Ze xx
06-10-2009, 05:30 AM
I have been involved in a couple of conversations recently about friends sons who, at the ripe old age of 4-6 like nothing better than to dress up as fairies or princesses. It was on a thread on a parenting forum that I'm on and also today my dd's school had a 'weird wednesday' where they get to dress up as something weird. One of dd's boy-chums went in as a girl, and his mum said that he does it all the time.
As a result of these conversations (none of whom know my stance on cding btw) it seems that the prevailing attitude amongst the mothers is to let them get on with it, it's either something that they're going to grow out of, or something that's inate in them anyway. (The fathers tend to be the ones to say 'no you're a boy, you do not dress in girls clothes').
My SO started to dress at around that sort of age, and of course he was told that it was 'wrong'. So although it didn't stop him, he did it in secret. The mothers that I've spoken to recently are more likely to say, hey you want to wear a dress, here, knock yourself out!
So, hopefully, it's a way forward for future cder/transgenders (whatever, not making any distinctions here) to be both more accepting of themselves and more accepted in society. May come a bit late for some of you, but it shows me that in much the same way as now most people would accept their gay son, will it really be that long before the tg son/daughter is more easily accepted. :)
As a result of these conversations (none of whom know my stance on cding btw) it seems that the prevailing attitude amongst the mothers is to let them get on with it, it's either something that they're going to grow out of, or something that's inate in them anyway. (The fathers tend to be the ones to say 'no you're a boy, you do not dress in girls clothes').
My SO started to dress at around that sort of age, and of course he was told that it was 'wrong'. So although it didn't stop him, he did it in secret. The mothers that I've spoken to recently are more likely to say, hey you want to wear a dress, here, knock yourself out!
So, hopefully, it's a way forward for future cder/transgenders (whatever, not making any distinctions here) to be both more accepting of themselves and more accepted in society. May come a bit late for some of you, but it shows me that in much the same way as now most people would accept their gay son, will it really be that long before the tg son/daughter is more easily accepted. :)