Sweetums wrote:
KTurner wrote:
idiggory, King of Bards wrote:
As always, gbaji needs to paint things in terms of benefits.
Transgendered people don't change their gender because they think a different one is better.
Transgendered people don't change their gender because they think a different one is better.
I read it as him describing a phase that a lot of kids that age go through, not describing true transgender people.
Correct. I'm saying that to attempt to diagnose someone as transgender at that age is ridiculous. Nearly every kid at some point goes through a stage where they want to be the other gender, or dress like the other gender, or play with dolls/trucks/whatever that the other gender seems associated with. And for the vast majority of them it has *nothing* to do with being transgender.
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I played with barbies at 3, my son played with dolls, dollhouses and cupcake kitchen sets. Doesn't mean I should turn him into a woman.
Sure. Which was what I was talking about by harm done though. If the odds of your three year old boy who likes to play dolls being transgender is one in 10,000, then taking him to a therapist and treating him based on the assumption that he *is* transgender is going to harmfully confuse 9,999 kids for every one it saves from harmful confusion.
Another way to look at it is that the pressure to "conform" to society's gender assumptions act as a test for transgenders. If after constantly being told you're wearing the wrong clothes, or the wrong hairstyle, and a zillion other things, you *still* believe it feels more right to you to do those things then otherwise, then you aren't confused anymore. If you remove those pressures, you might save the rare transgender a bit of embarassment and confusion growing up (cause if everyone is wearing and acting differently they wont stick out), but it's going to create even more problems for everyone else.
Whether it's fair to transgenders or not, the societal norms are norms for a reason. It's what most people conform to and are comfortable with. It seems counter productive to make everyone uncomfortable so that a small percentage can feel less so. And in this case attempting to make that decision at such a young age is pretty ridiculous.
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You don't have to worry about homones until you're older. All a little boy needs to look like a little girl is basically a dress.
Sure. But do we decide that since said little boy wanted to wear dresses when he was three that he must be transgendered and tell his parents that they should encourage him to wear dresses, and put braids in his hair, and otherwise pressure him to continue with that as his gender identity? How far do we shelter said boy from society in order that he not ever be exposed to the idea that others might think what he's doing is unusual? How many years do you keep doing this?
IMO, that's going to ***** him up far far more than actually being transgender in todays society. And it doesn't really help him in the long run either.
Edited, Dec 16th 2011 5:45pm by gbaji