Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had crushes way before that. first grade I think. And lots of other kids in the class said they did too.
I distinctly remember having butterflies in my stomach at age 9. Ryan. He was so cute and was so nice to me.
Kids that are are too young for acting on crushes but not for having crushes. Their sexually doesn't matter here.
Maybe examine how you feel about the possibility of your daughter being gay (even though only they can really know). Some parents feel like they are very supportive of the LGBT community until it looks like their kid might be part of that community. It can be hard to imagine them potentially getting teased and not having the traditional nuclear family you imagined them to have.
OP here. Thank you to everyone for their replies. Very helpful and respectful.
As far as your post, the bolded def ran through my head. What if she tells a girl she likes her and gets rejected, then she gets teased about being gay. Or how does she know who is gay and who isn't, when she's ready to date (not as easy as there is a cute boy. I like boys. maybe he will like me, kind of thing).
Ultimately, as long as she's happy, I really don't care who she falls in love with eventually. It did make me consider not moving to states that are not protective of the gay community.
Anonymous wrote:I had crushes way before that. first grade I think. And lots of other kids in the class said they did too.
I distinctly remember having butterflies in my stomach at age 9. Ryan. He was so cute and was so nice to me.
Kids that are are too young for acting on crushes but not for having crushes. Their sexually doesn't matter here.
Maybe examine how you feel about the possibility of your daughter being gay (even though only they can really know). Some parents feel like they are very supportive of the LGBT community until it looks like their kid might be part of that community. It can be hard to imagine them potentially getting teased and not having the traditional nuclear family you imagined them to have.
Anonymous wrote:You should tell her "Thank you for telling me this about you. I always like knowing things about you since I love you so much." Anything after that, would be whatever you would have done if she had told you she had a crush on a boy in her class.
I'm female and straight and remember having a crush on a boy at around age 10. My teenagers (one straight boy, one gay girl, and one straight girl) all had crushes around 10 or 11 too. It's a very normal age for that.
Anonymous wrote:10 is not going for crushes (it’s not old either, some kids have them younger, some older). I think you did great. No need to label anything now, just wait and see. I agree with pp to just listen. Don’t take it too seriously.