My parents are no longer being supportive

A word from our sponsor:

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My anxiety and depression started to go down a bit when I started taking estradiol several weeks ago and my mom said that was a bad idea. I got my ears pierced and my parents tore into me that it wasn't something I needed and that I should be spending my money on supporting myself. I got my nails done and my mom flipped out that I should be looking for a job and I should be saving for a car and stuff so I can move out.

They are not being understanding, I am not mentally stable enough to support myself right now, I'm not sure my parents are aware of how many times I have seriously considered suicide. I am struggling right now to stay out of a deep depressive spiral that I doubt I could make it out of.

My mom tearing me down is not helping and breaking who I am down to clothes is not helping. I am almost certain now that my mom is the one who told me to wait and I am torn right now between despair and anger and her for her words.

I would be able to survive without their understanding but I'm positive I can't make it without their support.

I'm sure if I tried to take her advice I wouldn't make it 4 years. I'm still not sure I will make it even without that complication, because I am still drowning in despair, that I let her convince me to wait, possibly robbing me of the body I could have had.
Additionally My gender dysphoria is crushing me. I don't know if the hrt I started is going to be enough because right I don't see myself making it until Christmas.

Comments

Please, seek help

Someone who understands YOU and your situation. Someone who is supportive.
Of course, all of us here are, but you need somebody close.

Anne Margarete

Your Shoes

You're asking your mother to do something very hard. Her instincts are to help you avoid pain. To her generation transgender wasn't even a word. She was vaguely aware of Christine Jorgenson and maybe even Candy Darling. If she picked up a psychology book she would read that "cross-dressing" is a mental disorder closely akin to child molesting.

Her mother knew nothing of gender dysphoria. She barely understood that gay people existed. When HER mother was your age the word gay didn't have that meaning.

The world has changed extremely rapidly regarding transgender. I'm sorry if I'm misreading what you've posted, but it seems like your applying standard of your generation to your mother, which is bound to create cognitive dissonance.

You're 26 and living at home. According to a recent study 32% of adults 18-34 live with their parents. Believe me . . . this was unheard of not that many years ago. I'm 68, and when I was a teenager, unless you were going on to college, you moved out at 18 and supported yourself ... period. All of my four children moved out immediately after college. Two came back for short periods of time. At the moment the three of my children who are 18-34 are all living on their own and are self supporting.

I think it's great that so many young people live in multi-generational homes. However, your mother might be applying the standards of her generation to you and might think she is being horribly supportive . . . and because of that support has a right to "mother" you. If that is the case, she is wrong.

I might be all wet on this and if that is the case, simply ask Erin to delete this comment and accept my apology. But . . . from the "peanut gallery" it appears like a failure to communicate due to generational differences.

(Generational difference = knowing what a "peanut gallery" was -- Cowabunga.)

Good luck to you.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I listened to her advice and

I listened to her advice and I waited.
I'm still not sure I will make it even without that complication, because I am still drowning in despair, that I let her convince me to wait, possibly robbing me of the body I could have had.
Additionally My gender dysphoria is crushing me. I don't know if the hrt I started is going to be enough because right I don't see myself making it until Christmas.

hugs :)
Michelle SidheElf Amaianna

Parental advice...

Never worked for me. Almost never. Advice that worked always was my intended course bevore the advice was given...
And... IMO, 1. There is nothing to gain by offing yourself. 2. If things will not improve, you can always do it next year. Repeat untill natural causes will catch up with you :-)
I so far survived 30 years on those 2 principles. And... It is not easy right now, but I have my car, my computer and my broadband connection to keep the world out of my mind :-)
And I understand that dealing with parents _is_ the hardest part. Good luck! Be safe. Be around to load us with your woes!

Congratulations!

I also had good experience - visited my parents and me being a lazy bum and disgrace to the family was not mentioned once! :-)