Trans and in Therapy: Healing, Honoring Identity & Doing It Right

Trans and in Therapy: Healing, Honoring Identity & Doing It Right

Van Ethan Levy

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

San Diego, United States

Medically reviewed by TherapyRoute
Therapy has the power to heal — but only when it affirmingly honors identity. This guide helps therapists, allies, and community-care providers create safer, more inclusive, trauma-aware spaces for trans, non binary, and many more non cis folx in therapy.

Why Therapy Matters for Trans, Non Binary and many more Non Cis Folx

For many trans, non binary and many more non cis folx, therapy is more than emotional support. It is access to safety, identity affirmation, survival skills, trauma processing, and community care.

Therapy should be personal. Therapists listed on TherapyRoute are qualified, independent, and free to answer to you – no scripts, algorithms, or company policies.

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But therapy is only healing when it acknowledges:

identity

lived experience

systemic oppression

history

culture

trauma

resilience

When therapy ignores identity, it reinforces harm.

When therapy affirms identity, it can transform lives.

1. Why Trans-Affirming Therapy Is Essential

Mental-health challenges among trans, non binary and many more non cis people exist because of systemic oppression, not identity.

Inclusive, respectful care improves treatment outcomes and strengthens therapeutic alliance.

Affirming language, correct pronouns, cultural humility, and intersectional understanding build safety and trust.

Trans, non binary and many more non cis folx experience compounded harm due to discrimination, erasure, and identity-based violence.

Affirming therapy is not “specialized”—it is ethical care.

2. Core Principles of Affirming, Trauma-Aware Practice

Respect identity always — pronouns, name, lived experience

Share your pronoun series.

Ask clients what pronoun to use and in what context (ex: with partner(s), parent(s)/guardian(s), with school, in legal documentation, notes, etc).

Use one pronoun per series (they, she, he, elle, él, etc.).

•Share your pronoun series

•Ask clients what pronoun they use.

• Use one pronoun per series (they, she, he, elle, él, etc.).

• Never assume identity based on appearance, voice, or name.

• Respect chosen names and document them appropriately.

• Avoid misgendering and mispronouning and correct yourself quickly if it happens.

Practice cultural humility

•Examine your own biases and privileges.

•Recognize how cis supremacy, colonialism, ableism, and class impact client experiences.

•Commit to learning: language evolves, identity evolves, understanding must evolve too.

•Remember: the client is the expert of their own identity.

Use trauma-informed approaches

•Prioritize safety, autonomy, pacing, and consent.

•Validate trauma caused by systems (medical, legal, educational, family, community).

•Understand that trauma is often collective, generational, and identity-based.

Affirm identity — do not pathologize it

•Identity is not a disorder.

•Dysphoria is not universal.

•Identity exploration is not pathology.

•Joy, affirmation, and self-determination are healing.

Encourage and support autonomy and choice

•Clients lead decisions about medical care, how they show up, and identity exploration.

•Offer referrals, information, and support without gatekeeping. (single sessions, check out No More GateKeeping dot org for the app that provides the questions and populates a ready to sign and date letter).

Address systemic oppression directly

•Therapy must include conversations about transphobia, classism, ableism, and systemic inequity.

•Healing is incomplete without acknowledging the systems causing harm.

3. Concrete Practices for Therapists & Providers

Intake & Forms

• Use open-ended questions about identity.

• Avoid forced binary options. (don't put "other")

• Ask for pronouns (one per series).

• Include space for chosen name and documentation preferences.

In-Session Language

• Use the client’s pronouns and name consistently.

• If you make a mistake, correct it and move forward without making it about you.

• Do not question the legitimacy of someone’s identity or pronoun.

Documentation

•Use identity-affirming language in notes.

•Use chosen names even when legal names differ (unless legally required otherwise and communicate this to the client (informed consent) — then document respectfully).

•Describe identity with care and precision using the clients language.

Treatment Planning

•Collaborate with clients on goals.

•Include identity-affirming, safety-centered goals when appropriate.

•Explore trauma through an intersectional realities (identity + class + ability + experience).

Referrals & Resources

•Connect clients with affirming medical care, therapists, legal resources, community supports, and non cis-led organizations. (Do Something: Identity(ies) non profit has a list of providers in the US in every state who will write letters for medical care in just one session).

•Never refer to providers who are unsafe or non-affirming without sharing this with your client.

Self-Education

•Engage in ongoing learning about trans health, identity, history, trauma, and community care. ( I offer trainings on my website Van Ethan Levy dot com that are asynchronous as well as have an interactive workbook).

•Attend trainings offered by trans and non cis educators.

•Learn the language and the context.

4. What Happens When Therapy Isn’t Affirming

When therapy reinforces cis supremacy, the harm is significant.

Possible consequences include:

•increased dysphoria

•anxiety and depression

•retraumatization

•identity suppression

•internalized oppression

•shame

•distrust of mental-health systems

•early termination of therapy

•isolation

Non-affirming therapy is not “neutral.”

It is harmful and it can be deadly.

5. What Trans, Non Binary & Many More Non Cis Folx Deserve in Therapy

You deserve:

•safety

•respect

•identity affirmation

•cultural humility

•transparent communication

•choice and autonomy

•trauma-aware care

•clinicians who understand oppression

•no gatekeeping (this means an assessment for someone to gain access to medical care should only take 1 session).

•meaningful access to affirming services

•space to explore identity without pressure

•recognition of your resilience

Therapy must meet you with care, not questioning.

Affirmation, not erasure.

Support, not barriers.

Therapy Can Heal When It Honors Identity

Therapy can be a place of healing, care, resistance, and possibility — when it honors identity and rejects cis supremacy.

Trans, non binary and many more non cis folx deserve practices rooted in:

•respect

•autonomy

•trust

•affirmation

•dignity

•transparency

•consent

•community care

•justice

Healing is possible.

Affirming therapy makes it accessible.

Important: TherapyRoute does not provide medical advice. All content is for informational purposes and cannot replace consulting a healthcare professional. If you face an emergency, please contact a local emergency service. For immediate emotional support, consider contacting a local helpline.

About The Author

Van Ethan

Van Ethan Levy (they | elle)

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

San Diego, United States

I offer therapy via phone and online. My focus is culturally responsive trauma-informed care that is client centered.

Van Ethan Levy (they | elle) is a qualified Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, based in undefined, San Diego, United States. With a commitment to mental health, Van Ethan provides services in , including Advocacy, Psych & Diagnostic Assessment, Advocacy, Mindfulness, Adolescent Therapy, EMDR, Therapy, Individual Therapy and Child Psych & Diagnostic Assessment. Van Ethan has expertise in .