AAMFT Consumer Update
Gender Identity

Transgender is an umbrella term, encompassing all nontraditional gender expressions, including, but not limited to: transsexual, cross-dresser, gender-bender, gender outlaw, gender queer, and drag king/queen. There are many diverse ways of being transgender. For example, not every transgender person is interested in changing his or her gender presentation (such as from male to female). Instead, some transgender people wish to expand or discard traditional definitions of gender. 

 

How can Family Therapy Help Transgender Clients?

Transgender clients and their families seek therapy for multiple reasons, which are not always because of gender-related concerns. Thus, family therapists do not assume that gender is at the center of the family problem. However, family therapists find it helpful to be sensitive to transgender issues in order to identify when/if gender-related issues may be intersecting with other issues. Conversely, many transgender people do seek therapy for gender-related concerns and the direction of therapy will differ depending on the client’s needs. Typically, transgender people and their families seek the services of family therapists for issues related to gender questioning and exploration, assistance in obtaining medical treatments, and relational difficulties. 

Types of Transgender Issues

The first group of clients recognizes feelings of gender variance, but may not know what to do about their feelings. When clients seek therapy while questioning their gender identity, family therapists adopt a client-centered stance, understanding that different clients see the issues differently. Because there are many possible expressions of transgender, when clients do not have a clear picture of how they wish to express gender, family therapists assist them in exploring possibilities. The goal is to find an expression of gender that feels most genuine. During this exploration process, therapists often assist clients in developing social and self-help connections with other gender variant people. With gender-questioning clients, therapy also includes a critical examination of the societal constructions of gender, opening up options outside of the traditional female and male identities.

While a full gender transition may be the best option for some, therapy explores other gender expression possibilities. Therapists often do this by discussing with clients what it will be like if their real desire is not to transition, but to blur the lines of gender. Complete gender transition may seem like a simple solution at first for many transgender people, however the realities of transitioning and passing can be difficult and sometimes unrealistic (financial limitations, passing prevented by body type). Some clients feel more comfortable when they stop focusing on passing as their preferred gender. Thus, clients may choose to take steps towards altering their presentation of gender (like a name change or hormone treatment) and choose not to pursue other steps, like surgery. There are as many different healthy expressions of gender as there are transgender individuals.

The second group of clients seeks therapy with the primary goal of obtaining a recommendation for medical treatment. These clients have a clear vision of gender transition and therapy is structured to assist them with this goal. Family therapists work to ensure that clients have the emotional stability and social support needed to cope with the challenges of transition. Due to society’s rigid gender conceptualization, transgender clients are subject to the stress of not fitting the norm. Not surprisingly, it is common for transgender people to exhibit mental health symptomology. Therapists will consider accompanying mental health symptoms and help stabilize clients so they can make centered decisions about transition. Assisting clients in gender transition often reduces gender-related stress, possibly helping to also reduce mental health symptoms.

The third group of clients seeks therapy for relational issues. In these cases, the family or partner of the transgender person is typically involved in therapy to create deeper understanding and integration of the transgender identity within a relationship. While some parents do not react intensely to their transgender child’s disclosure, other parents have described it as a profound, personal crisis, characterized by strong emotions such as shock, confusion, devastation, fear, and grief. Partners of transgender people may have similar responses if they were unaware of the transgender identity; however, many partners are supportive and couples may seek therapy to deal with the implications of transition, like a new definition of the relationship. Family therapists working with transgender clients and their families both acknowledge and normalize the seriousness of the family disruption. 

Ways to Support Transgender People

Due to the challenging and life-changing effects of transition, transgender clients are in need of social support. This support may come from inside and/or outside the family system. Family therapists inquire about the coming out process and explore the risks and dynamics of further disclosures. When adequate support is not found within the family, therapists assist clients in finding alternative support systems, such as continued therapy, connections with other transgender people, friendships, and the Internet.

As clients take steps in gender transition, the decision naturally becomes apparent to more people in their lives, whether or not the client discloses the information. Coupled with society’s low level of understanding transgenderism, gender transition is a process often characterized by stress and misunderstanding. For example, clients often face opposition in the workplace, such as conflicts over whether the employee should use the women’s or men’s bathroom. Therefore, the role of family therapists may include advocating, educating, and consulting with employers, co-workers, teachers, family members, neighbors, and friends. 

In cases where family members are angry, intolerant, and/or rejecting of the transgender identity, sessions may not initially include the transgender family member. Family therapists can serve as a sounding board for negative emotions, educate family members on transgender issues, and explore new understandings of the transgender individual. Therapists assist family members to: seek information, exposure, and support; understand their transgender person’s suffering and alienation related to gender identity; understand the politics of gender; help navigate how to disclose the information to others; and realize that the transgender person is essentially the same person on the inside as they always were. Once family members have had time to process some of their own experiences around the disclosure, family therapy including the transgender person may help families repair and redefine relationships, foster healthy communication of emotions, and nurture closeness.       

Consumer Resources

Transsexual Roadmap: Family Issues. http://www.tsroadmap.com/family/index.html. This site provides helpful information for transsexual people and their parents, partners, and children.

Gender Outlaw: On Men, Women, and the Rest of Us, by K. Bornstein, 1994. New York: Vintage Books. Written by a male-to-female transsexual, this book challenges cultural assumptions of gender. The author invites new possibilities for thinking about gender in a conversational, easy-to-read format.

My Gender Workbook: How to Become a Real Man, a Real Woman, the Real You, or Something Else Entirely, by K. Bornstein, 1998. New York: Routledge. This book provides activities to help explore gender identity and beliefs about gender.

Body Alchemy: Transsexual Portraits, by L. Cameron, 1996. San Francisco: Cleis Press, Inc. Compiled by a female-to-male transsexual, this book is a collection of powerful portraits and stories of transsexual men, including photos of the effects of hormones and surgeries.

The text of this brochure was written by Deborah Coolhart, PhD and Anibal Torres Bernal, PhD.

Stock # I110 


Marriage and family therapists are mental health professionals who treat a wide array of disorders, working with individuals, couples, and families. Marriage and family therapy clients report that they are highly satisfied with the services they have received, and research shows that marriage and family therapy is a cost-effective, short-term, and results-oriented form of treatment.

The American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT), the professional organization representing marriage and family therapists, believes that therapists with specific and rigorous training in marriage and family therapy provide the most effective mental health care to individuals, couples, and families. This brochure is courtesy of:
the AAMFT.

Visit the AAMFT
TherapistLocator.net, a public service of the AAMFT. There you will find information about a range of problems facing today's families, and you can search for a qualified family therapist in your area.


© 2002 American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy • 112 South Alfred Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3061
Phone: (703) 838-9808 • Fax: (703) 838-9805