- Joined
- Jan 9, 2015
- Messages
- 3,451
Dear Psers,
I have may 15 y/o niece living with us for 3 years. It's a looooooong complicated story, but the main lines are a complicated family background ( binational, living on a third, unrelated to the three nationalities of both parents and children, mental illnesses).
She's a sweet rather introverted girl. She's 15 and the oldest in my home, my own children are 2-14 y/o.
Yesterday during dinner my 10 y/o asked if she'd ever been in love. She replied yes and said that she'd had a "sweetheart" and then switched to English, which my smalles children don't understand to inform me that she'd had a girlfriend and if she'd better not say it to the young cousins.
I said, whatever you are comfortable with, but with a 5 y/o and an 8y/o brace yourself for questions. So she told them. The children were very business as usual about it and wanted to see a picture, which she showed and the only comments were "she's so pretty and looks very sweet".
Then the subject changed (8 people on the dinner table, most of them very young, so our subjects tend to change quickly).
I let the other children finish dinner slightly earlier (usually finish together ) and we chatted die a bit. I found out she's apprehensive to Tel her grandparents (they are very conservative) . I told her not to worry, because my mil greatly helped her own nephew Hen his parents didn't accept his longtime partner, now husband.
She told me had informed her parent's about it, but made.ut clear to them that she didn't want to discuss it with them.
She introduced herself as a gay person (her exact words) from day one in her new school, and no problems there. That's a huge relief for me.
I'll just signal I'm here whenever she wants to talk and keep showing we're supportive.
But was there something anyone who came out would have specifically wanted from their family? Something I didn't think of at all?
I have may 15 y/o niece living with us for 3 years. It's a looooooong complicated story, but the main lines are a complicated family background ( binational, living on a third, unrelated to the three nationalities of both parents and children, mental illnesses).
She's a sweet rather introverted girl. She's 15 and the oldest in my home, my own children are 2-14 y/o.
Yesterday during dinner my 10 y/o asked if she'd ever been in love. She replied yes and said that she'd had a "sweetheart" and then switched to English, which my smalles children don't understand to inform me that she'd had a girlfriend and if she'd better not say it to the young cousins.
I said, whatever you are comfortable with, but with a 5 y/o and an 8y/o brace yourself for questions. So she told them. The children were very business as usual about it and wanted to see a picture, which she showed and the only comments were "she's so pretty and looks very sweet".
Then the subject changed (8 people on the dinner table, most of them very young, so our subjects tend to change quickly).
I let the other children finish dinner slightly earlier (usually finish together ) and we chatted die a bit. I found out she's apprehensive to Tel her grandparents (they are very conservative) . I told her not to worry, because my mil greatly helped her own nephew Hen his parents didn't accept his longtime partner, now husband.
She told me had informed her parent's about it, but made.ut clear to them that she didn't want to discuss it with them.
She introduced herself as a gay person (her exact words) from day one in her new school, and no problems there. That's a huge relief for me.
I'll just signal I'm here whenever she wants to talk and keep showing we're supportive.
But was there something anyone who came out would have specifically wanted from their family? Something I didn't think of at all?