Wedding Woes

WDWWT? gender-roles and kids

http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20110524/ts_yblog_thelookout/parents-keep-childs-gender-under-wraps

Parents keep child’s gender under wraps

By Zachary Roth
By Zachary Roth zachary Roth Tue May 24, 1:08 pm ET

http://mit.zenfs.com/102/2011/05/storm_rightsize.jpg">When many couples have a baby, they send out an email to family and friends that fills them in on the key details: name, gender, birth weight, that sort of thing. (You know the drill: "Both Mom and little Ethan are doing great!")

But the email sent recently by Kathy Witterick and David Stocker of Toronto, Canada to announce the birth of their baby, Storm, was missing one important piece of information. "We've decided not to share Storm's sex for now--a tribute to freedom and choice in place of limitation, a stand up to what the world could become in Storm's lifetime (a more progressive place? ...)," it said.

That's right. http://www.parentcentral.ca/parent/babiespregnancy/babies/article/995112--parents-keep-child-s-gender-secret">They're not saying whether Storm is a boy or a girl.

There's nothing ambiguous about the baby's genitals. But as Stocker puts it: "If you really want to get to know someone, you don't ask what's between their legs." So only the parents, their two other children (both boys), a close friend, and the two midwives who helped deliver the now 4-month-old baby know its gender. Even the grandparents have been left in the dark.

Stocker and Witterick say the decision gives Storm the freedom to choose who he or she wants to be. "What we noticed is that parents make so many choices for their children. It's obnoxious," adds Stocker, a teacher at an alternative school.

They say that kids receive messages from society that encourage them to fit into existing boxes, including with regard to gender. "We thought that if we delayed sharing that information, in this case hopefully, we might knock off a couple million of those messages by the time that Storm decides Storm would like to share," says Witterick.

"In fact, in not telling the gender of my precious baby, I am saying to the world, 'Please can you just let Storm discover for him/herself what s (he) wants to be?!." she wrote in an email.

How did Stocker and Witterick decide to keep Storm's gender under wraps? During Witterick's pregnancy, her son Jazz was having "intense" experiences with his own gender. "I was feeling like I needed some good parenting skills to support him through that," Witterick said.

Stocker came across a book from 1978, titled X: A Fabulous Child's Story by Lois Gould. X is raised as neither a boy or girl, and grows up to be a happy and well-adjusted child.

"It became so compelling it was almost like, How could we not?" Witterick said.

The couple's other two children, Jazz and Kio, haven't escaped their parents' unconventional approach to parenting. Though they're only 5 and 2, they're allowed to pick out their own clothes in the boys and girls sections of stores and decide whether to cut their hair or let it grow.

Both boys are "unschooled," a version of homeschooling, which promotes putting a child's curiosity at the center of his or her education. As Witterick puts it, it's "not something that happens by rote from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays in a building with a group of same-age people, planned, implemented and assessed by someone else."

Because Jazz and Kio wear pink and have long hair, they're frequently assumed to be girls, according to Stocker. He said he and Witterick don't correct people--they leave it to the kids to do it if they want to.

But Stocker and Witterick's choices haven't always made life easy for their kids. Though Jazz likes dressing as a girl, he doesn't seem to want to be mistaken for one. He recently asked his mother to let the leaders of a nature center know that he's a boy. And he chose not to attend a conventional school because of the questions about his gender. Asked whether that upsets him, Jazz nodded.

As for his mother, she's not giving up the crusade against the tyranny of assigned gender roles. "Everyone keeps asking us, 'When will this end?'" she said. "And we always turn the question back. Yeah, when will this end? When will we live in a world where people can make choices to be whoever they are?"

(Baby Storm: Steve Russell/The Toronto Star)


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effing moronic Canadians....

Re: WDWWT? gender-roles and kids

  • hmonkeyhmonkey member
    Ninth Anniversary 10000 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    edited December 2011
    what ridiculous attention whores.
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  • edited December 2011
    Jazz, Kio and Storm....these kids got bigger problems than gender stereotypes.
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  • 6fsn6fsn member
    Knottie Warrior 10000 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    edited December 2011
    Gender roles are the least of those kids issues- Jazz, Storm, Koi.

    I get what they are saying, but they are using their kids to fight their fight.  I call BS on that.  The fact that they "unschool" makes me think they are dumbasses, but the only thing I know about that is from Wife Swap.
  • edited December 2011
    Why must everything turn into a "cause?"
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  • edited December 2011
    Zilla - even if Mr. and Mrs. Crazy Cakes don't push gender sterotypes on their kids, society will. I'm not defending their choice, by any means - AT ALL - I'm just saying it's not just parents who socialize the child.

    There was a study conducted about social norms and gender stereotype, and the concluded that children are very aware of gender expectations as early as the age of six or seven. Is it a BFD, no, not if you don't make it out to be.
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  • GBCKGBCK member
    Knottie Warrior 5000 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    edited December 2011
    I tended to be w/ zilla on this.

    I will say, I thought the reaction to this (on the interwebz where it has been talked to death) is VERY indicitive of how real gender stereotypes and gender profiling is in our culture.

    (and it irks me.  Hell, people think Buffy is a boy ALL the time.  And if I correct them (I don't tend to) or they figure it out (sometimes they realize when I say her name orthey suddenly notice that,oh, her outfit is pink) it changes dramatically how they treat her/talk to her/etc.)
  • loveshine1loveshine1 member
    Ninth Anniversary 5000 Comments 25 Love Its
    edited December 2011
    I think it's ridiculous.

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  • baconsmombaconsmom member
    Knottie Warrior 5000 Comments 500 Love Its First Answer
    edited December 2011
    This is so dumb for real. Keeping the sex of the child a secret isn't going to stop society from enforcing gender roles at some point. Far better for the child to grow up knowing her opinion and likes and dislikes are respected and seen as valid choices within the construct of a gendered society. 

    IOW, helping your child to be an individual person instead of a collection of stereotypes. 
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