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What’s So Bad About a Boy Who Wants to Wear a Dress?

Started by Shana A, August 08, 2012, 10:04:53 AM

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Shana A

What's So Bad About a Boy Who Wants to Wear a Dress?

By RUTH PADAWER
Published: August 8, 2012

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/12/magazine/whats-so-bad-about-a-boy-who-wants-to-wear-a-dress.html?_r=3&pagewanted=all

The night before Susan and Rob allowed their son to go to preschool in a dress, they sent an e-mail to parents of his classmates. Alex, they wrote, "has been gender-fluid for as long as we can remember, and at the moment he is equally passionate about and identified with soccer players and princesses, superheroes and ballerinas (not to mention lava and unicorns, dinosaurs and glitter rainbows)." They explained that Alex had recently become inconsolable about his parents' ban on wearing dresses beyond dress-up time. After consulting their pediatrician, a psychologist and parents of other gender-nonconforming children, they concluded that "the important thing was to teach him not to be ashamed of who he feels he is." Thus, the purple-pink-and-yellow-striped dress he would be wearing that next morning. For good measure, their e-mail included a link to information on gender-variant children.

When Alex was 4, he pronounced himself "a boy and a girl," but in the two years since, he has been fairly clear that he is simply a boy who sometimes likes to dress and play in conventionally feminine ways. Some days at home he wears dresses, paints his fingernails and plays with dolls; other days, he roughhouses, rams his toys together or pretends to be Spider-Man. Even his movements ricochet between parodies of gender: on days he puts on a dress, he is graceful, almost dancerlike, and his sentences rise in pitch at the end. On days he opts for only "boy" wear, he heads off with a little swagger. Of course, had Alex been a girl who sometimes dressed or played in boyish ways, no e-mail to parents would have been necessary; no one would raise an eyebrow at a girl who likes throwing a football or wearing a Spider-Man T-shirt.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


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Michelle G

That was one of my biggest complaints when I was younger, girls can wear pants and play with trucks in the dirt, but boys would be ridiculed and scolded for trying on their sisters dresses and playing with dolls, dancing etc.
No wonder I just "hid" in boy mode forever after that!

It's nice to see that times are changing and some kids are finally getting to be their true selves!
Just a "California Girl" trying to enjoy each sunny day
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UCBerkeleyPostop

The rationale is that it is OK to be a tomboy because one is aspiring to be something "superior" while aspiring to be girlish is aspiring to be something "inferior."
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Michelle G

well....that just sux doesnt it :(

When we were young teens, my two year younger sis would wear my t-shirts and stretch them out with her big boobs, everyone just thought that was cute and funny....not really having any idea that I wanted boobs so bad I couldnt stand it!

sorry...rant over ;)
Just a "California Girl" trying to enjoy each sunny day
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