Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guessing you live on a coast and have a loving home. This is normal for tween and teen girls now. It may last, it may not. It didn’t for my DD. She is an older teen now, only dates and talks about boys and never mentioned it again. So absolutely you said all the right things and it’s great to be supportive but unfortunately there is an epidemic of gay and trans “coming out” in girls of your daughters age.
I’m so tired of people saying this. It really trivializes the thoughts and emotions of preteen and teenage girls, as if they aren’t capable of understanding their own thoughts and making their own decisions. Could it be some kind of fad/phase? Maybe. But that’s not a reason to dismiss or diminish what your daughter says to you. All you have to do is be accepting and supportive! It’s not hard!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guessing you live on a coast and have a loving home. This is normal for tween and teen girls now. It may last, it may not. It didn’t for my DD. She is an older teen now, only dates and talks about boys and never mentioned it again. So absolutely you said all the right things and it’s great to be supportive but unfortunately there is an epidemic of gay and trans “coming out” in girls of your daughters age.
You are correct (coast/loving home). Interesting to hear regarding so many kids coming out.
Op I’m a new poster. My DS is approaching 10 and said same. I’m a very liberal person but was very confused as to why this came up at 9. Then I noticed every show he watches has a gay, bi, or non-binary character. While supportive there wasn’t much to discuss. He’s 9 and the earliest he might be allowed to date is 16. I’ll check back in with him when he’s older. If he doesn’t bring it up before then.
Anonymous wrote:Not true. Not every public and private school district has bought the super new ideology fiction book curriculum. Not even half have. Super liberal DC area has? No one outside of DC cares about DC school indoctrination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could very well be an anxiety reaction. She learnt what bisexual meant (and somehow felt that being one could mean that she won't be accepted, so probably learnt it as something negative), and started worrying that she might be one too because she's felt "crushes" on girls before.
Just assure her that whether she ends up liking boys, girls, both, it's all normal and fine.
Kid are being taught things too young and/or in age INappropriate ways, or worse, via internet influencers or friends. So much confusion being manufactured here.
Many kids also have no context. My 7 yo doesn’t even know human anatomy well yet the school read the Jazz Jenning book and he thinks people can be one ring on the inside, one on the outside and thus everyone can make a baby. Including himself if he decides he’s a girl.
We’re looking to move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could very well be an anxiety reaction. She learnt what bisexual meant (and somehow felt that being one could mean that she won't be accepted, so probably learnt it as something negative), and started worrying that she might be one too because she's felt "crushes" on girls before.
Just assure her that whether she ends up liking boys, girls, both, it's all normal and fine.
Kid are being taught things too young and/or in age INappropriate ways, or worse, via internet influencers or friends. So much confusion being manufactured here.
Many kids also have no context. My 7 yo doesn’t even know human anatomy well yet the school read the Jazz Jenning book and he thinks people can be one ring on the inside, one on the outside and thus everyone can make a baby. Including himself if he decides he’s a girl.
We’re looking to move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could very well be an anxiety reaction. She learnt what bisexual meant (and somehow felt that being one could mean that she won't be accepted, so probably learnt it as something negative), and started worrying that she might be one too because she's felt "crushes" on girls before.
Just assure her that whether she ends up liking boys, girls, both, it's all normal and fine.
Kid are being taught things too young and/or in age INappropriate ways, or worse, via internet influencers or friends. So much confusion being manufactured here.
Anonymous wrote:This could very well be an anxiety reaction. She learnt what bisexual meant (and somehow felt that being one could mean that she won't be accepted, so probably learnt it as something negative), and started worrying that she might be one too because she's felt "crushes" on girls before.
Just assure her that whether she ends up liking boys, girls, both, it's all normal and fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is trendy to be bisexual or admitting having mental illness among teenagers.
+1 Depression/anxiety combined with questioning sexuality (as is very common at this age) seems to have now morphed into many many teen/tween girls identifying as "Trans." Girls are self diagnosing with the internet and then finding their way to influencers and message boards that make them feel safe and part of a community or movement. That sense of community/being part of a movement is extremely appealing to young, suggestible girls and while I'm supportive of children who are truly experiencing gender dysmorphia, there are far more girls who have simply adopted this identity because it's the thing to do. Maybe they don't identify with "girly girls" or hyper sexual teens on social media and think that must be because they are experiencing gender dysphoria. Maybe they are truly gay/bisexual, but that's so 1990s so trans it is.
It’s the new anorexia. It washes over groups of girls age 10-13 and they all copy each other down the trans rabbit hole. Only a few have to guts to get over the peer pressure and dig out later. Meanwhile, they can pick a new name, bind, have new trans friends groups online and at school, take some blockers, take some T. Don’t try to stop it you’ll be accused of being toxic and a —phobe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guessing you live on a coast and have a loving home. This is normal for tween and teen girls now. It may last, it may not. It didn’t for my DD. She is an older teen now, only dates and talks about boys and never mentioned it again. So absolutely you said all the right things and it’s great to be supportive but unfortunately there is an epidemic of gay and trans “coming out” in girls of your daughters age.
You are correct (coast/loving home). Interesting to hear regarding so many kids coming out.
Op I’m a new poster. My DS is approaching 10 and said same. I’m a very liberal person but was very confused as to why this came up at 9. Then I noticed every show he watches has a gay, bi, or non-binary character. While supportive there wasn’t much to discuss. He’s 9 and the earliest he might be allowed to date is 16. I’ll check back in with him when he’s older. If he doesn’t bring it up before then.