I'm not sure how many of you have read
or heard about this five-year-old child in the media that was a girl,and is now recognized as a boy by her parents. I know that there are
some social groups that are claiming this as their issue, but as a
parent, I am claiming it as mine. This is child abuse.
Now, before you go and scream “bigot,”
let me tell you why. At five years old, I don't think it's
appropriate for her parents to reassign her identity. Even if they
felt their daughter truly was a transgender, it's not their place to
announce this to the world and help her transition into being a boy.
They've singlehandedly carved out her social position and identity
for the rest of her life. Isn't that what we get to do as teenagers
and young adults?
A five year old should not be committed
to something like that. It's like allowing her take out a loan on the
house she's going to live in when she grows up, after deciding
for herself what house that's going to be. Let's face it – at five
years old she can't understand the financial agreement she's
committing to, and her choice in houses is guaranteed to change.
Honestly, I wouldn't even trust a five year old to decide on
what they should eat for dinner, much less the social identity they
want to maintain for the rest of their life.
Similarly, there's no way this little
girl can understand or grasp what being openly transgender is going
to mean for her in the years to come. She is not mature enough to
make a decision with ALL THE FACTS. Deciding she's a boy at age two
is impossible. She doesn't understand what “being a boy” is
really all about. It also means being a teenage boy, and being a man.
She can't grasp the responsibility that comes with that.
As I was watching this video of this
little girl swimming in boy trunks and couple-dancing with little
girls, all I could think was, “What about in the next 10 years when
you start to grow boobs and decide who you're attracted to?” There
are so many more formative years after the age of five – why do you
have to put her in a box so young? What if this five year old goes on
to change her mind? That she's really a girl after all? And she could
– she has that right. Socially, she could decide that (if indeed
she really does feel she's a boy) she'd rather just embrace her girl
parts and be the girl that everyone else perceives her to be.
If given her privacy and the space to
claim her public identity alone, she still may have claimed her
female identity. What if she'd grown up and still identified with
being a boy, but was attracted to boys? She could have very easily –
and very understandably – decided to solely identify herself as a
girl to the rest of the world. Her sexual preferences could have
outweighed any other motive. Or maybe she'd simply decide that she
doesn't want to fight the battle over which locker room she should be
changing in, or on which sports team she should be allowed to play,
or any number of issues that hinge on whether you have a boy's or a
girl's anatomy (which, by the way, goes so far beyond whether you
have a vagina or a penis).
But now, there's not really an
opportunity for her to do that. At this point, if she's attracted to
boys, her only option is just to come out of the closet and decide
that she must also be gay, since she is attracted to boys, even
though she has a girl's anatomy, so boys that are attracted to her
are actually straight....Wow, is your head spinning yet? I can barely
wrap my mind around these scenarios at 32. How can we expect a five
year old to take all of these possibilities in stride when making a
decision of this magnitude?
Why would parents do this? Well, the
video that I saw talked about how the parents were trying to embrace
and accept their child, citing that many transgenders try to end
their life because of not being accepted. Well, congratulations
parents – you just made this child's road 10 times harder! Not only
could she potentially be dealing with gender identity, but now she
will be the bullseye of political and social commentators for the
rest of her life. As if puberty isn't confusing enough. Sorry sweetie
- now you're a poster child for a whole movement, and you don't even
know what “a poster child” means. Heck, I'm not even sure if you
can tie your shoes or spell your full name.
This is so far outside the LGTB issue.
To prove it, I'll even take the position that this child really is a
transgender. If the parents wanted to be supportive and open to all
possibilities, then why not just promote that environment at home? If
the parents wanted to accept her for who she was, “no strings
attached” as they put it, they could have done so without involving
the rest of the world. They could have responded in so many other
ways that still would have been supportive to the possibility that
she really is transgender.
This was not an A or B scenario. There
was a C, D, E, F and G option that wouldn't have brought this girl so
fully into the spotlight, and so entirely into a social and political
fight that she can't even decide she wants to be a part of yet –
one she doesn't even know exists. But instead, they have unilaterally
committed their child to this identity without the consent of her
rational, mature weigh-in that won't actually come around for many
years to come.
They're not freeing this child from a
social role or proverbial box – they're committing her to one. If
this was a teenage child, or a grown woman, this would be a LGTB
issue. But the fact that this
little girl is barely out of diapers makes this an entirely different
discussion. And quite frankly, I'm horrified that it even has to be
had.

Thanks for writing that Gwen. You said it so well. I remember wishing I was a boy when I was little. Haha....! I wouldn't be a boy now for anything in the world. I love being me!!! I feel so lucky.
ReplyDeleteThanks for addressing this Gwen! I was quite a tomboy growing up and sometimes felt I should have been a boy. But there is a huge difference between being a tomboy and being a boy. I am definitely a girl! I'm glad my parents didn't decide to try and change me. Thanks Mom and Dad for allowing me to be myself and for giving me the time to figure out who that was!
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