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Raising Children As Gender Neutral – Part 2
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How does that work? At some time the child is bound to discover that there are boys and there are girls – and that they are not the same - so when a child asks the question “What am I?”, what does the enlightened parent answer? Do they lie and say ‘You’re neither’, and if so is that, in effect, denying the child its true identity?
I’m inclined to think that in their determination to allow their children to ‘be who they are’, progressive parents are in danger of raising a generation of very confused people.
This child is, apparently, neither boy nor girl, but ‘They-By’.
https:/ /www.in depende nt.co.u k/life- style/h ealth-a nd-fami lies/th eyby-ge nder-ne utral-c hild-pa rents-r aise-co uple-ky l-myers -zoomer -a82868 76.html
I’m inclined to think that in their determination to allow their children to ‘be who they are’, progressive parents are in danger of raising a generation of very confused people.
This child is, apparently, neither boy nor girl, but ‘They-By’.
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No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are degrees of "gender neutral" parenting, clearly. The basic principle, I think, is fine, as long as it's not aggressively enforced. But it's hard to judge from a distance. You'd have to live with Zoomer [to be honest, I'd be more worried about the name] for a long time to see if they were unhappy, or maladjusted, or "pressured" into denying their own identity, and so on.
But if raising "gender neutral" merely means allowing a child more freedom to play with the toys they like, or to wear the clothes they like**, and so on, without subconsciously guiding their choice, then I don't see the harm in that.
** Up to not spoiling them, of course.
But if raising "gender neutral" merely means allowing a child more freedom to play with the toys they like, or to wear the clothes they like**, and so on, without subconsciously guiding their choice, then I don't see the harm in that.
** Up to not spoiling them, of course.
I agree with Jim in as much if it is a case of not inflicting existing stereotypes on children. Ie clothes and toys then fine but when it goes to the extremes is when it becomes too much. Which is the case with all extremism per sa.
As I said on the other thread I would like to see the outcomes of this sort of parenting. I imagine they become even more liberal than their parents.??
But (as I said in the other thread as well) what about the kids who were allowed to determine their schooling. Choseing lessons, what they learnt and when. Free thinking education and all that. The outcomes for that would be interesting as well.
As I said on the other thread I would like to see the outcomes of this sort of parenting. I imagine they become even more liberal than their parents.??
But (as I said in the other thread as well) what about the kids who were allowed to determine their schooling. Choseing lessons, what they learnt and when. Free thinking education and all that. The outcomes for that would be interesting as well.
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