Wolverine
Uncanny Pompadour
Heh-heh-heh... and I STILL have to deal with the person that inspired the thread!
As I understand it, he's a real Gary Brown.Heh-heh-heh... and I STILL have to deal with the person that inspired the thread!
My goodness. And I thought I had stories to share (and I do)...but that certainly is unbelievable. I hope someday that child will remember their parent...somewhere in small nooks and crannies, we always remember who was good to us. My father is a raging alcoholic. But I love him, because he was the best dad HE was capable of being (and that wasn't so great). But I love him, and nothing could ever change that.I have a friend that is transgendered,. She was married pre-transition, but the now ex-wife decided to stay friends but not stay in a relationship with her. They had a child together. My friend is now remarried, to another woman.
Well, my friend's parents are absolute *********s. They basically disowned her, but remained friendly with the ex-wife. Many years later, when the ex-wife lost her job due to layoffs, they let her move in with them - and treated her like garbage. Between not having a job, not being able to find a new job, and having to deal with those two *********s, she was driven to drink.
And that's when they struck! Suddenly, there was a custody lawsuit. They argued that the drunk and the transwoman - who had equal custody rights - were not acceptable parents. They saw a judge, and the judge basically laughed them out of court; in part, due to the complaint mentioning that one of the parties was an "abomination before God". But since the child was still in school - a private school paid for by the grandparents - it was decided that the child and the ex-wife would stay in the original state until July, and then move out to CA where my friend now lives.
A week or so later, my friend goes to the school to pick up her son, and the school refuses to release him to her custody. They even call the cops out when she refuses to leave without her son; the cop, rather than researching the situation and acting appropriately, takes the child to family services (or calls them and has them pick him up) - making my friend go down to the central holding facility to pick him up.
So everything's calm, right? No, the suit was still going. Not entirely sure why, something about final custody still needing to be determined at a later date.
Last month, my friend's ex-wife got sick. They took her to a hospital, where an MRI determined that she had a brain tumor next to her brain stem. And then.. they threw her out of the hospital, because she had no insurance. A week or so later, she was dead.
Yesterday, they had the "final" custody hearing, in front of (I believe?) a different judge. This judge listened to the "neutral arbiter" - a woman who couldn't look my friend in the eye, and refused to believe that the school or grandparents could be trying to brainwash the child - as they discussed the situation on both sides. Then they paraded out witnesses from the grandparent's church and the private school they sent the kid to, all of whom lauded the grandparents as wonderful people. Finally, they call up the 9 year old kid, and ask him who he'd rather stay with. The kid looked at the judge and declared that he'd rather stay with his grandparents, because my friend's homosexuality made him "uncomfortable". And so, the judge has now legally separated my friend from her son. The kicker? She gets to pay child support to them.
Her wife had to spend a significant amount of time talking my friend out of killing herself.
And THAT is why my friend's grandparents are people I hate. There are very few people that I truly despise, and they've managed to be put on that list. They've taken their bigotry and applied it to their child, and now they see a chance to "redeem" themselves by ruining their grandchild.
The sad thing is, this happens regularly. I have another friend that hasn't seen her three kids in over a year because her wife couldn't accept her, and took everything in the divorce because the judge was a bigoted dbag. She's now attending seminary in PA.My goodness. And I thought I had stories to share (and I do)...but that certainly is unbelievable. I hope someday that child will remember their parent...somewhere in small nooks and crannies, we always remember who was good to us. My father is a raging alcoholic. But I love him, because he was the best dad HE was capable of being (and that wasn't so great). But I love him, and nothing could ever change that.
Someone that I hate? I don't necessarily hate anyone...I mostly wish they'd mysteriously fall off the planet. No harm, no foul.
There are a lot of dbags in the world, aren't there?The sad thing is, this happens regularly. I have another friend that hasn't seen her three kids in over a year because her wife couldn't accept her, and took everything in the divorce because the judge was a bigoted dbag. She's now attending seminary in PA.My goodness. And I thought I had stories to share (and I do)...but that certainly is unbelievable. I hope someday that child will remember their parent...somewhere in small nooks and crannies, we always remember who was good to us. My father is a raging alcoholic. But I love him, because he was the best dad HE was capable of being (and that wasn't so great). But I love him, and nothing could ever change that.
Someone that I hate? I don't necessarily hate anyone...I mostly wish they'd mysteriously fall off the planet. No harm, no foul.
I am glad Mary - feeling better IS good.OK. I feel better now.
That's an awful story. Any time there is conflict with children involved, I think they invariably end up with the worst of it.And THAT is why my friend's grandparents are people I hate. There are very few people that I truly despise, and they've managed to be put on that list. They've taken their bigotry and applied it to their child, and now they see a chance to "redeem" themselves by ruining their grandchild.
One of the wisest things someone ever told me was that people live up to their potential ... and in many cases, there just isn't much potential to work with. Not that it is a bad thing - it is just important to recognize that not everyone has the ability to rise to the occasion.My goodness. And I thought I had stories to share (and I do)...but that certainly is unbelievable. I hope someday that child will remember their parent...somewhere in small nooks and crannies, we always remember who was good to us. My father is a raging alcoholic. But I love him, because he was the best dad HE was capable of being (and that wasn't so great). But I love him, and nothing could ever change that.
:Locolaugh: LOL!!! Agreed.I have a friend that is transgendered,. She was married pre-transition, but the now ex-wife decided to stay friends but not stay in a relationship with her. They had a child together. My friend is now remarried, to another woman.
I think most people could agree that can be very confusing to a child, **** I have read it 3 times and still dont understand it..
So a Man and Woman get married have a child.
Man becomes a woman and gets divorced.
New Woman marries another woman.
I would start drinking too...
Glad you brought this because I am as lost as you are/were.So a Man and Woman get married have a child.Man becomes a woman and gets divorced.
New Woman marries another woman.
I would start drinking too...
***, Gender and Sexuality are all completely different things. One can be physically male and mentally female and prefer women; that would make them straight pre-transition, gay post-transition.Glad you brought this because I am as lost as you are/were.So a Man and Woman get married have a child.Man becomes a woman and gets divorced.
New Woman marries another woman.
I would start drinking too...
Why the heck would a man go thru all this process to become a woman and then marries another woman? Unless the woman is not really a woman and...Know what? Forget it. Never mind. I do not drink RG but the first three rounds are on me.
Thanks for adding that! Other than (still minor) children of friends, I don't know anyone that has gone through the transition from that perspective.My biological father is transgendered. She grew up as a man, got married to my mom, had 3 kids (I'm the oldest), then about 6 months after my son was born revealed that he is going through the drug therapy to begin the process to become a woman.
I have to admit as the child of a transgendered person, it's difficult. Very difficult. It's been almost 6 years since everything was revealed and I still don't know how to introduce her to others. Within family circles, we refer to her as Maddy (combined Mom and Daddy), so that's what I introduce her as. Not as my mom, or my dad, but as Maddy. When my mom is there too, it's that much more difficult.
I think the hardest part of the whole process was dealing with the transition, because I lived the first 25 years of my life with a dad. I still see my dad everytime I see her. The other part that makes it difficult is as a person goes through the change, they basically go through the "growing up" mental stages, especially if they go through the process later in life. Once they reveal who they want to be, they want to show off to everyone that knew them before how much everyone "not in the know" doesn't realize who they used to be (ie, "see, they just called me Ma'am"). I've always been a "what happens in your bedroom is your business" person, so when Maddy started showing off how much of a woman she'd become, it took about a year before I snapped and had to tell her that I wasn't comfortable around her, how I hated her showing off, and how much pain I saw my mom go through (btw, they're still married).
I can definately see how others can be uncomfortable around something like this, because I'm going through it too. The only thing that really kept me going was that my love for Maddy was for the person. As a person she is changed, but only changed in the sense that she is now free to live her life the way she wants to, and because of that has become a much more open and better person.
I just wanted to add my perspective.
Ok... But do you really have to cut off your wang to be happy? I guess I never knew that this stuff happened in real life.Being transgendered is not about what you find attractive in a partner, it's about who you are. Only you can know who you want to be and how you live your life. If a guy wants to become a woman and marry a woman, all the power to them. I can only hope that people do not think less of them for doing it.
First, not exactly cutting it off; it's a lot more complicated both as a process and as a surgery than that.Ok... But do you really have to cut off your wang to be happy? I guess I never knew that this stuff happened in real life.
To add to what Karen S said, it's ALOT more complicated. Karen described the physical aspect, but there's an emotional/mental and a self-image/confidence part. I think of it along the lines of having a breast augmentation. My wife had hers enhanced not because I told her to, or because there was some physical need. She did it because she did not like the way she looked in the mirror (with or without clothes). She honestly did not feel attractive, and it caused a certain level of depression (along the lines of "I don't like how I look, so I know you don't like how I look, so I will completely cover myself up so no one can see me ever again"). She got tired of dealing with it and talked with her doctor and had it done.Ok... But do you really have to cut off your wang to be happy? I guess I never knew that this stuff happened in real life.Being transgendered is not about what you find attractive in a partner, it's about who you are. Only you can know who you want to be and how you live your life. If a guy wants to become a woman and marry a woman, all the power to them. I can only hope that people do not think less of them for doing it.
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