Family members caring

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I was rereading one of my favorite stories today, and like a lot of my favorite TG stories (maybe all?), it made me feel like crying. The story was Shoes (by Heather Rose Brown), and what made me cry was how the older brother and the newly out trans little sister interacted.

It's that they cared about one another.

That's actually what I notice in most of the stories I read and reread -- the protagonist having family members who care. Even if they're mad at the protagonist, it still is a sign that they care. In An Aria for Cami, even though the parents are rejecting, the siblings stick together -- I really got it when Cami spoke of how much family meant to Fiona. Even when they were mad at one another, it was still a kind of caring.

That is what is and always was missing from my parents and my siblings. It struck me the way when I came out to them as trans, nobody seemed to react, neither positively nor negatively. One brother warned me that he might occasionally mess up on the name or pronouns, but that was it. Nobody had any questions or comments about it. Just a kind of tepid "that's nice, dear." I once tried to find out from my sister, who is in a Baptist church, what the people there thought of her having a trans sibling, and never got an answer. (Maybe they don't know about me.)

That has been the pattern my whole life with my family (my "family of origin," as they say.) Back when I 10 and 11 and going through hell and thinking about suicide all the time, I got no help or sympathy. It was obvious to my parents that things were really bad, I know from some of the things they said that they were aware of it, but they never showed any interest in why they were going wrong or how I felt. They mostly just didn't want to have to hear about it. And when I was older and did well in college and got a PhD, the most I got was a "well, that's nice, dear." It was like being cared for by animatronic robots. In a way, it was worse than if they'd openly abused me.

Nor did I ever get much of a sense of support or solidarity from my siblings; it was like we were all individually on our own. (I think they learned that behavior from my parents.) I get the feeling none of them would really notice if I vanished forever; I don't think they would feel a hole in their lives. In a way, I feel like I don't really exist for them.

So when I read stories about sympathetic mothers or fathers or older sisters or brothers talking with the protagonist about what they're feeling or going through, and being sympathetic, and defending them, it reminds me of what I've never had, and it hurts. It really hurts. Even in stories where family members react negatively, even to the point of rejecting the protagonist, it at least means they care.

I'm getting a fair amount of emotional validation from my UU congregation; our pastor even got people to write "affirmations" for me, which I read and reread. They help. They tell me that I matter to them, that they want to hear about the small triumphs and joys and pains in my life. But the minute I put those pieces of paper away, the old feelings from my formative years start whispering in my ear that I don't matter, I'm nothing, that I'm a waste of space.

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