boy" who they raised to be a "good man" is telling them they fucked up. That they didn't do what they thought they were doing. There's a reason transitioning is so hard, not just on the person, but on the family and friends around the person. You're having to screw up everyone's perceptions and force them to re-evaluate their own lives and where they fit in their lives.
Give them some time. Remember that they're grieving the "loss" of their "son," and it's going to be much the same process as if you were dying. Suggest a counselor to them (yours probably has some great recommendations, and they should NOT be seeing her unless it's family therapy). Send them some reading material. Books are good, even if they're ones intended for children. They aren't automatons and you can't expect them to immediately accept you without some drama and angst.
In the meantime, you have my number and my email. Feel free to send me messages whenever, to vent or cry or what-have-you.
Your mom seemed supportive a few months ago. It seemed like she was finally getting it. Why the turnaround? If you got her alone, would she revert? Is it your father's influence? Did something happen between then and now to make her shift?
This is a big change for them, too. Right now, they're probably feeling like failures. Their "little boy" who they raised to be a "good man" is telling them they fucked up. That they didn't do what they thought they were doing. There's a reason transitioning is so hard, not just on the person, but on the family and friends around the person. You're having to screw up everyone's perceptions and force them to re-evaluate their own lives and where they fit in their lives.
Give them some time. Remember that they're grieving the "loss" of their "son," and it's going to be much the same process as if you were dying. Suggest a counselor to them (yours probably has some great recommendations, and they should NOT be seeing her unless it's family therapy). Send them some reading material. Books are good, even if they're ones intended for children. They aren't automatons and you can't expect them to immediately accept you without some drama and angst.
In the meantime, you have my number and my email. Feel free to send me messages whenever, to vent or cry or what-have-you.



Love ya.
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