As a therapist who is both queer herself and works almost exclusively with queer and trans folks, I have both firsthand experiences and have heard from hundreds of clients that past therapists didn’t understand them, and in fact, pathologized them, for the ways their lives fall outside the straight norm.
For me, this showed up when a trauma therapist I saw in college conflated my lesbianism with sexual abuse I must have not remembered. The same therapist, when I expressed distress over breakups and hookups happening in my friend group, suggested: Why don’t you all just stop having sex with each other? I stopped seeing her shortly after both of these comments and avoided therapy for years.
This therapist couldn’t comprehend why I wouldn’t be with a man other than having experienced sexual abuse at the hands of one — a take that is extremely reductive and pathologizing for queer and trans folks, but also for survivors of sexual abuse.
This therapist also didn’t understand, because she didn’t take the time to, that my friend group was also my dating pool, my hookup pool, and that, generally speaking, it is typical for queer and trans folks to have relationships of all kinds with their friends, sexual ones included.





