Dear Prudence,
I’m a queer, nonbinary parent who most people perceive as a woman. I have a 7-year-old stepdaughter who lives with me and her father, and I am pregnant with her sibling. I am out to my partner and our daughter, and we use they/them pronouns for me among ourselves. Our daughter calls me by my first name and refers to me as her parent. However, I’m not out to much of the wider world or our families, even though we have a great relationship.
Our kiddo understands that some people don’t know everything about me, and may think I’m a “she” or a woman, and that I’m ok with them thinking that, even though WE know I’m NOT a man or a woman. I’m not really sure why I don’t feel like coming out more, other than it’s never felt that vital to me that someone I’m not super intimate with know something as intimate (to me) as my gender. (Although my sexuality is also queer, and I’ve been very loud ‘n’ proud about that pretty much my whole life.)
Now that I’m visibly pregnant, besides the interesting body dysmorphia that sometimes comes up, people have been calling me “Mom.” My daughter even said to me, “You’re MY parent, but you’ll be the baby’s Mama.” But I don’t know if that’s true! I don’t feel like “Mama” anymore than I feel like a “she.” My question is … what the hell do we call me? And if that’s what the baby grows up calling me, does that mean I have to come out to everyone as an explanation of why this kid’s not calling me Mama? Am I setting a shit example for my kids by not wanting to be out more? I’m a little burned out from fielding lots of nonconsensual belly touching and questions about my body or genitals or about why we aren’t finding out or announcing the baby’s genitals. I want to be authentically myself to my partner and children, and to have them know who I really am. I just don’t know if I’m up for suddenly having everyone else we know have that information, too.
— Gestating While Genderqueer