Haere mai ki te community social and working bee potluck this Sunday!
Where: Aunty Dana’s Op Shop, 128 Abel Smith street Wellington
When: Sunday 3rd September 11am till 3pm
We will mostly be:
- Hanging up clothing
- Putting out shoes and other items for sale
- Making things look spiffy
Come along and meet some lovely people, share some kai, and join us in getting Aunty Dana’s Op Shop up and running! Your support is welcome and appreciated.
The venue is mobility accessible, smoke-free, child friendly, and has a gender neutral bathroom, so bring along your friends and whanau.
Please share this event and invite others as you please.
There is a link to our facebook event here, and to Aunty Dana’s Op Shop website here, as well as information about our venue hosts the 128 Community Whare and Social Centre here.
Come hang out! See you there!
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[image: a white semi-oval foreground with text in purple-grey. The background is yellow, and has big bright flowers printed on it in. In the oval are the words ”Aunty Dana’s Op Shop, working bee and kai, every second sunday from 11am”
Nau mai haere mai, come to a community working bee and potluck this Sunday August 6th 2017.
We will be working on the op shop venue, mostly cleaning, pricing and hanging up clothes, and other finishing touches.
Come along and meet some lovely people, share some kai, and join us in getting Aunty Dana’s Op Shop up and running! Your support is welcome and appreciated.
The venue is mobility accessible, smoke-free, child friendly, and has a gender neutral bathroom, so bring along your friends and whanau.
There is a link to our Facebook event here
and to Aunty Dana’s Op Shop website here
as well as information about our venue hosts the 128 Community Whare and Social Centre here
Come hang out! see you there!
Gender Minorities Aotearoa is working in partnership with Gloria Fraser, in developing and carrying out research into mental health support for sex and gender minorities and wider rainbow people in Aotearoa.
Do you identify as queer, takataapui, nonbinary, trans, LGBTQIA+, MVPFAFF, or questioning? Have you accessed or considered accessing any mental health support in Aotearoa (eg from counsellors, psychologists, psychiatrists, or therapists)? Are you aged between 16 and 30? And would you like to be interviewed as part of this research? Please get in touch! You can contact us on genderminorities@gmail.com or contact Gloria directly on gloria.fraser@vuw.ac.nz
Interviews will be conducted throughout New Zealand and will take around an hour. We are offering a koha of $30 in petrol, supermarket, or cinema vouchers.
The data collected will be used in creating resources for mental health professionals, so they can better understand the needs of patients like us, and we can have better access to more supportive mental health services.
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Parents often come to us with stories and questions. Most commonly, a child or teenager who they raised as a son has expressed feeling like a girl, or a desire to be a girl. Sometimes a child they thought was a girl has expressed being, or wanting to be, a boy. Some young people feel their gender isn’t male or female, and may use words like “non-binary” to describe themself.
Questions from parents
Parents sometimes have deep, emotional fears for their child’s well being, and ask questions such as:
- He’s getting teased about being a feminine boy, is that why he thinks he wants to be a girl?
- Is he just spending too much time with girls?
- Is my non-binary child just confused?
- Does my daughter want to be a boy because of sexism?
- Is it just a phase?
- Maybe he’s gay?
- Will giving him more masculine hobbies help?
- Maybe more discipline?
- Why does he want a hard life as a transgender woman, what will happen to him?
- Is he going to make permanent changes to his body that he can’t undo?
- Will they be a whole different person – will I lose my child?
Is there another answer – something other than being trans?
First, it’s important to understand that very few people question their own gender in the way that your child is questioning theirs. It is very uncommon for a person who is not transgender to reach a point where they are asking themself “am I transgender?”.
In our broad experience, the answer is almost always “yes”.
By the time children start puberty, they usually know how their gender feels, and will express it if they feel safe to do so. Many children know this at a much younger age, some report knowing since they were a toddler.
Is it just a phase?
Some people quote ‘80% of trans kids change their minds later’. However this figure comes from poorly conducted and misconstrued research – it is incorrect. If allowed to transition (to outwardly express being transgender), less than 1% of trans people voluntarily go back because they feel they made a mistake about their gender.
The most common reason why a transgender person detransitions or retransitions is because of pressure from a parent. Other reasons include the difficulties they face as a trans person. This may include because of pressure from family, friends, work, school, doctors, church community.
Ultimately, living “in the closet” is not healthy long term. Most of the people who transition away from a transgender identity, eventually transition back to a transgender identity, when it is safe to do so.
Even if it is just a phase, that’s OK. You can still support them.
Why is my child transgender?
Forget everything you have seen in films. Gender is not caused by teasing, trauma, recreational activities, or friends. Being transgender is a natural variance. Many cultures all over the world recognise 3, 6, or more genders. Natural variance is integral to life on earth, and trans people have always existed. They can live full, rich, happy lives, especially with a supportive family.
Your child is still going to be the same person they’ve always been, but probably a lot happier with the right support.
What steps will my child take next?
Most young people will transition socially before anything else. This may involve things like changing their name, their hair, and their clothing. It might even mean redecorating their bedroom. This is something they can easily do without making any commitment to future changes.
Being able to socially transition is a huge relief to a transgender person.
Before coming out, trans youth typically live with enormous amounts of stress, anxiety, and often depression and suicidal feelings. 71% of trans people live with ‘high’ or ‘very high’ psychological distress. This is 9 times the rate of the general population. More than 1 in 3 attempt suicide at some point. You can have a big impact on your child’s life – most trans youth report dramatically improved mental health, stability, sense of self worth, and relationships with family if their family is supportive.
If your child is expressing a desire to change their gender, it is absolutely essential that you actively support them to gently explore this further at their own pace, if they want to. Talk with your child. Let them know you love them no matter what their gender, and it’s ok to explore being another gender. Ask them what pronouns they want to use (she/her, he/him, they/them/ia). Ask if they are ready to tell the wider whānau and others in their life. Let them lead and make decisions. Help them find information. Connect them with other young rainbow people. Support them with gender affirming clothing or other things they might need.
You have a very special child, give them the love they deserve.
What about medical transition?
There is no need for medical treatments of any kind before puberty. If they wish to talk with a therapist or counselor, you can support them with this. However, most transgender children will be happy to explore gender at their own pace if their family is supportive.
Once puberty begins, some transgender youth have a strong desire to take medication which pauses puberty. This medication is sometimes referred to as “puberty blockers”. These pause puberty, and are commonly prescribed to transgender young people at the start of puberty. They are also prescribed to non-transgender youth who start puberty very early. They are safe and fully reversible.
What do puberty blockers do?
If your child is experiencing the growth of facial and body hair, the development of an Adams apple, deepening of their voice, or possibly a receding hairline, puberty blockers will halt those effects of puberty – essentially blocking their testosterone from effecting their development in these ways.
The same is true for people assigned female at birth – menstruation, breast development, widening of hips, and other puberty changes can be very distressing, and some are irreversible if allowed to continue.
Puberty blockers will simply pause puberty from making these changes, and give your child time to work out what feels right for them.
Without puberty blockers, many of the changes their body will go through during puberty are distressing, irreversible, and can have lifelong impacts.
If your child stops taking puberty blockers in the future, puberty changes will simply begin again – puberty blockers do not make permanent changes, they only pause things (much like contraceptive pills). They are completely reversible.
At around 16 years old, sex hormones (testosterone or estrogen) can be prescribed if desired. They are sometimes referred to as ‘cross sex hormones’.
The main sex hormones prescribed to transgender patients are oestrogen/estrogen for people who were assigned ‘male’ at birth, or testosterone for people who were assigned ‘female’ at birth. Oestrogen is primarily responsible for things like breast growth, skin softening, and fat distribution, while Testosterone is primarily responsible for things like deepening the voice, facial and body hair growth, and muscle mass. There is more information about medical transition here.
What about bullying and mental health?
If your child is seen as ‘different’, they may be experiencing bullying. This is extremely common for transgender teens (1 in 5 trans students experience bullying on a weekly basis – this is 5 times higher than for non-trans students).
Your child’s school is legally required to provide a safe learning environment, and the Ministry of Education recommends that schools provide inclusive gender education. It also recommends that schools allow trans students to use the bathrooms and changing rooms they feel safest in, or create gender-neutral single stall bathrooms and changing rooms.
There may be times when you wish your child would simply try to fit in. You must choose whether to join in telling them they are not good enough and they should change, or to accept your child for who they are and demand respect and safety for your whānau.
Getting support
We hope that this information is useful in assisting you to think about the best ways in which to support your child. You can find many useful resources in the family section of our website, and information on schools in the school section.
If you have any questions or need to talk, you can contact us. We support trans people of all ages, and their families and wider whānau as well.