"Can I borrow your purple eyeliner..."
So its almost midnight. Louise and I are chillin out in bed, I have breast forms on, the door is locked. You may know that we have a large crew of teenagers. One of my daughters, 16 years old, knocks on the door. Crap, take out the forms, straighten out and open the door. She is looking for some dental floss that is nowhere to be found. Then she leans a bit closer to me at the door and says.."Can I borrow your purple eyeliner... You know the fine tipped one". Her tone was low enough that Louise could not hear.
We just had to laugh after she had gone. She knows about my CDing. Six months ago, she had done enough rummaging through my drawers, and overheard enough - her bedroom is next to ours - to come to a few wrong conclusions and we talked about it at the time. It was necessary to be honest with her and tell her, to which she replied: "Wow - thats cool. I've got cool parents". Not much said since then. She did tell me once that my eye makeup was noticable. She knows where I keep my makeup, and 'borrrows" it and Louises frequently. So she was obvioulsy familiar with that particular piece.
Of the seven at home now, she is the only one that we have talked to about CDing. Her low tone was to make sure that the othe kids did not hear. Our oldest (20, not at home) also knows everything and is pretty cool about it.
All I can say is "Wow, we have cool kids".
We have not talked to the other kids - all of them teenagers - about my crossdressing. Provincial wisdom is that they have enough going on with their own sexuality development and hormones raging. But I am not sure about this as a Carte Blanche rule. Most of our older kids are well grounded in themselves and our family relationships. I think they would benefit from the openness of disclosure, and I believe that my relationship with them would be enhanced rather then damaged.
The objective is not to be able to dress around them. I am not going there. And there are also a couple who are not in a position to be able to deal with this in a healthy manner. But obviously some ofthem can!
now THAT is a good question....
Quote:
Originally Posted by
trannie T
Can you trust a sixteen year old with purple eyeliner?
teehee, I think so but don't quote me on that one!
Louise.
we have been very conscious in our parenting...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TxKimberly
Carin,
What an awesome life you seem to be leading! A great wife and a huge family that appears to be open minded and accepting. Adopting is such a huge and worth wihile comitment. My wife and I have considered it but don't have the courage or the resources to put another through school. Not sure we can put the two we HAVE through school for that matter! lol
Kim
to try our best to teach acceptance of all people. To that end my kids have had friends of many kinds including gay/lesbian friends, autistic friends, dev disabled friends....the list goes on. Included should be that our kid's friends also run the spectrum of race and culture. I am hoping they will each be an element of change in the world. That is my greatest wish.
Louise.
I have to say and I am probably a bit weird....
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rachel Morley
Seven teenagers living with you?! Phew we have only one and that's bad enough ! :heehee: Mostly because he's a 16 year old boy who doesn't like to bathe and likes to play rock music really loud almost all of the time :D
Actually, he's an ok kid but I think I'd be happier with teenage girls instead ..... or would I? :thinking: ... maybe that would be worse? :strugglin:
Anyway Carin, your daughter sounds lovely. I think it would be so cool to have an accepting teenage daughter (or two) .... I'm not sure why I think that, I just do. :happy:
I really enjoy our teenagers. Each and every one of them. Even the ones with serious emotional issues. Both boys and girls. Yeah, I know I am weird.
Louise.
hero worship not allowed...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TxKimberly
With out a question, you two are my heroes - way to go! With people lke y'all in the world, maybe, just maybe, it wont all go to hell in a hand basket after all. :-)
Kim
We are regular people with an interesting life. But thank you for your very very kind words!
Louise.:love: :love: :love: :love: :love: