charlie_cochrane (
charlie_cochrane) wrote2013-05-17 11:21 am
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International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia

Last year I blogged about the freelance training I do and how the UK has laws in place to guard the interests of LGBTQ people. Of course (and alas) you can’t legislate for what goes on in people’s minds. It was with great sorrow I read this, about a transgender teacher who’d taken her own life.
The newspaper implicated there is one I banned from our house as of last year, as they were so negative about the Olympics. They have a history of writing spurious stories - even during WWI they were regarded as unreliable – and they have their seemingly homophobic moments.
But I’m not going to rant about them; I’m focussing on something they said in support of their stance: “echoed the parents’ concerns about whether it was right for children to have to confront complex gender problems at such a vulnerable young age”. You see, in my experience (as parent, governor, trainer, friend, etc) children are more than capable of dealing with complex issues and tend to be incredibly inclusive, as well as being “blind” to difference.
I recall a conversation years ago a friend had with her child about a girl in his class.
Mum: Did you play with Sunita today?
Him: She wasn’t at school.
Mum: She was. I saw her.
Him: Oh. She must have had her hair differently so I didn’t recognise her.
Sunita was the only black child in his class and possibly in the whole school.
In the same way, I've heard of schools celebrating difference in their children, talking about Down’s syndrome, and the pupils not at all making the connection that some of their mates were Down’s children. Because they’re not labelled, they're just Jonny or Kirsty or whatever.
So where does that “blindness” go? I'm convinced that they’re heavily influenced by the adults around them, who are the ones who see difference and have such an issue with it.
So maybe “the parents’ concerns about whether it was right for children to have to confront complex gender problems at such a vulnerable young age” are really the parents’ concerns that their children will either grow up accepting of gender variation or will ask them awkward questions to which they’ll have no sensible answer. And they’ll have to face their own attitude towards complex gender problems.
My giveaway is a donation in the name of a commenter to Albert Kennedy Trust, and any e-book from my back catalogue.

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I absolutely agree with your comments about children, though I'm not sure it's blindness so much as greater willingness to accept difference. After all, children have a natural curiosity, but once that is satisfied they are generally hugely accepting of difference. I try not to discourage toots from asking questions about people who appear different from her for what ever reason, (while reminding her not to ask what might be hurtful questions within ear shot) and try to answer these questions as sensibly as possible. Of course she already knows that girls can marry girls and boys can marry boys if they want and she is adamant that when she grows up she will live with her girlfriend! :)
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kimberlyFDR@yahoo.com
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They're starting school this fall and there'll be a gender non-conforming boy in their year. I've seen him on a trampoline in a pink dress with a pink wig. A kid in the playground snickered at the boy (he has an older brother who's talked about this boy who likes "girl things"), but I felt so bad for the boy on the trampoline. He's going to have it tough as he grows older, living in a small town. I'm going to do my best to make sure that my boys accept him as he is, I've already sowed the seeds. They're not too young to learn about such "complexities", because those "complexities" are a reality.
Erica Pike
eripike at gmail dot com
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I agree absolutely that children aren't born with prejudices and discrimination. That is learnt behaviour, and that rag is happy to do the teaching.
I'm asking Waitrose why it is one of the two papers which they give away free with their loyalty card. I don't like the other paper either, but at least it has some integrity.
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If you don't mention it until the other children are grown up, it just means that you have waited until they have had a thorough conditioning in what society considers normal and will be less able to cope with it when it does come up.
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Hop
You are so right about children. I taught preschool for eight years and they kept telling us to teach diversity and I used to laugh because young children already accept diversity just fine. Its getting them to understand other things like hygiene that you have to concern yourself over. ;D I know for a fact that every time I had to address unkind words or wrong thinking that it was through an older child or parent's influence.
Thanks for participating in the hop and for the giveaway opportunity.
sophiarose1816 at gmail dot com
Re: Hop
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Urbanista
brendurbanist @gmail .com
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Beth
JPadawan11@gmail.com
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Hop
I must confess to being from the US so I am not familiar with that particular paper...thank goodness....and some of y'all's slang is over my head...*grin* but, I enjoyed the comments...
I thank you for sharing and for including in your giveaway a donation to a cause that you feel strongly about. I, also, thank you for participating in the Hop!
hugs from your fan,
jo
johannasnodgrass(at)yahoo(dot)com
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:)
L
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I wonder if any of the eCard people do one that would work for a Happy International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia. I know it's a day late, but I owe a card to one of my exes who was talking about transitioning.
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Karl
slats5663(at)shaw(dot)ca
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hop against homophobia and transphobia
lena.grey.iam@gmail.com
Re: hop against homophobia and transphobia
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humhumbum AT yahoo DOT com
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peggy1984 (at) live (dot) com
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Sophie
sophiebonaste@gmail.com
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tiger-chick-1(at)hotmail(dot)com
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penumbrareads(at)gmail(dot)com or
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sstrode at scrtc dot com
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