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Pink Orchids

December 21, 2009 by Sarah

Last week I published an essay about Sam on the parenting website babble.com. “Parenting My Explosive Child” is the first piece I’ve written about aspects of Sam other than his penchant for pink. And without condemning Sam’s pink boyhood in any way, I am compelled to explore the link between Sam’s mood and behavior problems and his different gender expression.

I belong to a list serve for parents of gender-nonconforming boys hosted by the Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, DC. On the list serve, parents share information, support, and advice about raising pink boys. There is also a strong current of parents reporting their sons’ hypersensitivities, overreactions, explosive tantrums, and other sensory, social, emotional, and behavioral challenges. Catherine Tuerk, co-founder of the list serve, says it’s not uncommon for parents to report that their pink boys were hypersensitive and difficult as infants.

Once, a parent posted a link to the website of Elaine Aron, author of the book The Highly Sensitive Child. The website offers a parent questionnaire, a checklist of 23 questions relating to physical and emotional hypersensitivity. Aron says that if a parent answers “yes” to 13 or more of the questions, “your child is probably highly sensitive.” Sam scored 22 out of 23. Other parents took the quiz as well and their children all scored above 20. Yet this is a list serve for parents of gender-nonconforming boys, not parents of highly sensitive children. Why are so many children clearly both?

I don’t know what the link is between hypersensitivities, mood issues, and being a pink boy. I just know that for Sam, and others like him, the three often exist together.

David Dobbs’ recent article in The Atlantic, “The Science of Success,” reviews new research identifying gene variants that increase a person’s susceptibility to depression, anxiety, ADHD, and other issues—genes that produce so-called “orchid children.”  Orchid children need far more care and attention to thrive than their “dandelion” counterparts—those normal, healthy, resilient children who do well in most any environment. (My daughter Ruby is a dandelion; the joke around our house is that we could raise her in a mud puddle and she’d be just fine.) Dobbs reports that orchid children are those who suffer the most when raised in negative environments, and profit the most from positive ones.

Are gender-nonconforming boys more likely to be Highly Sensitive Children—orchids? Anecdotally, it seems so. So what’s the connection between these different traits?  Nobody knows. Yet.

What I do know is that these pink orchids are special kids. They thrive on parental acceptance and support; as their parents, we need to give them all the love we can. They lead lives that are, in many dimensions, far more challenging than most. They are not only swimming upstream against the currents of mainstream culture, but navigating other perilous waters as well.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: "gender variant" "highly sensitive child" gender non-conforming parenting pink, "gender variant" gender non-conforming parenting pink

The Moment (or…Telling Steve)

November 16, 2009 by Sarah

“What sweet sisters!” Steve the Realtor says. Sam and Ruby are curled up in a rocking chair in a house we are looking at. Sam giggles. Ruby says gleefully, “We’re not sweet sisters, we’re sweet brother and sister!”

Steve blinks. “Right!” he says cheerfully, in the tone that adults use to humor children who say things like “I saw Santa outside kissing the tooth fairy!”

Steve has met Ruby, who I bring on my house-hunting expeditions, but this is the first time he’s met Sam. I’ve talked about Ruby’s big brother Sam, but I suppose Sam’s gender had not really sunk in for Steve.

It’s The Moment, the time when I decide whether or not to say, “Actually, Sam’s a boy.” I look at Sam, who is wearing a pink-striped dress and pink Crocs, his long blond hair in a ponytail. I wonder if we will stick with Steve or find another realtor (if the former, it makes sense to tell him; if the latter, it doesn’t). I weigh how much Sam likes it when people think he’s a girl (a lot) against how much he doesn’t like it when I tell people that he’s a boy (a little). I wonder if it’s possible to teach Ruby not to say anything when people comment on her “sister.”

I think too long; The Moment passes. It will be back soon enough.

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Filed Under: Sarah Hoffman's Blog Tagged With: "gay" "gay boy" "sissy boy" "richard green", "gender variant" gender non-conforming parenting pink, "Ugly Betty" "pink boys" "gender" "teenager" "Justin" "boy wear a skirt" "boy in a dress" "sarah hoffman"

So…Gay, or Not?

September 24, 2009 by Sarah

“Do you think Sam will grow up to be gay?”

I hear this question all the time, from family, friends, and strangers who learn about Sam’s proclivity for pink. It’s a question that reflects the asker’s assumption that boys who like pink must be gay.

Richard Green’s study (“The ‘Sissy Boy Syndrome’ and the Development of Homosexuality,” which I wrote about here) told us that 75% of pink boys will grow up to be gay or bisexual, and 25% straight.  A few pink boys will be transgender, with varying sexualities.  So, gay adulthood for pink boys is not a guarantee. On the flip side, we also know not all gay men were pink boys as children.

I think that assuming a child will be gay can be as problematic as assuming a child will be straight. In the same way that it’s problematic to assume a child will grow up to be a lawyer (when he wants to be an artist) or a teacher (when he wants to be a paramedic).  It places unnecessary limits and stresses on a child who is trying to discover his own way of being in the world.

The challenge for parents of boys like Sam is creating a space for them to grow into who they are, accepting whatever they become, and waiting—patiently—for them to tell us.  Just as soon as they figure it out themselves.

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Filed Under: Sarah Hoffman's Blog Tagged With: "gay" "gay boy" "sissy boy" "richard green", "gender variant" gender non-conforming parenting pink

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