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Sasha Aguilar's avatar

My son did desist six months ago and I worry about him being pulled back in, although less so as time goes on. I’m trying to make sure he has built up more resilience through working, talking about life challenges, and “what if” conversations. I had to be very careful about sharing the documentaries and podcasts. I wanted him to get there on his own, because part of this is the adolescent’s biological imperative to pull away from the parent and become independent. I had to be so careful and strategic. I watched cult documentaries last year. Sometimes he would watch them with me. I discussed my lifelong fascination with cults and my need to understand how people get indoctrinated. He was fascinated too.

There were so many moments where I thought there might be a breakthrough or a loosening of the fixed mindset. It did all come apart a few months after his 18th birthday. We had a big fight in the car and he said that I would never accept him as a trans woman. I answered that it would always be difficult, but that if he waited until he was 25 I would be so much more willing to accept his choice. I lost my temper and yelled at him. “You are 18! 18 year olds make terrible decisions all the time that haunt them for the rest of their lives! I can’t stop you. You have to make the decision. If Kaiser prescribes you the hormones without question, so be it. I am not responsible for your choices. You have not actually talked to or listened to any of the detransitioners to understand their perspective and experience. You want to jump in without having done your own research or had real life experiences. You haven’t even had sex yet! You don’t understand how this will impact your possibilities for love, romance, and sex for the rest of your life! Life is scary. It’s all scary. But hormones are big. You might as well tell me you’re going to take heroine because it will make you feel better. Yes, it will. For a minute. You are free to “duck” up your life. I’m done. I’m so done!” I marched out of the car.

Two weeks later he had gotten the blood work to get the hormones. Three weeks later he went back to they/them and his original name. A few days after that he doubled down into she / her. And three days later it was over. He told both of us, his mom and dad, “don’t tell me you told me so. I want to be a boy again”. If the relief for me was huge, it was enormous for our son. He is relieved of the burden of acting and pretending. He’s comfortable in his own skin and in his slouchy boy clothes. He’s socially active, has taken up his former interests in cars, in hiking, and Magick the Gathering. While he’s been taking a gap year since graduating high school, he got a job, made some new friends, and he applied to go to college for next year and got in.

There is hope. It was a long waiting game and I felt like everything had to be planned in advance, a chess game. We have to try all the things: building family memories and surround with unconditional love, homeschooling or gap years, dropping truth bombs with the podcasts, getting them away from social media, and maybe a good dressing down mixed in there to set those oh so important boundaries and expectations young people need from parents and adults.

I have my fingers crossed that your son will persist in his desistance. Thank you for sharing your story.

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Betty's avatar

Congratulations you are truly blessed. My daughter who thinks she is non binary is getting a double mastectomy she's 24 and I can't talk her out of it. She lives in VT a liberal hell hole. We talk weekly so I thank the Lord for that. The LGBTQ cult has taken hold of her and won't let go. My sister's affirm her but the rest of my family will not. She tried taking her life back in 8th grade because of bullying, she has cut, bulimia etc. She got help but then when off to college where my world changed. I pray daily for God to open her eyes and her heart.

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