CC33

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

CC33


4 posters

    Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    wants2laugh
    wants2laugh
    …is a Power Member.
    …is a Power Member.


    Female
    Join date : 2011-07-10
    Location : South Jersey---yes we are a different state
    Posts : 3913
    Rep : 87

    Weird Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    Post by wants2laugh Sat Jan 21, 2012 1:21 am

    It's a boy! And he's five. Beck Laxton, 46, and partner Kieran Cooper, 44, have spent half the decade concealing the gender of their son, Sasha.

    "I wanted to avoid all that stereotyping," Laxton said in an interview with the Cambridge News. "Stereotypes seem fundamentally stupid. Why would you want to slot people into boxes?"

    Take a look at the most controversial parenting stories of the year.

    Laxton, a UK-based web editor, and her partner, Cooper, decided to keep Sasha's sex a secret when he was still in the womb. The birth announcement stated the gender-neutral name of their child, but skipped the big reveal. Up until recently, the couple only told a few close friends and family members that Sasha was a boy and managed to keep the rest of the world in the dark. But now that he's starting school the secret's out.

    For years, Becks has been referring to her child, the youngest of three, as "the infant" on her personal blog. But guarding the public from her son's gender was only part of her quest to let her kid just be a kid.

    Sasha dresses in clothes he likes -- be it a hand-me-downs from his sister or his brother. The big no-no's are hyper-masculine outfits like skull-print shirts and cargo pants. In one photo, sent to friends and family, Sasha's dressed in a shiny pink girl's swimsuit. "Children like sparkly things," says Beck. "And if someone thought Sasha was a girl because he was wearing a pink swimming costume, then what effect would that have? "

    Sasha's also not short on dolls, though Barbie is also off limits. "She's banned because she's horrible," Laxton says in the Cambridge interview.

    On a macro level she hopes her son sets an example for other parents and makes them reconsider buying their own sons trucks or forcing their daughters into tights. She's seen how those consumer trappings affect how and who kids play with in the sandbox.

    See how one preschool is fighting gender bias in the classroom

    But the sandbox is just a precursor to the classroom. When Sasha turned five and headed to school, Laxton was forced to make her son's sex public. That meant Sasha would have to get used to being a boy in the eyes of his peers. Still, his mom is intervening. While the school requires different uniforms for boys and girls, Sasha wears a girl's blouse with his pants.

    "I don't think I'd do it if I thought it was going to make him unhappy, but at the moment he's not really bothered either way. We haven't had any difficult scenarios yet."

    Last year another couple, Kathy Witterick, 38, and David Stocker, 39, of Toronto made a similar decision when they had their baby, Storm. At the time, certain psychiatric experts voiced concern over their decision. "To have a sense of self and personal identity is a critical part of normal healthy development," Dr. Eugene Beresin, director of training in child and adolescent psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, told ABC News. "This blocks that and sets the child up for bullying, scapegoating and marginalization."

    But as parents well know, bullying is hard for any child to avoid. It's more important to raise someone who's confident enough in himself to overcome peer pressure. It's also important to have his parents have his back (remember the mom who defended her son's choice in a Halloween costume?) Maybe Sasha's early years will be character building, maybe he'll have a higher emotional quotient being raised with dual perspectives on gender. Or the reverse could be true: Sasha may have less of a formed identity because of his upbringing, and feel angry at his mom for dressing him in flowery shirts and telling the world about it. Then again, maybe he'll get over it.

    As for Laxton, she says she's open to her son pursing any career or sexual preference he chooses as he matures. "As long as he has good relationships and good friends," she says, "then nothing else matters, does it?"

    Artemis
    Artemis
    …is a Newbie.
    …is a Newbie.


    Female
    Join date : 2011-11-18
    Posts : 87
    Rep : 0

    Weird Re: Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    Post by Artemis Mon Jan 30, 2012 8:42 pm

    its an interesting social experiment....
    THe kids I've been around, the boys and girls play with different "gender" toys ~ without their sex being hidden.. although wearing a girls blouse with boys pants, ...what is this trying to achieve?
    Forgiveness Man
    Forgiveness Man
    …is a Chamber Royal.
    …is a Chamber Royal.


    Male
    Join date : 2010-06-25
    Location : Chilling on your sofa
    Posts : 6657
    Rep : 153

    Weird Re: Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    Post by Forgiveness Man Mon Jan 30, 2012 9:36 pm

    They are just setting the kid up for a fall. These "let's rebel against gender stereotypes" thing is just getting wackily out of control. This kid's gonna be messed up a lot more from his mothers than he would from wearing boy's clothes.
    Nystyle709
    Nystyle709
    ...is a 20G Chamber DIETY.
    ...is a 20G Chamber DIETY.


    Female
    Join date : 2010-03-16
    Location : New York
    Posts : 27030
    Rep : 339

    Weird Re: Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    Post by Nystyle709 Mon Jan 30, 2012 11:31 pm

    They crazy....

    Sponsored content


    Weird Re: Parents Hide Kid's Gender

    Post by Sponsored content


      Current date/time is Fri Nov 22, 2024 8:23 pm