kids

In September 2010, Mary Moss lost her daughter. In September 2010, she also gained a son.

My daughter Grace passed away in September 2010.

There wasn’t an obituary. There wasn’t a funeral. There wasn’t a casket or even a body to put in it. No one sent me sympathy cards. No one brought me casseroles. But that wasn’t because no one cared. It was because my child was still alive.

When my daughter came out to me as transgender at age 12, I was driven by fear. I feared that my child would kill herself if she couldn’t begin her transition from my daughter to my son.

That fear and longing to save my child overtook everything else. I forged ahead into a new life and helped her transition. I didn’t expect to feel such grief. C.S. Lewis said, “No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear.”

I had to put away all the girl pictures. I had to get rid of any sign that Grace had ever existed. I had to remember to call my child by the name that she had chosen: Chris. I had to replace “she” with “he.” I had to start calling the child I thought was my daughter my son.

I distinctly remember crying one Saturday afternoon in bed, mourning the loss of my daughter. Grace came in and hugged me. “Mum, if this is going to be so hard for you, I won’t do it,” she said.

I looked into her eyes and saw such fear. I knew that she needed to transition to alleviate the pain in her heart. But she was willing to keep going through that pain to spare me pain. I thought about what a great kid I had, and about the fact that what I loved was her heart and soul, not her gender. “No, I know you need to do this,” I said. “And I’ll be OK. Just give me time.”

She looked so relieved. “Thanks, Mum,” she said. “And we’ll get you help too.”

Grace slept in bed with me that night. When we awoke I found her staring at me pensively. “What are you thinking about?” I asked.

“You have a really big nose,” she said.

I burst out laughing, and so did she. She and I had always used humor to get through life, and I needed it now more than ever. I realised that no matter what, my child would be the same honest, wisecracking kid I’d grown to know and love. I knew in my heart that we would both be OK.

Over time, as my child blossomed into the young man he was meant to be, my grief lessened. But the tears didn’t end; they just changed. Instead of the tears I’d cried when my son got his period at age 12, I cried happy tears when his puberty-blocker implant was put in. It put an end to the misery that his period had brought him.

I cried happy tears when his name was legally changed to “Christopher.” I cried happy tears when his school changed the gender designation on his records to “male” and allowed him use of the boys’ room. I cried happy tears when he began testosterone treatments and a slight mustache began to appear.

Georgie Stone recalls the moment she knew she was meant to be a girl with her Mum, Rebekah, and Mia Freedman on No Filter. Post continues after audio…

By far the biggest milestone and the happiest tears came on April 11, 2014, when my son had “top” surgery to remove the breasts that had been torturing him. I knew he would be happy after surgery, but I had no idea how happy he would be.

If there was ever any question as to whether I had done right by my son by allowing him to transition, it was squashed that day. I saw the pure joy in his eyes as he awoke from surgery to discover that, as he puts it, his dream had come true.

“They are really gone,” he marveled. Still in recovery, he held my hand and said, “Thank you, Mum. I love you. I am sorry that I don’t tell you enough how much I love you.”

Now, admittedly, he was pretty drugged up. But having a transgender teen doesn’t give you a pass on having to deal with typical teenage behaviour, so hearing such praise can be a rarity, and I’ve milked it as much as I can. If he’s annoyed with me, I remind him, “Remember what you said when you woke up from your surgery?” I think I can get a lot of miles out of that one, or at least I’ll try.

A funny thing happened along the way. My fears dissipated, because my son was joyful. He was smiling, laughing and beaming with a confidence that I hadn't ever seen. He was being who he really had been inside all along: a boy.

I believe my child was always a boy and my son. As a matter of fact, not only was he my son, but along the way he had become my hero. And he and I formed a closeness that I hadn't anticipated.

The most important lesson I take from the toughest journey I've ever experienced is that there is hope. I know my son can have a happy, productive life, and for that I am grateful.

I need parents of transgender children out there to know that they are not alone. They need to know that feeling grief is a very real and normal part of the process. They need to know that it really does get much better.

(I am a moderator of a private Facebook group for parents and family of transgender kids, young and grown alike. We now have over 700 members worldwide. We have a very tight-knit, supportive group. You can feel free to send me an email at transparentmary@gmail.com to request to join our group.)

Grace is gone, but Chris is very much alive. I am grateful every day that he is my son and that I was lucky enough to be chosen to be his mum. It is an honour that I cherish. There wasn't a funeral; instead, there was a birth announcement. I gave birth to my child again, but this time in the correct gender.

This post originally appeared on the Huffington Post here and has been republished with full permission.

Mary J. Moss is a 42-year-old mother to a terrific teenage son who just happens to be transgender. She lives in New York, earned a BA in Criminal Justice and Psychology from SUNY at Albany, and works full time for the New York State Education Department. The role of advocate came naturally since she was diagnosed as a baby with Rheumatoid Arthritis in all joints and grew up in a wheelchair. She was able to walk after hard work and having her knees and hips replaced as a teenager. She defied limitations by not only walking but working full time, driving and raising her son on her own. She enjoys reading thrillers and sappy romance novels, loves coffee and openly admits to being a reality TV addict.

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Top Comments

Iz 10 years ago

If only we could bottle that kind parenting, love and open mindedness this world would be heaven on earth.


Kate Salinger 10 years ago

I don't think I could be more pro diversity than I am, more accepting of difference, more into raising awareness. I am all of those things but I am also the mother of a child who has died. As in, dead, not alive, never coming back in this life time. One I did get to plan a funeral for. People brought me lasagne, mostly. Lucky me!

I don't usually do the comparison thing. We each have our own cross to bear but how dare this writer make any comparison to her child having died, HOW DARE SHE. As parents, at some stage, to varying extents, we have to let go of the 'ideal' child we thought we would have and hopefully embrace our children for who they actually ARE. Our children become who they are because of us and in spite of us. Sometimes you are hoping for a girl after having three boys. Sometimes you want your son to become a footballer but he is into ballet. Sometimes your daughter likes boy bands when you'd prefer her to enjoy classical music. I am not trying to trivialise the loss and grief this mother must have felt but at the end of the day she still had a child who she was supporting to be the best he could be. A child who has a long, happy life ahead; fingers crossed. One she gets to watch grow and develop, laugh with and cry with. One she gets to hold in her arms and watch graduate and fall in love.

Even an analogy such as 'Welcome to Holland'

http://www.our-kids.org/arc...

regarding special needs children would have been offensive in this instance but reproducing this article, with it's extremely poor comparison, was bad judgement indeed.

Read my story here:
http://whatkatedidnext.word...

Then ask yourself how many 'happy tears' I've shed.

Please put more thought into your story choices in the future to maintain your previously high standard.

R 10 years ago

I havent gone through what you have but I had very similar thoughts after reading the heading and then the article. Ridiculous

Guest 10 years ago

Me too. I thought I was being overly sensitive.

Guest 10 years ago

I don't have children but I thought the same thing as soon as I started reading the article and realised it had nothing to do with the actual death of a child.