What We Learned

by shoffman on September 7, 2010


I spent Labor Day weekend at the Gender Spectrum Family Conference in Berkeley, where I led a workshop for parents of gender-nonconforming kids. Much of the focus of the Gender Spectrum conferences, so far, has been geared toward parents of transgender kids–children who insist, consistently and persistently, that the body they were born in does not reflect their true gender. There’s been less space devoted to kids who, like my son Sam, are happy with their bodies but prefer the clothes, manner of play, toys, and playmates (not to mention accessories) typically associated with the opposite gender.

The workshop came out of conversations I’ve had over the years with Gender Spectrum’s Director of Education and Training, Joel Baum. One of the things Joel and I have discussed is that being–and parenting–a transgender kid has a huge number of challenges. But being–and parenting–a kid who doesn’t quite fit into either the male or female box has its own set of challenges, some of which are quite similar to those of trans kids, and some of which are quite different. So last year, Joel and I hatched the idea to create a space at this conference for parents of gender-nonconforming kids to talk about the issues that our kids face, and that we face as their parents.

In my workshop, I encouraged the fifty or so parents in attendance to just talk, and to listen to each other. We talked about our kids being hassled in the bathroom, confusion in the classroom and on the playground, conflicts with school administrators, trouble with pronouns, talking to family members who don’t understand. Parents shared resources and ideas and support, talking more about their successes than their failures.

As we talked, it dawned on me that I’d unconsciously expected the discussion to be a real downer, as we reviewed all the ways that we’d all fought and lost trying to make space for our kids to be themselves. What surprised me is how much progress parents are actually making in homes and schools across this continent to broaden the definition of what it means to be a girl or a boy in an otherwise binary world. And what I clearly saw was how much love these parents have for their kids, how hard it is to exist in the not-knowing about where their children are headed, and how little they think they know—and how much they really do know.

And what we all learned was this: we are not alone.

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Gender Spectrum on Forum

by shoffman on September 1, 2010

KQED’s Michael Krasney aired a show today on gender-nonconforming kids and the Gender Spectrum conference, which will happen in Berkeley this weekend. I will be leading two workshops, one on writing and one on the challenges of raising gender-nonconforming kids.

Director of Education and Training at Gender Spectrum Joel Baum and psychologist Diane Ehrensaft, as well as Rachel Becker, the mother of a transgender seven-year-old, spoke eloquently about the challenges faced by children and parents who are broadening the definition of gender from the old binaries of boy and girl to, well, a spectrum.

The show is well done and worth a listen–and your comments. I hope to see many of my readers this weekend at the conference!

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Inviting the Resources In

July 15, 2010

In a February post on my blog, I speculated that, after three years together, Sam’s classmates might actually be getting used to him. Used to the idea of a boy with hair flowing down his back who wears pink shirts and doesn’t like sports.
I was wrong.
Toward the end of second grade, a girl in his [...]

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On The Importance of Being Interviewed

July 13, 2010

I get a fair number of requests to be interviewed by academics and talk-show hosts. I say no to anyone who wants to feature an image of my child, but I tend to say yes to everyone else. Why? Because I believe that the more we talk about our gender-nonconforming kids, the more we build [...]

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I am a Soul Thief

July 7, 2010

It turns out that while I thought of myself as accepting my child for who he is, I am actually stealing his soul.
I’ll be speaking at the Gender Spectrum conference this September about what it’s like to parent a gender-nonconforming child. I didn’t think that posed a particular threat to my son’s soul, until I [...]

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Go Parenting! Now, go farther.

April 15, 2010

I recently read the article Could Your Child Be Gay? by Stephanie Dolgoff on Parenting magazine’s website. It made my heart sing…and sink.
Dolgoff—and therefore Parenting magazine, as mainstream a parenting rag as there ever was—showed concern for the wellbeing and outcome of pink and/or proto-gay boys. The piece went farther than I’ve ever seen this [...]

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Zee Utilikilt

March 15, 2010

Today I took Sam to the Apple store to look at a Star Wars video game he wants for his birthday. He was very excited, and sat down on the floor next to the software to review his options. He looked like he wanted to settle in for a while.
An Apple employee wearing a Utilikilt [...]

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Purim, Part 2

March 3, 2010

Karen, a mom from Sam’s school, emailed me after my recent blog post about our head of school dressing up as a woman for Purim last week. Karen’s son, Jacob—not a pink boy like Sam—dressed as a girl for Purim. Karen felt conflicted about the meaning and effect of cross-gender dress-up. Was it mocking? Was [...]

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Queen Esther

February 27, 2010

It’s Purim, the Jewish holiday I love for its signature cookie, Hamentashen, for its dress-up potential, and for its wonderful tale of social justice and feminine strength. I’m also loving this essay by Anat Shenker about the holiday, and her three-year-old son’s desire to dress up as Queen Esther. My son Sam dressed as Queen [...]

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Katana

February 17, 2010

I was talking with Caroline, a fellow second grade mom, setting up a playdate between her son Henry and my son Sam. Henry and Sam had never played outside of school before, but recently discovered a mutual love of Wii Star Wars.
Caroline suggested Monday, but Sam had speech therapy; I suggested Tuesday but that’s Henry’s [...]

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