My son, the pink boy
Moms ask if my "feminine" son is gay.
Strangers tell me I'm being too permissive. Here's what they don't
understand
Sarah Hoffman
A
random mom on the playground, looking serious and a little bit
concerned, asks me, “Do you think your son might grow up to be gay?”
It’s never crossed my mind. Really. Not since that last Random Mom asked me five minutes ago.
Watching
Sam on the monkey bars, his long hair blowing in the wind, I say, “I
don’t know. He’s always just liked feminine things.”
Random Mom looks at me like she knows something I don’t.
Random
Moms across America think they know: My son has got to be gay. He wears
khakis today but wore a dress to school from age 4 to 6; he used to do
ballet and still doesn’t like sports; in preschool he was all about
playing princess but now is all about Pokemon; and, in spite of the
clear gender divisions in third grade, he plays with both girls and
boys. I mean, what straight boy is into that kinda freaky gender
mash-up?
Well, my husband, for one. And all metrosexuals, for
another coupla-million-ish. My husband used to help his mother choose
curtains. He now drives a motorcycle and hunts deer. He still likes
curtains, which he now calls “window treatments” (
How gay is that?
Random Mom mutters). But really, haven’t you met a guy like this, the
one you think is gay when you first met him, but then realize that his
sexuality doesn’t match his gender presentation?
And if you get
busy thinking about femmy boys who grow up to be straight, you might
also start thinking about butch boys who grow up to be gay, like all
those bears and leather daddies I see walking around the Castro. Then
you might have to admit that, though it
often does, childhood gender expression doesn’t
always correlate to adult sexuality.
I recently discovered that America’s favorite telepsychologist and I actually agree on that.
Dr. Phil’s website tells Robby, the mother of a 5-year-old boy who loves Barbies and wearing feminine clothes: “This is not a precursor to your son being gay.”
I
got a little excited reading this. The conflation of gender expression
and sexuality is so ubiquitous in our society that it was refreshing to
hear our country’s second-highest-rated talk show host giving the same
message to millions of Americans that I’ve given to dozens (literally
dozens!)
of Random Moms on playgrounds across my fair city. Reading on, however,
the beautiful Dr. Phil/Ms. Hoffman mind-meld crumbles.
Dr.
Phil — who implores us all to “get real” — tells Robby that she should
not buy her son Barbie dolls or “girl’s” clothes, and that she should
“Take the girl things away, and buy him boy toys … Support him in what
he’s doing, but not in the girl things.” Support him, but take away the
things he loves to play with?
And does Dr. Phil really imagine
that Robby’s son will stop being interested in Barbie just because Robby
throws his dolls in the trash? What kid forgets about his favorite toy
just because it’s been taken away? (What kid doesn’t want the forbidden
thing
more when it’s taken away?) As Dr. Phil advises Robby,
Random Moms advise me to encourage my son to do “boy” things like play
soccer and get fixated on trains. But really, has that
ever
worked? Think about it: How easy is it to force a tomboy into a dress? A
girly-girl into playing football? And I’d really like to see Dr. Phil
make a sports-loving he-boy wear Tinkerbell underpants. And
like it.
Gender
identity isn’t something we just impose on kids and expect them to suck
it up, like eating vegetables or going to school. It’s part of who they
are, whether that satisfies us as parents or not.
I write (under a pen name) about raising my gender-nonconforming son for magazines, radio, and my
blog. I get all kinds of e-mail from readers telling me that if I just stopped
encouraging
my son to be girly that he’d man up and try out for the football team.
Ah, yes: I am the All Powerful Mother, whose magic is strong enough to
make boys run from Thomas trains to pink tutus. Really, I’m
that good. And if I just directed my magic toward good and not evil, then my boy would become all boy.
The
problem is that, as a mother, I’m too powerful. Or too weak. We’re not
sure which. Because I’ve also been told that I need to learn to parent
forcefully, to learn to stand up and say NO. That my son wouldn’t be
like he is if I simply didn’t allow him to be like he is. But here’s the
truth: I’m actually kind of a NO-saying badass. Check me out: Can we
throw this baseball in the kitchen? NO. Can we eat chocolate cake for
breakfast? NO. Can we make fun of the girl in the wheelchair? NO. I
really can haul out a NO when I need to, and I whip it out many times a
day. But I try to save NO for things that actually cause demonstrable
harm to property, to my children or to other people.
Is it really
my maternal strength/weakness that caused my son to adore pink
Marabou-feather slippers at age 3? You decide. But consider that mothers
have regularly been blamed for their children’s — especially their
sons’ — quirks and challenges.
In the 1950s, psychologist
Leo Kanner
coined the phrase “refrigerator mother” and used it to blame mothers
for causing autism in their children (needless to say, Kanner’s theory
was later discredited by actual science). From the academic paper
Children, Work, and Family: Some Thoughts on “Mother Blame,”
we learn that mothers have similarly been blamed for a host of issues
in their offspring including schizophrenia, bed-wetting, learning
disabilities and, my personal favorite, “homicidal transsexualism.”
You may remember momblogger Nerdy Apple Bottom (who goes by the name of Sarah — no relation), whose November blog post
My Son Is Gay
went viral and has now generated over 46,000 comments. After her post,
Sarah was chastised by her church for standing up to the other preschool
mothers who criticized her and her son for the way he busted out of
gender norms (on Halloween! We’re not even talking about the glamfest
that has walked out of my house on any old Tuesday). Her church accused
her of “promoting gayness” and threatened to kick her out of the entire
denomination.
The notion that parents are responsible for
spreading gayness (like butter, or an STD) is one buoyed by conservative
religious organizations like Exodus International and Focus on the
Family. Focus’ ousted founder, the famed radiovangelist James Dobson,
offers his book “Bringing up Boys” as a guide for “parents to lay a
healthy foundation for heterosexual identity for their children.” In
other words, to use reparative therapy to try to ungay them before the
gayness spreads.
Joseph Nicolosi, founder of NARTH, the National
Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality, penned the DIY
reparative therapy bible, “A Parent’s Guide to Preventing
Homosexuality.” NARTH has long and loudly argued that feminine boys are
pre-homosexuals who can be ungayed with a just-so combination of a mom
who backs off and a dad who takes his son out to pump gas and light the
barbeque.
It would seem that Dr. Phil has torn a page from
Nicolosi’s book, a book in which Nicolosi tells parents to replace
feminine toys, games and clothing with masculine ones, stressing the
importance of “extinguishing feminine behavior” with “gentle and
consistent disapproval.” But where these two popular scolds differ is on
the moral value of homosexuality.
Dr. Phil sides with the
American Psychiatric Association, publisher of the “Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,” broadly considered the arbiter
of mental health. The APA declassified homosexuality as a mental illness
nearly 40 years ago. Dr. Phil tells Robby, “If your son is gay … it
won’t be a choice. It will be something that he’s pre-wired to do.”
Elsewhere on his website, Dr. Phil
tells a mother
concerned about her lesbian daughter, “Homosexuality is not a learned
behavior. A sexual orientation is inherited. You are wired that way.” He
asks, “What difference does it make if she is gay? Accept her, support
her, and do not be judgmental. It is difficult enough for her to live
openly and honestly in this society. Don’t put your judgment on top of
that.”
But
definitely rain that judgment down on your 5-year-old son.
So
I’m really trying to figure this out. Dr. Phil tells us that it’s OK to
be gay (just like the APA), but it’s not OK for boys to play with
Barbie (just like NARTH), because … well, that’s where I get stuck.
Because … they might grow up to be gay? But … they won’t necessarily, he
says. And around we go.
Perhaps Dr. Phil’s thought process is
just terribly muddled (the more charitable explanation among those I’ve
considered). A more likely explanation is that Dr. Phil really isn’t OK
with homosexuality and thinks that it can be prevented in boyhood if you
just chuck the Barbies and say NO. If so, he hides this message fairly
well — or at least confuses his viewers with his
homos-good/proto-homos-bad schtick.
And speaking of confusion, Dr.
Phil tells Robby, “Direct your son in an unconfusing way … You don’t
want to do things that seem to support the confusion at this stage of
the game.”
Who’s confused? My son knows exactly what he likes.
When Sam was 4 and his male peers trick-or-treated as Batman and
Spiderman and gorillas, Sam was a princess. At 5, he was a queen, regal
and proud and full of the royal prowess that Disney offers all little
girls. He liked feather boas and lip gloss and dancing. Did he think he
was a girl? Nope. Was he confused about being a boy? Nope. Did he need
to be taught what boys are supposed to like? Nope — how boys are
supposed to behave was abundantly clear from the trains and trucks we
bought him before we realized he was a pink boy, the behavior of all the
boys he knew, the messages on TV, and the judgments of all the Random
Moms. He just liked what he liked, the way other kids did — only his
likes were different.
Anti-gay organizations are clear about why
boys like Sam need to change. But Dr. Phil’s muddled message reflects a
broader, mostly unspoken cultural bias in America — even among Americans
who are accepting of gay people — that femmy boys are somehow
nebulously bad (though no one can actually articulate why). Dr. Phil —
or NARTH — isn’t making a stink over girls who wear jeans and play
soccer. So what, exactly, is wrong with a boy who likes Barbie?
America,
talk to me. I’m all ears. And if you can’t think of an un-muddled
answer, then think about this: Everywhere — on playgrounds and in homes
across America, in Disney movies and on national television, on high
school and college campuses — pink boys are the brunt of jokes, made to
feel inferior, mocked until they take their own lives. Feminine boys are
among the last people it’s OK for our culture to hate.
Indeed,
one of the most popular arguments against letting boys express their
feminine sides is that people will make fun of them. Which makes me
wonder: should we hide who we are because people are mean? Or should we —
parents, teachers, bystanders, infotainment talk-show hosts — stand up
and say it’s not acceptable to make fun of people who are different?
Random Mom doesn’t know who or what my son is going to grow up to be, any more than she knows who or what
her
kid is going to grow up to be. Whether or not she shares the judgments
of America’s religious conservatives and reparative therapists, or even
Dr. Phil, she’s repeating cultural biases that she’s absorbed, raising
her eyebrows at the things that might, to her, signal future gayness. In
this I can hear the click of the first domino falling into the second
in the cascade that flows from judgment to disapproval to bullying. As
social acceptance of gay people grows, it’s time to look critically at
the lingering disapproval of things we once thought were precursors to
gayness.
Because the problem ain’t Barbies. It’s bullies.
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