Parent FAQ

We answer the top 10 questions that parents often have.

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It’s very possible. Many parents wish for a medical or psychological test that would succinctly “prove” their child’s gender identity. Yet, no such test exists. In the past, assessment guidelines were put forth for providers that worked with transgender adults. These guidelines suggested that a person would answer yes or no to certain kinds of questions allowing a “professional” to then make a “diagnosis”. We better understand today that having a transgender, nonbinary, or otherwise gender-diverse identity is not something another person can definitively “assess”. We know that the only one to make such a determination is that child/person. A trans person has an internal sense of their gender identity that is different from how others perceive them. The latter is assumed, often based on what is externally visible and within a fixed understanding of gender that is presumed to be “normal.” Most people have never had to give thought to their gender identity—the  intrinsic and innate sense of one’s own gender—it just seems to be a given reality. While being transgender is a normal human experience, it is simply not as common.