Anonymous wrote:You say "Okay. I love you no matter what, and no matter who you're attracted to." And then you hug her and go on with life because this isn't a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
Hasn’t something gone wrong in our world when an 11yo knows the word pansexual, let alone identifies as one? I think you handled it well, pp, but I just think this celebration of sex and sexuality in elementary and middle schools is less than ideal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t make a big deal about it. It’s a fad.
Micro aggressions toward LGBTQ+ rampant on this board.
Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
Anonymous wrote:Say that's great, reiterate issues of consent and safety, and let her figure it out. It's not going to hurt anything if she's bisexual, and it's not going to hurt anything if she says she's bisexual and only dates one gender. It's all fine. Safety and consent are all that matters.
Thank you! My husband actually used it in his toast at our kid's wedding last fall. Fortunately, kid married a lovely person who is not an asshole.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids try identities on. She may change and she may not. Be supportive and don't make assumptions about how she'll end up. She'll figure out who she is eventually. (BTW would you have told her not to label herself if she insisted she was straight?)
My kid:
As a youngster, insisted she was straight. As a middle schooler, told us she was bi. Then as a teen insisted she was a lesbian. Then met a guy she liked and decided she was bi. As an adult, her identity is bi. Our rule: We don't care what gender you date but don't date assholes.
This is a great rule lol
This is an excellent response overall but YES that is the best rule. I am going to use it when my kids get old enough to date.
Anonymous wrote:You say "Okay. I love you no matter what, and no matter who you're attracted to." And then you hug her and go on with life because this isn't a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids try identities on. She may change and she may not. Be supportive and don't make assumptions about how she'll end up. She'll figure out who she is eventually. (BTW would you have told her not to label herself if she insisted she was straight?)
My kid:
As a youngster, insisted she was straight. As a middle schooler, told us she was bi. Then as a teen insisted she was a lesbian. Then met a guy she liked and decided she was bi. As an adult, her identity is bi. Our rule: We don't care what gender you date but don't date assholes.
This is a great rule lol
Anonymous wrote:Kids try identities on. She may change and she may not. Be supportive and don't make assumptions about how she'll end up. She'll figure out who she is eventually. (BTW would you have told her not to label herself if she insisted she was straight?)
My kid:
As a youngster, insisted she was straight. As a middle schooler, told us she was bi. Then as a teen insisted she was a lesbian. Then met a guy she liked and decided she was bi. As an adult, her identity is bi. Our rule: We don't care what gender you date but don't date assholes.
Anonymous wrote:You say "Okay. I love you no matter what, and no matter who you're attracted to." And then you hug her and go on with life because this isn't a big deal.