Sorry it's going to be in 4 bits so this is 3/4
Kristen: Yeah. I wanted to ask you about the impact of the transition on you emotionally and on the kids. So let's start with you. So emotionally, your partner, your spouse is now coming home in a different role, living as female, how did you respond emotionally to that? Did you feel a sense of grief, a feel a sense of loss, was there any anger? What was happening for you?
Stephanie: I didn't really understand what was going on, but it was going on very fast. So there was confusion. That was some anger, but I responded by very strongly trying to hold it together. And I think you know with that with hindsight maybe I didn't process my own emotions as well as I could have done at the time, but we got through it. And it was holding it together and particularly when Debbie was going through this really quite bad mental health and actually there was a possibility that in a month's time, Debbie might have committed suicide. So I'm living with all of that at the time as well. And it was just, 'Well, let's keep it going for the children, let's hold it together, we're okay for now.'
The worst time, and it was in October, but I can't remember which year, I would wake up in the morning and just think, 'Can I get through the next few hours?' and then at 10 or 11 o'clock, I'd think, 'Can I get through the next few hours?' And thankfully that didn't go on very long, maybe it was only six weeks or two months while I was living like that, but that bit I remember was very hard, very very tiring, and just kind of keeping on going, keeping on going. Can I take the next step?
Kristen: Did you think about leaving at any point, did you think about divorce or was it, 'let's keep it together for the kids and the family'?
Stephanie: We did at one point. We decided, I can't remember why, but we decided that maybe we should take time out to chat once a fortnight or so and we went out to a local arts centre on the Thursday evening and we would chat about how things were going. And Debbie's life at the time did revolve around Debbie. It was what Debbie wanted; Debbie was choosing. I had no say apart from at maximum, 'Just kind of slow down very slightly' and one of these Thursday evenings, I just said, 'Well look you keep telling me that you're going to transition, you're going to keep going. Even if you have to leave, even if you have to walk out, I think maybe we need to separate because I can't cope with it anymore,' and Debbie said, 'Okay if that's what you want, then that's what we'll do.'
But my daughter was about two months away from her first set of significant School exams, which are taken at age 16 in Britain. And so two weeks later, we went back on a Thursday evening to this local arts centre and Debbie said, 'I've been thinking and I'm not going to move out. I want to stay' and at that point, I really just felt, 'Well, I've got nothing here. All along, you've been saying that, if necessary, you will leave and eventually I've got to the point of saying okay, you need to leave. And you're now saying you refuse.' So again, actually that was a turning point for Debbie. I think Debbie realized that if she wanted to stay within the family, she needed to actually start thinking about the family a little bit more, rather than just what she wanted and how she was going to do things. And after that, I started having a little bit more of a say and Debbie would ask my opinion about things and I felt that my opinion was actually making a small amount of difference, maybe not huge, but a small amount of difference. And we got through my daughter's exams and, at that point, you know, it was then three months after I'd said, 'I think you need to leave'. And things were better, though a long way from perfect but much better than that very, very low point.
Kristen: Yeah, I do want to talk to you about the kids in a second, but first I want to ask Debbie. So does that kind of align with your experience of saying 'Okay, I will leave if I need to,' but then what made you say, 'No, I want to stay.' What was that for you? And then what were the adjustments ... did you feel like you did try to make adjustments to sort of either accommodate or include Stephanie in the process a little bit more.
Debbie: It's really difficult hearing that and thinking back to that time. Yeah, I was in a bad way psychologically, my mental health was in tatters really. I guess I wanted my cake and to eat it. I wanted to transition and keep the family and have all the family life which I'd enjoyed up until then. And trying to hold all those things in. But you know, the most important person in there at the time and I thinking back it was clear, it was me. And trying to make space for other people in my mind was very difficult, even Stephanie and the children.
Kristen: Thank you for saying that because I think I think that that's not an easy thing to admit or to say, and I think it validates what a lot of women that I've talked to, and I've talked to several now who have had transgender partners, that that it's kind of like holding onto a horse that's taken off and your feet aren't even in the stirrups yet. And you're lucky if you have a rein, one rein in your hand let alone two. And that stopping transition is kind of like trying to stop the ocean waves, it kind of rolls over the family and washes over you. I can't imagine just personally the level of mental distress that everybody is in, in the family at this time. But were you able to at all Debbie like kind of step back and say what is this like for Stephanie? How is she doing through this? Or for you was transition so all-consuming that it just kind of everything else gets pushed to the side?
Debbie: Well at the time I thought I was doing. And we'd have conversations, and Stephanie would say, 'All you're interested in is yourself', and at the time I thought I was including Steph. But looking back now, I wasn't, but I wasn't in a place to actually to notice how self-serving and selfish that I was at the time
Kristen: So what about the kids? How did they how did they navigate the transition of a parent? I guess Stephanie you'd mentioned before that you guys had put some guidelines in place for the kids. And what were those guidelines and how did they cope emotionally?
Stephanie: Well, once we'd decided on a date that Debbie was going to transition we needed to tell certain people in a certain order and that happened very rapidly because we were fairly sure that once one group of people knew, it would be spread out, and we wanted to get our letters out, so that people were hearing from us rather than each other. So we had a couple of weeks where the PCC, so the church council at our church were informed, and then the next day the children were informed, and the following Sunday, the rest of the congregation were informed and then our families were informed because they live some distance so that they weren't necessarily going to hear immediately from our friends. And all of that was quite in place so that the children wouldn't have to tell people and if the children needed to speak to somebody, there'd be somebody there. I'd already spoken to a teacher or the relevant teacher at each of the Children's Schools so that the teachers knew what was happening, and that the children would be finding out on this particular date so that they could be ready to support if needed. So all of that was set in place.
Regarding guidelines at home, it was in some ways just to kind of trying to minimize the impact on the children immediately so they could adjust a little bit more slowly. So for example, Debbie said that she wouldn't wear a skirt at home. Women can obviously wear blouses and trousers and that was just slightly easier to handle than seeing a dad wearing a blouse and a skirt. So Debbie did that. I can't remember many of the others. Actually the children still called Debbie Dad. We did discuss that, and we have discussed it at different times, but we thought if we try to amalgamate mom and dad you come up with either mad or dumb, neither which were best appropriate.
Oh, it's small things like that. Just where Debbie said, 'Okay, I won't wear a skirt and I'll still respond to dad,' and things like that. I would go to the children's parents’ evenings, because the children just felt they couldn't cope with having what looked like two women, or a woman and someone who was halfway between, so I did that for some while.
But the children did come through it at their own pace and in some cases it took a few years, but all of the children after three or four years had told some friends, and those friends had responded positively and I think that helped them. And they all knew that there was this congregation of people at church who knew, and they were still themselves within that congregation, that they weren't being isolated or being left out. One of the children saw a school counsellor for a while who was incredibly helpful, another one of the children actually got to see the same counsellor, but just for a few sessions and although at the time we didn't think that helped very much, with hindsight this particular child said it was helpful, it was helpful just to know that it was okay. Because the counsellor said it was okay, that your dad still loves you, and you're still okay, and you're still a family and it's okay. That child looks back on that time and said yeah, that was really good to hear.
Kristen: Right. Well, I want to thank you for sharing about your kids navigating that and of course, we wish them all the best continued still in their lives. I think are they high school age, college age now I think.
Stephanie: The youngest is going off to University in a couple of days’ time and the other two are beyond.
Kristen: So good luck to them and University and in life. We're going to take a quick break and when we come back I want to talk about how things are now and then a little bit about you know, Debbie's sort of public persona. She's out there in the world talking about these issues. So we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back with more Stephanie and Debbie.
And so you guys obviously you decided to stay married and I wonder, and I want to address this question to Stephanie first. Was this kind of like a default choice or was this an active choice on your part where you're like, 'I want to keep the family together'. Did you get to a place where you were like, 'Okay, I'm good with the marriage again, despite those rocky years during transition where I was kind of the glue holding it together'. How did you come down on staying together?
Stephanie: I've been thinking about this quite a bit over the last few days since knowing this was coming up. If I'm honest, it was a default position, but it was a default position that I actively chose, that I did want, if I could hold the family together then I wanted to do that. Obviously now, we're in a situation where all three children will have left home in a couple of days’ time. And so it just raises the question again, 'Well, is that still the default position?' and for me it is yes. It has been a rocky road, but there is an awful lot of shared history now, which is important to me, and we're looking ahead longer now one point. As I said, at one point, I said, 'Can I get through the next three hours?' whereas now we're looking ahead and saying, well five years’ time, 10 years’ time, 20 years’ time, what will it be like? So we can see ahead further into the future.
We're both facing possible changes as we get the freedom of the empty nest, but I think all the way along, we've actually been supportive of each other trying to do what we needed to do. And maybe that's why we are still together, or why I stayed when Debbie transitioned because actually there was something about, 'Well if Debbie needs to do this, then I will support that'. Within reason, as long as it didn't, you know, completely traumatize the rest of us. I don't know if you want to hear any more at the moment. Those are thoughts that have been going through my head. Many years ago, someone asked me about my marriage, and I said, 'We work well together,' and I thought afterwards, 'that sounds so unromantic'. It sounds awful. But actually there's still a lot of truth in that, we work well together.