According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006
Started by EllieM, January 30, 2014, 04:25:20 PM
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
QuoteSince the summer of 2012, Olie Pullen has kept in her bedroom closet a Wonder Woman costume, which she loves, but has struggled to actually wear. The plan had been to don it on Halloween two years ago, but when that day came, Olie, now 11, chose to be a vampire instead. Dressing up in the red and blue costume would have exposed her at school and around her Montreal neighbourhood in a way that didn't feel right yet: Olie was, after all, born a boy. Oliver....Pullen Sansfaçon recalls having to tell a close family member who was disapproving, "If you can't accept this, you won't be able to see Olie anymore." Green, whose now-adult son wore dresses as a child, recalls her mother phoning to say, "Can you make sure that Liam comes in shorts today?" Another mother whose child is gender variant but doesn't want to be named says that there has been "full-blown opposition" from her relatives to her son living as a girl, "to the point where there's major rifts, and it's really sad."