Hilarious.
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+100 |
Omg so this! This navel gazing narcissism is driving me crazy. |
| This generation has been sitting at joke bored for a year online. It’s going to be a weird group of adults. Sorry. |
| *sitting at home |
Seriously, if this generation of middle schoolers are the center of a giant social experiment, they are wasting a valuable population of people incredibly bored and self focused for a solid year. OP, they are labeling themselves in their pre-teens and early teens because we have created a label for anything and made it known it's acceptable. Do what I do as a parent, "That's nice, dear. I'm glad you are figuring it all out. If you need to talk, let me know." and keep moving. I have 5 kids and the younger two are going through this while the older 3 are looking at them like they are a different species. Because they are. They are 2020 pre-teens with an Instagram account. |
+1000000000000000000000000000 This age group is known for navel gazing narcissism anyway, but the age of social media is just enhancing it by lionizing it, focusing it, and normalizing it. Instead of it being a phase, it becomes a way of being that carries on into adulthood. It makes me want to yak. We need to stop the focus on all the labeling. We need to keep prompting them to look outward. |
Sorry but I’m not taking advice from a parent who lets their tweens have Instagram accounts… |
| Here is the thing... All this is not new. AT ALL. it's always existed, just it existed in the shadows. In invisible universes that weren't part of mainstream society but still very much a thing and alive. Think of the NYC balls and what not in the. 80s and 90s. It was there it was just forced to be hidden |
No. Not this, nothing like this. You're not right. Rewriting the past isn't helpful. |
What do you mean? Trans people have always existed. Non-binary people have too but honestly were usually sort of forced to "pick a side". I mean it's not just the past. There are people who were trans in the 80s and still alive. I. Very confused by your firm, 100% positive assertion that this didn't exist before. It did. Because people alive today can tell you their stories. It's just it was not acceptable to say it out loud or live it out in the open except in very narrow sets of circumstances prior to this moment. I'd argue it's largely still not on the whole for queer youth. |
There’s a huge difference between adults dressing as they choose and going to social events, and medically transitioning children and young adults. It’s not even close. |
+1. |
And no one, literally no one will force you to medically transition your child. Trans is just the new proxy for the culture wars. You either can see that or you can't. |
+1 - dealing with this with both of my girls - 14 and 10. I have posted here about it previously. I'm supportive, but firm about the idea that they are too young to make any permanent decisions. I refused to buy a chest binder for my 14 year old. She has largely returned to being a girl, but is still a bit uncomfortable with her developing body. 10 year old has friends calling her by a gender neutral name. She has not asked me to use this name. I don't think I would agree to it at this point simply based on my point above - too young to make any permanent decisions. I have also tried to talk to them about the fact that they are being heavily influenced by the internet/culture and while we should all be accepting we should also be aware of outside influences on how we think about things. This is trickier because it can sound unsupportive but I feel like it's important for them to question the source and content of what they are seeing/reading. From an adult perspective I feel like the entire gender dysphoria discussion in teens/tweens is hugely overrepresentative of how many actual transgender people exist in society. The sexuality discussions are a little different, but I think it's this generation's edginess. |