Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Chap wrote:If a little boy of mine had wanted to be treated as a little girl, or vice versa, then I would have adapted to that. No problem there. So far as I am concerned, that is a matter for the kid, me, their friends, and so far as necessary their school.
I think many parents would feel and act that way. Like most stuff about the kid's personal life, it should not be treated as material for flag-waving and photos on Facebook or whatever. In fact many kids start asking their parents to take down all those personal pix once they get old enough to realise the implications for their right to privacy (which when they are little they don't know they have).
That's where I differ from the lady in the picture. That picture was her choice, and out of line. And I think that amongst parents whose kids question their gender, she will be a very rare phenomenon.
When I was around four or five-years-old I would regularly play with a girl doll. I carried her around. Dressed her. Whatever. I ended up growing into a heterosexual male. No worries.
I have to wonder if I were born in this era, to a parent like those we're seeing in the news, if my mother or father, instead of letting me grow out of a phase, would use that as an opportunity to confuse me and place me on a path that leads to inevitable difficulties. It's one thing to be chill about your kid being a kid, and it's another to convince them they're not ok and they'd be better off as something else. It's definitely a problem when a parent does that.
- Doc
Your parents seem to have done it right. Keep kids at a kids level. If a five-year-old wants to wear a dress, let him. No need to take things further than he is capable of thinking of by asking him 'Would you like us to get the name on your birth certificate changed? Do you want to see a doctor to get ... changed' and so on.
If he gets older and still feels that way, which in the great majority of cases (like yours) he will not, then the problem may need to be addressed at a level suitable to his age. I'm glad I never had to deal with that.