I don't really see any other way. I've seen parents attempt to do 'compromises' where they insist that their child present as their birth-assigned gender around them, or say things like "we aren't going to use your chosen name/we aren't going to use your pronouns/etc." Usually this winds up going badly, of course, because it's not actually a solution to anything.BogusMeatFactory wrote:It can't be an accept or goodbye scenario
"We accept what you're doing so long as you allow us to pretend like you're not doing this" isn't "accepting" or "understanding" at all, it's keeping up appearances, it's indicative of parents who care more about not looking "bad" in front of their neighbors and friends than they do about the well being of their child.
I don't think that's at all acceptable.
If Victoria wants to try and reach out to her family down the line, that's her choice. She shouldn't be pressured to do it though.
I've seen it end tragically way too often however to suggest she just try harder to explain herself. All the explaining in the world want to anything for people who've shown they clearly don't WANT to understand.
I don't mean to come across as argumentative, but this is something I'm passionate about. Nearly every trans person I know who's been estranged from their family would be ecstatic to have their family reach out and say "hey, we love you, please help us understand." All too often it's the family that cuts off contact, it's the family that refuses to listen, it's the family that decides that the conversation is over.
I've just seen this happen a lot, and I hate it, and while I know you're well meaning, seeing someone say "well maybe you should try harder" just kinda peeves me. .

