Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like traditional gender norms are far more enrenched and visible now.
I grew up in the 70s/80s. Maybe it was because I lived out in the country and lots of kids were rural and farm kids but no one cared about gender really at all. There was no such thing as gender non conforming. Boys and girls had long hair or short hair, everyone just wore whatever they wanted. I was a tomboy, had short hair, wore boys clothes, played in the dirt, etc and no one ever said anything - no one cared at all.
There would have likely been a little more pushback if a boy had worn a dress or a skirt or something but we all just did what we wanted. Traditional gender norms and expectations now mean that any girl who sin't feminine and into pink and glitter is non binary or gender non conforming and any boy who isn't masculine is seen as the same. This isn't progressive, this is going backwards.
I agree
In the 80s if you wanted a flashlight you had a choice of red or blue.
Coats, blue, black, brown
Water bottle, blue red or silver..
You get the drift
Now we’ve made everything to gender specific, and for kids that don’t fit that box it’s confusing. Marketers and retailers did this. There is nothing wrong with our kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like traditional gender norms are far more enrenched and visible now.
I grew up in the 70s/80s. Maybe it was because I lived out in the country and lots of kids were rural and farm kids but no one cared about gender really at all. There was no such thing as gender non conforming. Boys and girls had long hair or short hair, everyone just wore whatever they wanted. I was a tomboy, had short hair, wore boys clothes, played in the dirt, etc and no one ever said anything - no one cared at all.
There would have likely been a little more pushback if a boy had worn a dress or a skirt or something but we all just did what we wanted. Traditional gender norms and expectations now mean that any girl who sin't feminine and into pink and glitter is non binary or gender non conforming and any boy who isn't masculine is seen as the same. This isn't progressive, this is going backwards.
The people pushing “traditional gender norms” are the trad wives/MAGA crowd.
For the rest of us, it’s all way more fluid today, not traditional.
Anonymous wrote:It's a lot of labeling and language that don't seem relevant to me in this situation. As Gen X would say, she's a tomboy. Who cares. So many girls are like this. My own 5th grade daughter is. What does this have to with trans and cis gender at this point in her life?
Just follow her lead and stop looking for trouble. Let her wear her hair how she wants, dress how she wants, and coach her to tell the custodian she likes her hair how it is.
Anonymous wrote:If the custodian thing actually happened talked to the administration.
That person seems off. Probably shouldn’t be around kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd make sure that she has a safe place to be herself with peers. Art, music and theatre groups tend to be accepting.
You can get through a lot of tough times if you know you have a safe place to go later.
This.
Also, you might want to teach her a couple of confident retorts when someone comments on her appearance. Like, "I am very happy with myself," or "Thanks for your opinion, but I'm good."
She doesn't need to respond confidently (or aggressively) to a comment from a random adult. She can smile in acknowledgement and move on. Not everything needs an attack.
Why should she smile??
Because she is a respectful child with good manners and he is an elder. Do you not teach your children to respect adults? Or only to correct them or ignore them?
Teach your children that they must always trust, respect, obey elders, then you make them into nice targets. Teach them to distinguish safe adults, appropriate behavior, and act accordingly
Anonymous wrote:It is indeed rough out there for females with short hair.
I'm not a tomboy, but I'm also not decked out in dresses each day (or ever).
My haircut is stylish. I always have my nails done. I wear makeup and jewelry daily. I've been accosted several times by people claiming I was trans and going to hell for using the women's restroom. This never happened to me until Trump's first term.
Literally, I've had short hair since I was 22. I can't stand hair touching my neck/shoulders and I woke in a profession where it is not seen as professional to wear updos or ponytails. A short cut was my compromise and has been my thing for 20 years.
I wish I could make my voice really deep so when someone comments I could use a deep voice and say something snarky back. I try but I just end up sounding like cookie monster. That's not intimidating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd make sure that she has a safe place to be herself with peers. Art, music and theatre groups tend to be accepting.
You can get through a lot of tough times if you know you have a safe place to go later.
This.
Also, you might want to teach her a couple of confident retorts when someone comments on her appearance. Like, "I am very happy with myself," or "Thanks for your opinion, but I'm good."
She doesn't need to respond confidently (or aggressively) to a comment from a random adult. She can smile in acknowledgement and move on. Not everything needs an attack.
Why should she smile??
Because she is a respectful child with good manners and he is an elder. Do you not teach your children to respect adults? Or only to correct them or ignore them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd make sure that she has a safe place to be herself with peers. Art, music and theatre groups tend to be accepting.
You can get through a lot of tough times if you know you have a safe place to go later.
This.
Also, you might want to teach her a couple of confident retorts when someone comments on her appearance. Like, "I am very happy with myself," or "Thanks for your opinion, but I'm good."
She doesn't need to respond confidently (or aggressively) to a comment from a random adult. She can smile in acknowledgement and move on. Not everything needs an attack.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like traditional gender norms are far more enrenched and visible now.
I grew up in the 70s/80s. Maybe it was because I lived out in the country and lots of kids were rural and farm kids but no one cared about gender really at all. There was no such thing as gender non conforming. Boys and girls had long hair or short hair, everyone just wore whatever they wanted. I was a tomboy, had short hair, wore boys clothes, played in the dirt, etc and no one ever said anything - no one cared at all.
There would have likely been a little more pushback if a boy had worn a dress or a skirt or something but we all just did what we wanted. Traditional gender norms and expectations now mean that any girl who sin't feminine and into pink and glitter is non binary or gender non conforming and any boy who isn't masculine is seen as the same. This isn't progressive, this is going backwards.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like traditional gender norms are far more enrenched and visible now.
I grew up in the 70s/80s. Maybe it was because I lived out in the country and lots of kids were rural and farm kids but no one cared about gender really at all. There was no such thing as gender non conforming. Boys and girls had long hair or short hair, everyone just wore whatever they wanted. I was a tomboy, had short hair, wore boys clothes, played in the dirt, etc and no one ever said anything - no one cared at all.
There would have likely been a little more pushback if a boy had worn a dress or a skirt or something but we all just did what we wanted. Traditional gender norms and expectations now mean that any girl who sin't feminine and into pink and glitter is non binary or gender non conforming and any boy who isn't masculine is seen as the same. This isn't progressive, this is going backwards.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like traditional gender norms are far more enrenched and visible now.
I grew up in the 70s/80s. Maybe it was because I lived out in the country and lots of kids were rural and farm kids but no one cared about gender really at all. There was no such thing as gender non conforming. Boys and girls had long hair or short hair, everyone just wore whatever they wanted. I was a tomboy, had short hair, wore boys clothes, played in the dirt, etc and no one ever said anything - no one cared at all.
There would have likely been a little more pushback if a boy had worn a dress or a skirt or something but we all just did what we wanted. Traditional gender norms and expectations now mean that any girl who sin't feminine and into pink and glitter is non binary or gender non conforming and any boy who isn't masculine is seen as the same. This isn't progressive, this is going backwards.