Family can be such a pain, am I right? Thanks for coming to my TED Talk.
I feel like I'm always at odds with my family. They're split into various groups: most of my mom's side, my dad and stepmom, my sister's family, my stepdad's family, my aunt and her wife and kids, my aunt's wife's family. I interact differently with each one. Most would probably say they know a quiet, reserved person. This has essentially been me keeping my head down until I'm no longer around them. I hardly see or speak with most of them. Every few weeks I'll talk to my parents on the phone, try to talk with my aunts and the twins more, and my siblings it's every few months. Most, been years.
Either way, the picture they have is so tiny that it feels like talking to them, being more open with them, shouldn't be relevant. I should be able to keep my head down any time we interact, rare occasions those are. But eventually I'm going to see them again, and eventually that's going to be far enough along that they're going to notice things are different about me. And also it's probably immature to think hiding myself is a long-term plan.
But where do I even start? I mean, did they even realize I was unhappy? I feel like I was good at keeping things from them, better than with people I interact with more frequently. I've seen people whose families came around because they saw how much happier and psychologically healthy the person is after they've stopped hiding themselves, but I don't know if that's the case. I've kept so many of them at arm's length.
So I'm like, do I start by seeding out that things are wrong? Do I say "I'm starting to look into therapy about gender, anxiety, (insert whatever else)", essentially pretending I'm earlier along than I am? Blasting it across Facebook is probably a bad idea, but I've seen people do that. I just don't know where to start. I'm sure a letter going "I knew something was wrong back when ..." It comes off as a dear john letter. I don't want to approach them remorseful about this, but I feel like much forwardness is going to have blowback. Or that any approach is going to go poorly, weeeeeee.
tl;dr I don't know how to come out to my family in a way that can be amicable to both myself and the people I'm talking to, but not doing so is giving me increased anxiety.
I feel like I'm always at odds with my family. They're split into various groups: most of my mom's side, my dad and stepmom, my sister's family, my stepdad's family, my aunt and her wife and kids, my aunt's wife's family. I interact differently with each one. Most would probably say they know a quiet, reserved person. This has essentially been me keeping my head down until I'm no longer around them. I hardly see or speak with most of them. Every few weeks I'll talk to my parents on the phone, try to talk with my aunts and the twins more, and my siblings it's every few months. Most, been years.
Either way, the picture they have is so tiny that it feels like talking to them, being more open with them, shouldn't be relevant. I should be able to keep my head down any time we interact, rare occasions those are. But eventually I'm going to see them again, and eventually that's going to be far enough along that they're going to notice things are different about me. And also it's probably immature to think hiding myself is a long-term plan.
But where do I even start? I mean, did they even realize I was unhappy? I feel like I was good at keeping things from them, better than with people I interact with more frequently. I've seen people whose families came around because they saw how much happier and psychologically healthy the person is after they've stopped hiding themselves, but I don't know if that's the case. I've kept so many of them at arm's length.
So I'm like, do I start by seeding out that things are wrong? Do I say "I'm starting to look into therapy about gender, anxiety, (insert whatever else)", essentially pretending I'm earlier along than I am? Blasting it across Facebook is probably a bad idea, but I've seen people do that. I just don't know where to start. I'm sure a letter going "I knew something was wrong back when ..." It comes off as a dear john letter. I don't want to approach them remorseful about this, but I feel like much forwardness is going to have blowback. Or that any approach is going to go poorly, weeeeeee.
tl;dr I don't know how to come out to my family in a way that can be amicable to both myself and the people I'm talking to, but not doing so is giving me increased anxiety.