Don’t Mess with Moms Like Us

Happy 10th Birthday C.J.'s Brother!!!!

Happy 10th Birthday C.J.’s Brother!!!!

It’s C.J.’s Brother’s birthday week! We started off celebrating his decade of awesomeness with a party at Dave and Buster’s – which I deemed a total and complete stress-free success…but, then again, I didn’t have to drive home five 10-year-old boys who were hopped up on sugar, hitting each other with the inflatable hammers they won gaming and telling fart jokes mingled with “your mom” insults. That was C.J.’s Dad’s job.

Monday we were recovering from the party and prepping for the next day’s actual birthday. I was attempting to write a blog post on Monday night when someone sent me a Huffington Post article written by Randi Zuckerberg, sister of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

In the article, Zuckerberg questions the choices of mothers like me – mothers who don’t hide their gender nonconforming sons from the world; mothers who don’t prod their gender nonconforming sons to conform to make others feel more comfortable; mothers who share with their friends through social media the daily happenings of their gender nonconforming sons (who may happen to be wearing a dress on the way to the grocery store or pink shoes on the way to school).

Zuckerberg thinks that mothers like me are doing a disservice to our children and that we are doing so without thinking about the consequences.  If she only knew how much I thought about my children on a daily basis.

“We need to encourage our children to be individuals and to explore their passions and talents. At the same time, we do have to acknowledge that we live in the real world, not a fantasy world. Your child is inevitably going to come into contact with other kids, who can be mean and cruel — is it possible that we do our children a disservice by not preparing them for the outside world?…This might mean having a realistic discussion at a young age about why other children might not understand a young boy wearing dresses and high heels and why it’s in his best interest to limit that behavior for now. I’m not sure we’re doing them a favor by just sending them straight into the lion’s den without a warning about what’s in store,” she wrote.

She supported her argument by quoting parenting guru and gender expert Kanye West.

Someone may have been having an attitude because it wasn't his birthday.

Someone may have been having an attitude because it wasn’t his birthday.

The article got me so worked up that I couldn’t focus on the blog post  I had started. I turned off my laptop and spent the rest of the evening wrapping C.J.’s Brother’s birthday presents while watching Real Housewives of Orange County and stuffing leftover Easter candy into my mouth hole like it was going to expire the next day.

I was getting more and more agitated. I was exchanging hurt-angry-sarcastic texts with friend, fellow pink boy mom and blogger Kelly. I was preparing for a sleepless night when an email from one of my favorite writer friends and fierce mamas landed in my inbox. The Huffington Post’s Amelia was coming to the defense of gender nonconforming mothers everywhere — even though her gay son is gender conforming.  At a time when my words were unorganized and scrambled, Amelia’s were clear, firm and perfect. Read her full rebuttal here.

I think her entire post is a sample of Grade A badassery and I’m hugely thankful that she penned it.  Here are my favorite chunks.

“Pink boys or gender nonconforming boys have been a popular topic of conversation these days. People who have gender-conforming children (or no children at all) are always ready to put in their two cents about what they would do…Until you are actually a parent in that situation, you don’t know what you would do…”

“I am fortunate enough to call some of these moms my friends. Sarah Manley, Lori Duron and Kelly Byrom have not only stood by their children publicly but shared the sheer beauty and joy of their children in words and photographs. I can say for certain that none of these women takes sharing lightly. They are well aware of what people think and what people say, but they have made the decision to put their families out there, not for notoriety but in an effort to help other parents who are going through the same thing. Every one of them has had uncomfortable conversations with a very young child about the assholes who make fun of them for being themselves. They don’t live in a bubble. They live in the real world, and they are trying to make that world a better and safer place, not just for their kids but all kids.”

“… I stand strong with the moms who post about their gender-nonconforming children. We are sisters in the same fight. We are standing up and fighting for our children’s right to be who they are. And we are fighting homophobia, because — let’s be honest — that’s really what this is all about….By not hiding who our children are and by being proud of them, we are sending them the message that they are perfect exactly the way they are.”

“…I will not hide who my child is for the sake of others, because I will not teach my child to be ashamed of what makes him the amazing little man whom it is my privilege and honor to parent. Yes, there are bullies, but I will not be one of them.”

C.J.'s birthday present to his brother was this picture of the two of them.  C.J. is the one in the skirt.

C.J.’s birthday present to his brother was this picture of the two of them. C.J. is the one in the skirt.

Thank you, Amelia, for writing this. And, thanks to you, Kelly and Sarah for always, always, always having my back and being there for me and my son. As Kelly has said, you mess with one of us, you mess with all of us. Thanks, ladies, for inspiring me, supporting me and being a group with which I can say the eff word much more than a good mother should. 😉

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Friday Fodder: Parenting Done Wrong Edition

Courtesy of A Game of Romance and Winchester blog.

Courtesy of A Game of Romance and Winchester blog.

I hear from a lot of you who say that when it comes to parenting I’m doing it right.  And, I never ever hesitate to let someone know if I think that they are doing it right.

Well, read this for an example of a father who is doing it wrong — if you ask me.  It starts with his son wanting a sketch pad and him calling it a “gay ass notebook.”  It gets worse from there.  Charming.

* * *

“Over the past few decades, we’ve made a lot of changes in the English language to make it more gender neutral. We say “police officer” instead of “policeman” and “people” instead of “mankind”…But there’s one thing we can’t seem to get right: pronouns. We know that if you say, “Every child has his monkey,” it excludes girls. So instead we might say, “Every child has their monkey,” even though it’s not grammatically correct. And “Every child has his or her monkey,” is just clunky.”

When it comes to pronouns, C.J. prefers his masculine…even though when it comes to clothes and playthings, C.J. prefers his feminine.

Click here to read an article on NPR’s website about some kids in Baltimore who have come up with a solution that has caught the attention of linguists.  Yo!

* * *

51FTdGSie7L._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA278_PIkin4,BottomRight,-64,22_AA300_SH20_OU01_Last night I finished a book written by one of my readers and I loved it.  I’m a huge fan of LGBTQ issues and historical fiction, so her book was tailor-made for me.  Paulette Mahurin’s The Persecution of Mildred Dunlap has been dubbed Brokeback Mountain for women.

“The year was filled with memorable historical events: the Dreyfus Affair divided France; Booker T. Washington gave his Atlanta address; the United States expanded the effects of the Monroe Doctrine in South America; and Oscar Wilde was tried and convicted for gross indecency under Britain’s recently passed law that made sex between males a criminal offense. When news of Wilde’s conviction went out over telegraphs worldwide, it threw a small Nevada town into chaos. This is the story of what happened when the lives of its citizens were impacted the Wilde news. It is a chronicle of hatred and prejudice with all its unintended and devastating consequences, and how love and friendship bring strength and healing.”

I loved the characters.  I wanted to sit around and talk books with partners Mildred and Edra and their friends Gus and Charley.  I wanted C.J. to play with Mabel.  I despised bully Josie.

Click here to download the book free for Kindle or purchase the paperback.

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David Burtka & Neil Patrick Harris Present Raising My Rainbow

It has been two weeks since I announced that I’ve penned a book inspired by my blog and that it will be released on September 3.  And, the responses, comments and emails of support have been overwhelming and much-needed.  I’m really good at brainstorming for worst-case scenarios.  I don’t even want to tell you the various things I imagined would happen after I came out as the author Lori Duron – mostly I don’t want to tell you because I’m afraid that the scenarios could still come true.

I certainly wasn’t expecting to feel so much love.  Sure I felt some hate, but I’ve gotten really good at ignoring it.  I also heard from the people who continue to believe that my blog and family are a work of fiction.  That, to me, is laughable.  I wish I had time to dream up fiction!  I could do that instead of making three square-ish meals a day, doing laundry, working full-time or shuttling kids to-and-fro and back again.  Fiction must be fun!  If this were all a game, it would be a very tedious one to play – and I don’t have time for games other than Candyland, Sight Word Bingo and “Mom, can you find my sock/shoe/homework/iPad/manners”.  Wish I did; but I don’t.

So, thanks to all of you who wrote to me and to those of you who found a way on your own to pre-order my book.  I want you, my readers, to be the first to know about two other important supporters of mine, because you are in very cool company.

I have received support from David Burtka and Neil Patrick Harris – who have done me the enormous honor of writing the foreword for my book.  I still can’t believe it’s true.

I think that David and Neil, as parents and members of the LGBTQ community, are the perfect people to introduce my book and our family to readers and the world.  When you read their foreword, you’ll get a sense of them as the awesome parents I’ve seen them to be and you’ll learn a thing or two about the always captivating Harper and Gideon.  It’s a rare opportunity for readers to get a glimpse into the lives of this new nuclear family.

I’m beyond honored that David and Neil see the importance of this book for kids, parents, educators and the LGBTQ community.

C.J. doesn’t know David and Neil as celebrities; he knows them only as Harper and Gideon’s dads — the ones who don’t care how gender creative he chooses to be in their presence.  He sees the four of them and sees a family; a fun, normal family that has two dads who cook their own pizzas and sometimes randomly break out in song and dance.  He can be perfectly pink in their rainbow presence.  That’s all that matters to him.

I see David and Neil as a gracious couple that I will forever be indebted to.  When two guys have everything how do you thank them for doing a favor as massive as introducing you and your book to the world?  If you have any ideas, let me know.

* * *

Although my book’s pre-order pages are not totally complete aesthetically, they work functionally and you can now pre-order Raising My Rainbow: Adventures in Raising A Fabulous, Gender Creative Son (Foreword by Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka). 

How do you prefer it?

Amazon/Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Raising-My-Rainbow-Adventures-Fabulous/dp/0770437729/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1367189013&sr=1-1&keywords=raising+my+rainbow

Barnes and Noble/NOOK:  http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/raising-my-rainbow-lori-duron/1114194385?ean=9780770437725

Google Play: http://books.google.com/books/about/Raising_My_Rainbow.html?id=pLKMlwEACAAJ

Indiebound: http://www.indiebound.org/book/9780770437725

iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/raising-my-rainbow/id629693750?mt=11

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Friday Fodder: It’s Okay To Be Different Edition

SP_IO_Cover_V1C.J. loves Todd Parr’s book It’s Okay to Be Different.  C.J. also loves playing on my iPad (which he calls “his iPad,” much to the annoyance of his brother).  So, imagine how much he loves the new It’s Okay to Be Different app. “The team at Storypanda Books worked with Parr’s publisher Little, Brown Books for Young Readers to add a layer of interactivity to this beloved title. The ability to select different characters, clothing, and props on each page means kids can customize the book to match their own life experiences. In doing so, the message feels more personal to each and every child allowing them to identify closely with certain instances where they may have felt ‘different.’”  Download the app here:  (https://itunes.apple.com/ca/app/id521512463).

* * *

People in the Spokane area of Washington, listen up!  I’ve been contacted by a licensed mental health counselor and a mother of a seven-year-old transgender child.  They have formed a playgroup open to all gender nonconforming and transgender children up to the age of 13. It provides children with a supportive and positive space where they can socialize with other children expressing comparable ranges of gender fluidity.  It is designed to run concurrently with the parents’ group and conveniently allows parents the opportunity to meet while their children are having supervised fun in the same building.  Both groups are supervised by licensed mental health therapists and the playgroup has young adult mentors who identify along the gender spectrum. There is no charge for either group. For more information, send an email to transgendercare@live.com.

* * *

Don’t live near Spokane, WA?  Instead, you live near St. Louis in Missouri?  You should check out TransParent, a St. Louis-based organization dedicated to providing compassionate support and resources to parents and caregivers raising a gender independent child.  TransParent provides support, information and resources to help parents confidently navigate their gender independent child’s personal journey of self-discovery to authentic living.  If you are raising a gender independent or transgender child but don’t live in the St. Louis area, you should check out their website, which has some useful resources. http://www.transparentstl.org

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Passing My Wedding Dress On To My Son

“Mommy!” C.J. yelled as he entered my bedroom with his usual flourish.  He was freshly bathed and in his fleece Monster High pajamas.  I was lounging on my bed reading People Magazine, when I should have been doing the laundry.

“Yes….how may I help you?” I asked, not looking up from my reading.

“Where’s your wedding dress?”

“In the garage.  Why?” I said, setting my magazine down.

“Can I have it?”

photo 1Now, when I married C.J.’s Dad in 2000, the absolute last thing I wanted to wear was my mother’s wedding dress from the 1960s — with its Victorian neckline, poufy shoulders and long tight sleeves made of lace with a daisy design.

My mother didn’t want me to wear her dress either.  Thankfully.  Under the watchful eye of my brother and his then-boyfriend, I selected my wedding dress and promised myself that I would not keep it for the daughter that I might have.  No way.  No how.

But, after the wedding and honeymoon were over I didn’t have the heart to trash my dress.  And, I couldn’t bear to donate it either.  I also didn’t want to pay the $200 fee to have it dry-cleaned and professionally preserved.  So I put it in big plastic storage bin and put it in the garage.  I’d deal with it later.

photo 2Then I got pregnant and the thought crossed my mind that we might have a girl and she might want to at least see and try on my dress.  I decided to keep it awhile longer.  We had a boy.  Then I got pregnant again.  It might be a girl.  It wasn’t.  There was officially no need for me to keep my wedding dress.

Two years ago we had a neighborhood garage sale and I half-heartedly hung it out for the highest bidder.  Nobody wanted it — which made me kind of sad.  But, then again, I didn’t really want it either.  I thought about selling it on eBay or Craigslist, but that seemed like such a process.  If you know me, you know that I hate a process.  We had another garage sale a year later.  Still, nobody wanted my dress.  It continues to sit — ripped and dirty — in the big plastic bin in the farthest corner of our garage waiting for me to decide what to do with it.

“Sooooo…can I have it?  Please say yes, please say yes,” C.J. asked again, bouncing up and down.

My heart and brain skipped a beat.  Somebody wanted my wedding dress!

“Yes.  You can.”

“Can I have it right now?” he asked.

“No, but when you are a little bit older, you can have it.  I promise.”

“Yay!!!!”  He skipped out of the room.

photo 4I pictured my son trying on my wedding dress in the years to come.  I’d surprise him and show him my tiara and veil as well.  He would look beautiful in it.  More importantly, he would feel beautiful in it.  I pictured him, sometime later, deconstructing the dress and making an entirely new garment or two out of it.  I smiled a big smile at the thought.

My son wants my wedding dress and he can do anything he wants with it.  Wear it, cut it, rip it, whatever.  I’m glad that I didn’t purge the dress before I had kids.  I’m glad that I resisted the urge once I had only boys.  Because my boy loves fashion, lace, beading and all things princess-like.  And, he wants my dress and he’s going to love it.

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I Wrote a Book

It’s time for me to come out.  My name is Lori and for nearly two and a half years now you’ve known me as the blogger C.J.’s Mom.  And, now I’m an author.  Or, I will be on September 3, 2013.

I’m coming out in a big way and you, my loyal readers, have had a hand in it.

You shared my writings with people through social media, emails, conversations and, sometimes, during whispered interactions when you knew the other person would benefit from reading about my sparkly son.  Because of your support I caught the attention of some pretty important people.  Now, in less than five months, I’ll be sharing our lives with a broader audience when the Random House’s Broadway imprint releases Raising My Rainbow — my book based on my blog.

It was with a massive amount of thought and consideration that I agreed to write the book.  Should we risk our anonymity?  In doing so, would we risk our safety?  Did I even have the time to write a book while maintaining my career, our home and our children’s sense of normalcy?  Did I want to be the face of a cause?   What would C.J. and his brother Chase think of the book now?  What would they think of it in 10 years?  20 years?

In the end, C.J.’s Dad Matt and I were and continue to be certain that a book like Raising My Rainbow is needed to encourage the world to change for the sake of gender nonconforming and LGBTQ kids.  We have to try.  We have to try educating as many people as we can about children like C.J. so that hopefully, growing up and thriving from childhood to adolescence and beyond is the least painful experience possible.

The book is a lot like the blog.  It gives people a glimpse into our lives in hopes that they will see that we are not weird – we are just different.  And, different isn’t bad.  Different can and does happen to anybody.  Your neighbor.  Your coworker.  Your friend.  Your enemy.  You.

The book is about expectations.  You don’t always get what you expect when you are expecting.  When your child is born you expect that their sex and gender will align.  Sometimes they don’t.  You expect that your male child will like traditionally male things and that he’ll be physically and emotionally attracted to a woman.  Sometimes that doesn’t happen.  There is comfort found in expectations, but when those expectations are squashed when your child is three, four or five years old you start to question why they exist at all.  You build new expectations and try not to be jaded when people around you hold tight to the old ones.

The book is about empathy.  It took us a while to realize that what we want most from other people is empathy.  You don’t have to fully understand gender, sex and sexuality; we just ask that you have an open heart and an open mind.  Imagine for a minute what our child and we have to go through on a daily basis.  What would you do if you had a child like C.J.?  Judge less and imagine more.  Treat others how you want to be treated.  Period.

The book is about the evolution of a family.  When our son grabbed that first Barbie, we set out on a journey of evolution – though we didn’t know it at first.  The evolution was slow and, at times, didn’t feel like it was moving forward or felt like we were fighting it.  But, it happened; no one in our family is the same person that they were three years ago.  Now, I wouldn’t change this experience for anything in the world.  I couldn’t always say that.

Finally, the book is about equality.  There’s a new civil right movement happening in our country.  It astonishes me that in 2013 we need a civil rights movement at all.  It should be a given that all people are created equal and should be treated as such – whether it’s on the playground or in the nation’s capitol.  The book is my way of taking a firm stand in the movement.  It is my way of publicly saying that my son and brother deserve the same human rights and human decency taken for granted by the majority of the country’s population.  I want my son to be treated like a human being.  If you can’t tell if he is a boy or a girl, then just treat him like a person.

As I move toward September 3 with excitement and fear, I hope that you will accompany me.  You will never know how much you mean to my family and me.  You all have taught me the difference between sex and gender; you have taught me how to parent an LGBTQ child; you have taught me how to get lipgloss out of my son’s hair when one particular makeover went awry; and the list goes on and on.

The blog will continue to exist as an outlet for me.  Will I only be Lori now?  No, I’m also C.J.’s Mom.  Which names will I use?  I’m not sure.  I have to see what feels comfortable. Will there be identifying photos of our family on the blog now?  Nope.  I’ll continue to amaze you with my nondescript iPhone photography skills.  Will I keep you updated on book news from now on?  You betcha.

For us, life continues to be an adventure.  I’m glad that you are along for the ride.  I hope that you continue to be.  Wish me luck and buy my book and thank you, thank you, thank you for being such a rad blogosphere family.

xoxo,

Lori Duron/C.J’s Mom/Blogger/Author/Candlestick Maker

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Saturday Fodder: I’ve Been Off My Blogging Game This Week Edition

Montreal Family Looking to Connect

I’ve been contacted by a family in Montreal that is raising a young transgender daughter (assigned male at birth) and looking to connect with other families of young transgender children in the Montreal area.  They are also part of a monthly support/action-oriented gender group that welcomes new members.

The family and the group are looking for other resources in the area, as well.  If you fit the bill, send me an email at raisingmyrainbow@gmail.com and I’ll get you connected.

* * *

Families with Gifted GLBTQ Youth Webinar

Date: May 14, 2013
 // Time: 7:30 p.m. EDT  // Presenter: Terry Friedrichs, PhD, EdD

Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (GLBTQ) youth experience much higher-than-average rates of verbal and physical harassment, parental rejection, and suicide. However, these students also have great potential for academic success, as seen by their disproportionately-high representation in programs for the gifted.

This session explains how parents, siblings, and teachers can build on these students’ potential and can diminish the effect of others’ harm.  The cost is $40.

Click here to register or get more info.  

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Registration Now Open For Gender Spectrum’s Professional Workshop

Join Gender Spectrum for a full day of learning and professional growth at the 2013 Gender Spectrum Professional’s Workshop on July 12, 2013, in Berkeley, CA. This workshop is a special gathering for professional service providers–therapists, physicians, attorneys, educators, faith leaders, youth advocates, and others–who work with (or would like to work with) gender nonconforming and transgender children and teens, and the adults who support them.  Building on the success of previous years, the 2013 event will offer a wider range of sessions than ever before.

Click here to register or learn more.  

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Saturday Fodder: Roland Humphrey Edition

This is what the book looks like.

This is what the book looks like.

We have discovered another great book for/about gender creative kids.  C.J. really, really, really loves this one.  Seriously, it’s one of his new favorites.  He would like you to know that the book “rhymes really great” and has “pretty collage pictures” and it’s “about a boy who likes girl stuff.”

Roland Humphrey is Wearing a WHAT? by Eileen Kiernan-Johnson is a new children’s picture book about a boy’s quest to be his authentic pink and sparkly self in a world that is often inhospitable to boys who don’t conform to strict gender norms around boys dress and play. 

Roland is sad and confused when the kids at school tell him that he can't like "girl colors."

Roland is sad and confused when the kids at school tell him that he can’t like “girl colors.”

It’s a tale that finds Roland as confused about the rules as those around him are about what he wears. In a humorous journey that raises questions about what is normal and why, Roland Humphrey is a gorgeously illustrated book that will open the minds and hearts to accept and cherish the Roland Humphreys of the world.

How come it's okay for girls to dress like boys, but not for boys to dress like girls?

How come it’s okay for girls to dress like boys, but not for boys to dress like girls?

Roland Humphrey is a fictional version of a real boy; a boy having a happy childhood that doesn’t fit into a conventional box of what others may expect of a boy. He’s not constrained by what he wears, what colors he likes or how he plays with other kids. Watching a beautiful child grow up, we are seeing how our Roland Humphrey is running into other people’s expectations of how he should behave.

Roland decides not be scared of what other people will think about him.

Roland decides not be scared of what other people will think about him.

Author Eileen Kiernan-Johnson has been kind enough to offer the book to Raising My Rainbow readers for $10.99 and ship it for free.  To get this offer:

  • Send an email to rolandhumphreybook@gmail.com
  • Put RAISING MY RAINBOW in the subject line
  • In the body of the email, indicate how many copies if the book you want
  • The author will generate a PayPal request for payment from there
  • Easy peasy cheddar cheesy (as C.J. would say)
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A Father’s Nightmare

Last week, C.J. had to have a small dental procedure done that required him to go under anesthesia.  Of course his dad and I were a nervous wreck the weeks and days leading up to the morning of the 7 a.m. appointment.

Mural from the dentist's office...

Mural from the dentist’s office…

The night before, we fed C.J. a big dinner and dessert because he wouldn’t be able to eat for at least 15 hours.  We gave him a bath with Strawberry Shortcake bubble bath and tucked him into bed wearing his favorite Disney Princess nightgown.

My alarm went off extra early in the morning.  I turned it off and rolled over to wake up C.J.’s Dad.  He was staring at me with big, bright eyes that startled me.

“What?!” I said/asked/gasped.

“I had the worst dream last night,” he said.

“What was it about?”

“I had a dream that when C.J. woke up from the anesthesia he liked boy stuff.  That he was gender conforming.”

“Why is that a bad dream?” I asked.  It seemed like a weird dream, but not a “bad” one.  He explained.

“Because that’s not my boy.  My boy likes girl stuff.  In my dream, we went to the dentist and I was holding him and they gave him the shot and he went under.

We waited for like an hour and a half and they came out to tell us that he was coming to and we went back to be with him.  We walked in and he was coming out of it and he said ‘Hey Dad, what’s up?’  He said it just like his brother says it.  I was stroking his head and he looked down and saw that he was wearing his Disney Princess nightgown and he asked ‘Why did you dress me in this?  Why am I wearing this?’  He was really mad.

I told him that he was wearing it because it was his favorite nightgown and he kept getting more and more fired up.   He wanted another shirt.  He wanted a boy’s shirt.  He was pissed off and didn’t even want to ride home with the nightgown on.

He totally wasn’t himself.  His mannerisms were all boy, like his brother.

I kept asking you and the dentist if he was okay, if he was fine.  The dentist told me that the procedure was a total success.  I said that it wasn’t, that he was totally different.  I got upset because something was wrong.  He was not acting like himself.  And you and the dentist were downplaying it.

‘What’s wrong with him?! What’s wrong with him?!’ I started yelling.  And, you asked if I was happy because the anesthesia got him out of his gender nonconforming phase and that he was normal now.  I grabbed you and said ‘he’s not effing normal now, not like this!’

I was so pissed because people kept saying that now he was normal and fine.  I yelled at the dentist, ‘What did you do to my effing kid!?’ and everybody was looking at me like I was crazy.  You and the dentist kept saying that I should be happy that he liked boy stuff now.  But I was yelling and so pissed off asking what they had done to my son.

It wasn’t him.  He had changed.  To me that wasn’t ‘normal.’  C.J. is normal the way he is.

What does that even mean?  ‘Normal?’  That’s not my kid, that’s not my boy.  My boy likes girl stuff.  That’s his normal.  My boy likes girl toys and girl clothes and saying things like ‘Ohhhhh, heeeeeeyyyyyyy’ and ‘Drama-bomb!’   I don’t know what I would do now if he changed and started liking boy stuff.  I love him the way he is.  I don’t want him to change.”

He finished telling me about his dream and we stared at each other.

photo 1“Oh, baby, it’s going to be fine.  He’s not going to change,” I said.  What if my husband was clairvoyant?  What if the anesthesia was going to make our gender nonconforming boy conform?  I couldn’t bear to think about him changing either.

Three hours later C.J. woke up from the anesthesia.  He got upset when the dentist gave him a “boy’s toothbrush” instead of a “girl’s toothbrush.”  When we got home he gathered his Barbie dolls and Monster High girls to comfort him as he watched old episodes of iCarly on the iPad.

He was and still is gender nonconforming.  The anesthesia didn’t change him.  My husband is not a clairvoyant.  For all of those things, and so much more, I am a very thankful mama.   There was a time when all we wanted was for C.J. to conform to traditional gender norms.  Now, the thought of him doing so doesn’t feel right.  It feels disturbing.  It feels like a bad dream.

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You Might Want To Sit This One Out…

As I’ve written over the years, birthdays can be tricky when the birthday boy/girl is gender creative.  Take C.J.’s last birthday for example; he had a Valentine’s-Day-themed-crafty-dress-up-party, wore a pink tutu and tiara and had nothing but “girl stuff” on his wish list.

My annual struggle always shows up right on time.  Do I warn parents that my son will be presenting as a girl?  Do I inform gift givers that he doesn’t like “boy toys?”  You’d think I’d have the answers by now.  But, I don’t.

I’ve talked with enough moms of gender creative kids to know that these are issues that most of us have stressed over and try to handle as delicately and directly as possible.  I’ve often wondered what’s the best way to handle these birthday party dilemmas?

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Then, C.J. received an invitation to his friend T.L.’s Arabian Nights themed eighth birthday party.  T.L. is gender nonconforming too.

When C.J. learned that he had mail, he hopped up and down trying to peek inside the mailbox.  When he learned that it was an invitation to a party, he ripped the envelope and yanked out the invite.  When he saw that the party invitation was decorated with colorful feathers and rhinestones he nearly lost his mind.  He squealed, held the invitation tight to his heart, closed his eyes and smiled as he ran in place.

When I finally pried the invite out of his hands to read for myself, it was my turn to be over-the-top happy.  All because of this disclaimer that T.L.’s Mom had included at the bottom.

Disclaimer

 

A Quick Note to Our New Friends:

For those of you who have not yet had the pleasure to really get to know our fabulous T.L., he likes things that might traditionally be considered just for girls.  When shopping for a gift anything that you would normally get for an eight year old girl, T.L  will love!  Oh yeah, and if you’re not comfortable with an eight year old boy in a dress…you might want to sit this one out.  🙂

I immediately texted T.L.’s mom to RSVP and tell her what a fierce mama she is.  Later that night, when I showed the invite to C.J.’s Dad he made me text T.L.’s Mom again to let her know that he thinks that she’s pretty rockin’ awesome too.

In houses around town I pictured T.L.’s classmates getting the same invitation.  I pictured other parents reading the disclaimer and having a range of emotions.  I hope that some of them realized how brave T.L. and his Mom are.  It’s easy to see that they are fabulous.  Their bravery is less flashy but deserves the most credit.

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