In this episode, you'll discover the one reason it is vitally important to believe your child when they tell you who they are.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind, the podcast helping parents of LGBTQ kids move from fear to fierce allyship and feel less alone and more informed so you can protect what matters, raise brave kids, and spark collective change.
Speaker AI'm Heather Howard.
Speaker ATester.
Speaker ALet's get started.
Speaker AWhen your child says, I need to tell you something, they're not testing you.
Speaker AThey're trusting you.
Speaker AAnd what you say next can either build a bridge or a wall.
Speaker ABelief is where safety begins.
Speaker ABy the end of today's episode, you'll understand why believing your child is the core cornerstone of trust and mental health.
Speaker AYou'll learn how fear, bias, and grief can block your ability to listen and how to move through those.
Speaker AAnd you'll walk away with specific tools to communicate love and safety when your child shares something vulnerable with you.
Speaker AAnd stick around for the unlearn, where we will dismantle the myth that exceed acceptance or even affirmation requires full understanding.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker AToday we're talking about one of the hardest yet most beautiful moments of parenting.
Speaker AWhen your child shares a truth that changes what you thought you knew.
Speaker AThis is where love becomes real.
Speaker ANot in the words we rehearse, but in the space, that space that is between fear and trust, the pause where we choose to believe.
Speaker ASo imagine this scenario.
Speaker AA child, a teenager or young adult, goes to their parent and they say, I want you to know that I'm gay.
Speaker AAnd the parent says, are you sure?
Speaker AOr I think it must be all the tiktoks that you've been watching, or you are way too young to know that about yourself.
Speaker ADo any of these scenarios sound familiar?
Speaker ADid you feel this way or say something similar when your child came out to you, or do you know a parent who has.
Speaker AWhen a child tells you who they are, whether it's about gender, sexuality, beliefs, or identity, they're not testing you.
Speaker AThey're trusting you.
Speaker AThis is the moment that can either deepen connection or build a wall.
Speaker ALet me say that one more time.
Speaker AWhen your child tells you who they are, whether it's about their gender identity, their sexual orientation, their faith, their mental health, or their worldview, they're not saying that to spite you or hurt you or throw you into a spiral.
Speaker AAnd for you, that moment isn't about having the right response.
Speaker AIt's about whether or not they feel safe enough to.
Speaker ATo tell you again.
Speaker ABelieving them doesn't mean you instantly understand.
Speaker AIt means saying, I'm here and I'm listening.
Speaker AIt's that magical curiosity over judgment, answering with openness instead of fear, and that one sentence of belief versus disbelief can save a life.
Speaker AResearch from the Trevor project found that LGBTQ youth who have at least one accepting adult are 40% less likely to attempt suicide.
Speaker AThey don't need or frankly, they don't want you to be a perfect parent.
Speaker AAnd remember, that is completely a fool's errand anyway.
Speaker AThey don't want a room full of experts.
Speaker AThey just want one adult who listens, who stays, and who says, I believe you.
Speaker AThat one adult can be you.
Speaker AAnd again, belief doesn't have to come with full comprehension.
Speaker ABelief is simply a way of saying, even if I don't fully understand yet, I trust that you do.
Speaker AThink about those words.
Speaker AI trust that you do.
Speaker ATelling your child, I trust that you know who you are.
Speaker AThat trust creates what psychologists call felt safety, which is the sense that it's okay to be seen.
Speaker ADr. Dan Siegel explains that when kids feel safe, safe, seen, secure, their nervous systems stabilize.
Speaker AIn essence, their insides take a deep breath and they can integrate their experiences Instead of internalizing fear.
Speaker AWhen you meet your child's truth with openness instead of anxiety, you become their nervous system's safe harbor.
Speaker AYour calm says you're not alone.
Speaker AYour belief says to them, you don't have to earn my love.
Speaker AHere's the truth.
Speaker AIdentity doesn't need your permission to exist.
Speaker AIt already is.
Speaker AWhat it needs, though, is your protection to thrive.
Speaker AAnd that starts with belief.
Speaker AOnce again, you don't have to get it to believe it.
Speaker AYou just need to allow the possibility, if only for a moment, to acknowledge that your child may actually know who they are better than you do.
Speaker ATake one breath before your words and let curiosity lead instead of fear.
Speaker AThat pause might be the most powerful sentence you never say.
Speaker AOkay, so here's the nitty gritty on what to do when your child opens up.
Speaker AWhether it's their first disclosure of something to you or one of many evolving conversations.
Speaker AThe first thing you do is to pause your reaction.
Speaker AWhen a child shares something vulnerable, your response sets the emotional tone.
Speaker ASo the first thing you want to do is to take a slow, deep breath before saying anything.
Speaker AYour calm nervous system communicates safety faster than any words do.
Speaker AYour neurons in your child's brain will register your calmness as permission to relax, helping regulate their stress response as well.
Speaker AThe second thing you do is to reflect what you've heard.
Speaker ASay something like thank you for telling me that took courage.
Speaker AA simple reflection signals validation.
Speaker AIt says, I see you.
Speaker AYou are not analyzing or fixing.
Speaker AYou are affirming their bravery.
Speaker AValidation tells your child that their truth matters.
Speaker ADr. Lisa Dumour's research shows that validation, not agreement, is what builds emotional safety between parents and teens.
Speaker AI'm going to say that one more time.
Speaker AValidation, not agreement, is what builds emotional safety between parents and teens.
Speaker AThe third thing that you're going to do is to stay curious, not corrective.
Speaker AReplace why or how?
Speaker ADo you know or Are you sure?
Speaker AWith Tell me more.
Speaker AAsking why puts them on the defensive.
Speaker ATell me more invites conversation.
Speaker AIt's open and nonjudgmental.
Speaker AYou don't need to understand everything at once.
Speaker AYou only need to stay open and available.
Speaker ASaying things like that sounds important to you.
Speaker ACan you help me understand what it means?
Speaker AOr I want to make sure I get this right.
Speaker AHow would you like for me to talk about it?
Speaker AThe fourth thing that you're going to do is to name your love explicitly.
Speaker ADon't assume that they know I don't know how to say this more clearly.
Speaker ASay I love you exactly as you are.
Speaker ASay it again.
Speaker ASay it when you're learning.
Speaker ASay it when they're unsure.
Speaker ASay it until your voice becomes their internal monologue.
Speaker AThe Family Acceptance Project found that affirming parental behaviors, listening, using correct names and pronouns, and expressing pride, all of those behaviors directly correlate with higher self esteem and lower depression rates in LGBTQ youth.
Speaker AEvery single I love you becomes data their brain uses to define safety.
Speaker AThe fifth thing you're going to do is to seek education, not validation.
Speaker ALearn on your own time.
Speaker ARead.
Speaker AListen to this podcast.
Speaker AAsk trusted experts.
Speaker AIt's not your child's responsibility to educate you.
Speaker AYour willingness to do the work tells them you're not a project I'm trying to fix.
Speaker AYou're a person I want to understand.
Speaker AThe sixth thing you're going to do is to hold space for complexity.
Speaker AYour child might still be figuring things out, and that's okay.
Speaker AYour role isn't to rush their clarity.
Speaker AIt's to be their safety tree while they discover it.
Speaker AWhen they change language, identity, or expression, meet it with grace.
Speaker AThank you for sharing that update.
Speaker AI'm honored you trust me with it.
Speaker AIdentity development is nonlinear, especially during adolescence.
Speaker AResearch from the American Psychological association shows that affirming evolving identities supports long term emotional resilience.
Speaker AThe seventh thing you're going to do is to repair when needed.
Speaker AWhen you fumble.
Speaker ANot if you fumble, but when you fumble.
Speaker AOwn it quickly.
Speaker AI'M sorry that I said that wrong.
Speaker AThank you for correcting me.
Speaker AAny statement Taking genuine accountability will work.
Speaker ARepair builds more trust than perfection ever could.
Speaker AThe eighth thing that you are going to do is to remember that you are their mirror.
Speaker AYour child learns how lovable they are by watching how you respond to their truth.
Speaker AEvery time you meet their identity with respect, you etch a new truth into their memory that says Love can handle all of me.
Speaker AWhen Connor first came out to me, I thought that I needed to have all of the answers right away.
Speaker AI wanted to fix the fear in his eyes, and perhaps in my own as well.
Speaker ABut what I've learned is that belief isn't about certainty.
Speaker AIt's about trust and having the courage to put all of our own stuff aside, to step into the known, to acknowledge our child as a being who is separate from ourselves, one with autonomy and the internal wisdom to know who they are.
Speaker AIn those first conversations, my voice, my body shook all the time.
Speaker AI didn't know the right language.
Speaker ABut somewhere in the midst of all of that, at some point, I said the one thing that mattered to him.
Speaker AThank you for trusting me.
Speaker AIn that moment.
Speaker AHe knew that he was safe, no matter what was to come.
Speaker AI heard him.
Speaker AI saw him.
Speaker AI believed him.
Speaker AOver time, I've realized that love, especially in moments like that, isn't a declaration.
Speaker AIt's a practice.
Speaker AIt is the late night, I'm still here, the gentle correction when someone misgenders them, the quiet listening when they change pronouns again.
Speaker AThe steady reminder that who they are isn't an inconvenience.
Speaker AIt's a gift of trust.
Speaker AAnd yes, oh my gosh, of course I've gotten things wrong.
Speaker ABut each repair has taught me that what matters most isn't perfection.
Speaker AIt's the willingness to see them, to believe them, to continue growing my capacity to hold whatever may come.
Speaker AOur kids don't need flawless parents.
Speaker AThey need ones they can trust.
Speaker AWhen you choose to see the beauty in the messiness, to not just sit but grow through your own discomfort, your child learns that love can hold complexity.
Speaker AAnd that belief, even in the in between, is the bridge that keeps connection alive.
Speaker AThis week, try one small act that communicates belief.
Speaker AIt could be leaving your child a note that says, I love watching you become who you are.
Speaker AIt could be changing their name in your phone to the one that they have chosen.
Speaker AIt could be asking them how they'd like you to share about them with family this holiday season.
Speaker AEach gesture, no matter how small, tells their nervous system you are loved and you are safe with me.
Speaker AToday's Unlearned is about letting go of the idea that belief requires complete understanding.
Speaker AWe've been told if you don't understand it, you can't support it.
Speaker ABut that's not how love works.
Speaker ALove isn't comprehension.
Speaker AIt's compassion.
Speaker AIt's a verb.
Speaker AWhat if belief sounded like I don't have all the language, but I trust you.
Speaker AI might need to learn, but I will never stop showing up.
Speaker AAnd even I trust you when you tell me who you are.
Speaker AThat kind of belief changes everything because it tells your child their truth.
Speaker ADoesn't have to shrink to fit your comfort.
Speaker AThis week, practice saying one of these out loud.
Speaker AThank you for helping me see the world through your eyes.
Speaker AI believe you.
Speaker AI'm still learning.
Speaker AAnd I'm with you.
Speaker AWords like these become anchors your child will return to long after the conversation ends.
Speaker AWhen we unlearn the myth that love must understand before it accepts, we open the door to a deeper kind of safety.
Speaker AThe kind that says you don't have to prove who you are.
Speaker AI believe you.
Speaker AThank you for being here, for choosing courage over comfort and curiosity over certainty.
Speaker ARemember, when your child shares who they are, they're not asking for perfect responses.
Speaker AThey're asking you to fully see them in that moment.
Speaker AYou don't have to have every answer.
Speaker AYou just have to believe them.
Speaker AIf this episode spoke to you, share it with another parent, teacher, or friend who might need to hear these words.
Speaker AAnd remember that new episodes of More Human, More Kind drop every Tuesday and Friday, so make sure to follow and subscribe so you never miss one.
Speaker AAnd if you're ready to release fear, shame, or outdated patterns in your own life, I'm accepting a few private clients right now.
Speaker AYou can learn more at morehumanmorekind.
Speaker ACom.
Speaker AUntil next time.
Speaker ABreathe, believe, and remember, your love can be the safe place someone needs to come home to Sam.