Children
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This page gives a collection of resources about children who have nonbinary gender identities, or are gender nonconforming.
It is often thought that young children are incapable of understanding transgender and nonbinary identities, but this is untrue. Additionally, "No harm is done on an individual or societal level if a child has the option of exploring their gender identity from early on," even if the child later turns out to be cisgender.[1]
In rare cases, parents choose to raise their child without assigning a gender to them, allowing the child to come to their gender identity on their own as they grow up. These children can be known as "theybies" (mixture of the words "they" and "babies"). The concept of raising "theybies" became popularized in the 2010s, especially after media coverage in 2011 of a Canadian couple and their child named Storm.[2]
See also
- Family
- Charities and groups that benefit gender variant people
- Coming out
- Gender nonconformity
- Practical resources
- Nonbinary gender in fiction
External links
- Examiner: My Child is Genderqueer: Lou and Jack [Dead link]
- Rethinking Schools: It's Ok to Be Neither - Teaching that supports gender-variant children
- The Tiny Voice of Reason: Growing Up Genderqueer (Wayback archive)
- So Your Child Is Nonbinary: A Guide For Parents
- What it means to be non-binary: A guide for parents
- Explaining Nonbinary: How to Talk to Kids About Gender, by Amber Leventry
- Loving my Agender Child
Further reading
- Gonzales, Maya. Gender Now Coloring Book: A Learning Adventure for Children and Adults. San Francisco: Reflection Press, 2010. Print.
References
- ↑ Transgender Europe. "Overcoming Myths in Legal Gender Recognition Discussions" (PDF). tgeu.org. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
- ↑ Compton, Julie (19 July 2018). "'Boy or girl?' Parents raising 'theybies' let kids decide". NBC News. Retrieved 18 April 2021.