Lecture 3 Flashcards
What is gender dysphoria?
A clinical term used to describe the symptoms of excessive pain, anguish, agitation, and restlessness that gender-variant people seeking therapy often express
Examples: Dissociation, suicidality, sexual dysfunction,<br></br>substance abuse, self-mutilation, intense hostility toward other differently gendered people, insomnia, isolation, dysthymia, anxiety, weight loss or gain, and work or school difficulties
What is transgender emergence?
Transgender emergence is a developmental process whereby gender variant people examine themselves and their identity, within a context of compassion and empowerment, in progress to an authentic and functional sex- and gender-identity congruence
What are the stages of the emergence?
- Awareness
- Seeking information/reaching out
- Disclosure to significant others
- Exploration: identity and self-labeling
- Exploration: transition issues/possible body modification
- Integration: acceptance and post-transition issues
What are the family emergence stages?
- Discovery and disclosure - families are often shocked, even when they are aware of a gender issue, the realization of its importance can be emotionally devastating
- Turmoil - Family members may become withdrawn or emotionally volatile, and can cause stress as the family struggles to accept the reality of gender variance
- Negotiation - Partners realize that the gender issues will not vanish and must be adjusted to in some manner. A process of compromise, determining what each is comfortable living with.
- Finding balance - balance does not necessarily mean permanent resolution, it means the transgenderism as is no longer a secret, the family no longer in turmoil. Usually family is ready at this point to integrate the transgender member back into the normal life of the family
What is cultural humility?
- Cultural humility is about listening deeply to what our clients tell us
- Cultural humility is about being flexible and humble enough to:
- Engage in self-reflection and critique
- Understand our culture is no better than any other
- Admit when we don’t know about the culture of our clients
- Seek out resources
- Recognize that only the client is the expert in their culture
- Place assumptions aside
What are the stages of the family life cycle and the emotional process that goes with each?
- Life stage: Leaving home/Single young adults
- Emotional process: excepting emotional and financial responsibility for self
- Life stage: The joining of families through marriage
- Emotional process: commitment to a new system
- Life stage: Families with young children
- Emotional process: Accepting new members into the family system
- Life stage: Families with adolescents
- Emotional process: increasing flexibility of family boundaries to permit a child’s independence and grandparents frailties
- Life stage: launching children and moving on
- Emotional process: excepting a multitude of exits from and entries into the family system
- Life stage: families in later life
- Emotional process: excepting the shifting generational roles
Second-order changes in leaving home/single young adults
- Differentiation of self in relation to the family of origin
- Development of intimate peer relationships
- New peers become more important
- Establishment of self in respect to work and financial independence
Second-order changes in joining of family through marriage
- Formation of marital system
- Realignment of relationships with extended families and friends to include spouse
Second-order changes in families with young children
- Adjusting the marital system to make space for children
- Joining in child rearing, financial and household tasks
- Realignment of relationships with extended family to include parenting and grandparenting roles
Second-order changes in families with adolescents
- Shifting of parent/child relationship to permit adolescent to move into and out of system
- Refocus on midlife marital and career issues
- Beginning shift toward caring for older generation
Second-order changes in launching children and moving on
- Renegotiation of marital system as dyad
- Development of adult to adult relationships
- Realignment of relationships to include in-laws and grandchildren
- Dealing with disabilities and death of parents (grandparents)
Second-order changes in families in later life
- Maintaining your own and/or couple functioning and interests in the face of physiological decline
- Support for a more central role of middle generation
- Making room in the system for the wisdom and experience of the elderly, supporting the older generation without over-functioning for them
- Dealing with the loss of spouse, siblings, and other peers and preparation for death