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[–]Shesstealthy 53 insightful - 1 fun53 insightful - 0 fun54 insightful - 1 fun -  (2 children)

At no time does this person give an example of their parents using their birth gender. It's all what if. Having had a parent with dementia who died without forgetting who I was, I know I used to worry about how I would cope with that. But this person is being incredibly self centred. Yeah they won't know who you are, they'll call you the wrong name, deal with it. Your gender identity and new life have no bearing on this.

[–]luckystar 25 insightful - 1 fun25 insightful - 0 fun26 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

Yeah, I'm kinda confused. This story has nothing to do with gender identity; it's a story about parents with Alzheimers, which is a tragic, if well-trod story.

I was waiting for something juicy like "My parents kept calling me their daughter" or "My parents accused me of being a stranger breaking into their house" or whatever but nope. This is just somebody blogging about their slightly atypical life and getting into the NY Times for it.

[–]MarkTwainiac[S] 27 insightful - 1 fun27 insightful - 0 fun28 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

As a child of parents with a terminal illness, I am obviously upset, too. Unexpected, however, is the sense that my identities as a man, husband and father — all predicated on my gender transition — seem to be falling away, too, as their dementia progresses and they forget who I am.

It only has to due with gender identity in this person's head. The writer is so narcissistic and so wedded to, and dependent on, gender identity ideology that s/he goes to great lengths trying to make the tragedy of what's happening to mom and dad all about himself and his fucking phony "identities as a man, husband and father."

I read it as the writer trying to make it appear that the prospect of his phony identities "falling away" is on par with having a terminal illness that causes people to actually lose their minds.

He seems to think not having his precious "identities" to constantly obsess over, blather about and make everyone else notice would a fate akin to, perhaps even worse than, dying of a terrible and terribly cruel disease. Coz the writer is a narcissist and his "identities" are the means by which he obtains the narcissistic supply of constant attention he needs like the rest of us need oxygen.