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Transgendered Children In America

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  • Transgendered Children In America

    December 2, 2006

    Supporting Boys or Girls When the Line Isn€™t Clear

    By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN

    OAKLAND, Calif., Dec. 1 €” Until recently, many children who did not conform to gender norms in their clothing or behavior and identified intensely with the opposite sex were steered to psychoanalysis or behavior modification.

    But as advocates gain ground for what they call gender-identity rights, evidenced most recently by New York City€™s decision to let people alter the sex listed on their birth certificates, a major change is taking place among schools and families. Children as young as 5 who display predispositions to dress like the opposite sex are being supported by a growing number of young parents, educators and mental health professionals.

    Doctors, some of them from the top pediatric hospitals, have begun to advise families to let these children be €œwho they are€ to foster a sense of security and self-esteem. They are motivated, in part, by the high incidence of depression, suicidal feelings and self-mutilation that has been common in past generations of transgender children. Legal trends suggest that schools are now required to respect parents€™ decisions.

    €œFirst we became sensitive to two mommies and two daddies,€ said Reynaldo Almeida, the director of the Aurora School, a progressive private school in Oakland. €œNow it€™s kids who come to school who aren€™t gender typical.€

    The supportive attitudes are far easier to find in traditionally tolerant areas of the country like San Francisco than in other parts, but even in those places there is fierce debate over how best to handle the children.

    Cassandra Reese, a first-grade teacher outside Boston, recalled that fellow teachers were unnerved when a young boy showed up in a skirt. €œThey said, €˜This is not normal,€™ and, €˜It€™s the parents€™ fault,€™ € Ms. Reese said. €œThey didn€™t see children as sophisticated enough to verbalize their feelings.€

    As their children head into adolescence, some parents are choosing to block puberty medically to buy time for them to figure out who they are €” raising a host of ethical questions.

    While these children are still relatively rare, doctors say the number of referrals is rising across the nation. Massachusetts, Minnesota, California, New Jersey and the District of Columbia have laws protecting the rights of transgender students, and some schools are engaged in a steep learning curve to dismantle gender stereotypes.

    At the Park Day School in Oakland, teachers are taught a gender-neutral vocabulary and are urged to line up students by sneaker color rather than by gender. €œWe are careful not to create a situation where students are being boxed in,€ said Tom Little, the school€™s director. €œWe allow them to move back and forth until something feels right.€

    For families, it can be a long, emotional adjustment. Shortly after her son€™s third birthday, Pam B. and her husband, Joel, began a parental journey for which there was no map. It started when their son, J., began wearing oversized T-shirts and wrapping a towel around his head to emulate long, flowing hair. Then came his mother€™s silky undershirts. Half a year into preschool, J. started becoming agitated when asked to wear boys€™ clothing.

    En route to a mall with her son, Ms. B. had an epiphany: €œIt just clicked in me. I said, €˜You really want to wear a dress, don€™t you?€™ €

    Thus began what the B.€™s, who asked their full names not be used to protect their son€™s privacy, call €œthe reluctant path,€ a behind-closed-doors struggle to come to terms with a gender-variant child €” a spirited 5-year-old boy who, at least for now, strongly identifies as a girl, requests to be called €œshe€ and asks to wear pigtails and pink jumpers to school.

    Ms. B., 41, a lawyer, accepted the way her son defined himself after she and her husband consulted with a psychologist and observed his newfound comfort with his choice. But she feels the precarious nature of the day-to-day reality. €œIt€™s hard to convey the relentlessness of it, she said, €œevery social encounter, every time you go out to eat, every day feeling like a balance between your kid€™s self-esteem and protecting him from the hostile outside world.€

    The prospect of cross-dressing kindergartners has sparked a deep philosophical divide among professionals over how best to counsel families. Is it healthier for families to follow the child€™s lead, or to spare children potential humiliation and isolation by steering them toward accepting their biological gender until they are older?

    Both sides in the debate underscore their concern for the profound vulnerability of such youngsters, symbolized by occurrences like the murder in 2002 of Gwen Araujo, a transgender teenager born as Eddie, southeast of Oakland.

    €œParents now are looking for advice on how to make life reasonable for their kids €” whether to allow cross-dressing in public, and how to protect them from the savagery of other children,€ said Dr. Herbert Schreier, a psychiatrist with Children€™s Hospital and Research Center in Oakland.

    Dr. Schreier is one of a growing number of professionals who have begun to think of gender variance as a naturally occurring phenomenon rather than a disorder. €œThese kids are becoming more aware of how it is to be themselves,€ he said.

    In past generations, so-called sissy boys and tomboy girls were made to conform, based on the belief that their behaviors were largely products of dysfunctional homes.

    Among the revisionists is Dr. Edgardo Menvielle, a child-adolescent psychiatrist at the Children€™s National Medical Center in Washington who started a national outreach group for parents of gender-variant children in 1998 that now has more than 200 participants. €œWe know that sexually marginalized children have a higher rate of depression and suicide attempts,€ Dr. Menvielle said. €œThe goal is for the child to be well adjusted, healthy and have good self-esteem. What€™s not important is molding their gender.€

    The literature on adults who are transgender was hardly consoling to one parent, a 42-year-old software consultant in Massachusetts and the father of a gender-variant third grader. €œYou€™re trudging through this tragic, horrible stuff and realizing not a single person was accepted and understood as a child,€ he said. €œYou read it and think, O.K., best to avoid that. But as a parent you€™re in this complete terra incognita.€

    The biological underpinnings of gender identity, much like sexual orientation, remain something of a mystery, though many researchers suspect it is linked with hormone exposure in the developing fetus.

    Studies suggest that most boys with gender variance early in childhood grow up to be gay, and about a quarter heterosexual, Dr. Menvielle said. Only a small fraction grow up to identify as transgender.

    Girls with gender-variant behavior, who have been studied less, voice extreme unhappiness about being a girl and talk about wanting to have male anatomy. But research has thus far suggested that most wind up as heterosexual women.

    Although many children role-play involving gender, Dr. Menvielle said, €œthe key question is how intense and persistent the behavior is,€ especially if they show extreme distress.

    Dr. Robin Dea, the director of regional mental health for Kaiser Permanente in Northern California, said: €œOur gender identity is something we feel in our soul. But it is also a continuum, and it evolves.€

    Dr. Dea works with four or five children under the age of 15 who are essentially living as the opposite sex. €œThey are much happier, and their grades are up,€ she said. €œI€™m waiting for the study that says supporting these children is negative.€

    But Dr. Kenneth Zucker, a psychologist and head of the gender-identity service at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, disagrees with the €œfree to be€ approach with young children and cross-dressing in public. Over the past 30 years, Dr. Zucker has treated about 500 preadolescent gender-variant children. In his studies, 80 percent grow out of the behavior, but 15 percent to 20 percent continue to be distressed about their gender and may ultimately change their sex.

    Dr. Zucker tries to €œhelp these kids be more content in their biological gender€ until they are older and can determine their sexual identity €” accomplished, he said, by encouraging same-sex friendships and activities like board games that move beyond strict gender roles.

    Though she has not encountered such a situation, Jennifer Schwartz, assistant principal of Chatham Elementary School outside Springfield, Ill., said that allowing a child to express gender differences €œwould be very difficult to pull off€ there.

    Ms. Schwartz added: €œI€™m not sure it€™s worth the damage it could cause the child, with all the prejudices and parents possibly protesting. I€™m not sure a child that age is ready to make that kind of decision.€

    The B.€™s thought long and hard about what they had observed in their son. They have carefully choreographed his life, monitoring new playmates, selecting a compatible school, finding sympathetic parents in a babysitting co-op. Nevertheless, Ms. B. said, €œthere is still the stomach-clenching fear for your kid.€

    It is indeed heartbreaking to hear a child say, as J. did recently, €œIt feels like a nightmare I€™m a boy.€

    The adjustment has been gradual for Mr. B., a 43-year-old public school administrator who is trying to stop calling J. €œour little man.€ He thinks of his son as a positive, resilient person, and his love and admiration show. €œThe truth is, is any parent going to choose this for their kid?€ he said. €œIt€™s who your kid is.€

    Families are caught in the undertow of conflicting approaches. One suburban Chicago mother, who did not want to be identified, said in a telephone interview that she was drawing the line on dress and trying to provide €œboy opportunities€ for her 6-year-old son. €œBut we can€™t make everything a power struggle,€ she said. €œIt gets exhausting.€

    She worries about him becoming a social outcast. €œWhy does your brother like girl things?€ friends of her 10-year-old ask. The answer is always, €œI don€™t know.€

    Nila Marrone, a retired linguistics professor at the University of Connecticut who consults with parents and schools, recalled an incident last year at a Bronx elementary school in which an 8-year-old boy perceived as effeminate was thrown into a large trash bin by a group of boys. The principal, she said, €œsuggested to the mother that she was to blame, for not having taught her son how to be tough enough.€

    But the tide is turning.

    The Los Angeles Unified School District, for instance, requires that students be addressed with €œa name and pronoun that corresponds to the gender identity.€ It also asks schools to provide a locker room or changing area that corresponds to a student€™s chosen gender.

    One of the most controversial issues concerns the use of €œblockers,€ hormones used to delay the onset of puberty in cases where it could be psychologically devastating (for instance, a girl who identifies as a boy might slice her wrists when she gets her period). Some doctors disapprove of blockers, arguing that only at puberty does an individual fully appreciate their gender identity.

    Catherine Tuerk, a nurse-psychotherapist at the children€™s hospital in Washington and the mother of a gender-variant child in the 1970s, says parents are still left to find their own way. She recalls how therapists urged her to steer her son into psychoanalysis and €œhypermasculine activities€ like karate. She said she and her husband became €œgender cops.€

    €œIt was always, €˜You€™re not kicking the ball hard enough,€™ € she said.

    Ms. Tuerk€™s son, now 30, is gay and a father, and her own thinking has evolved since she was a young parent. €œPeople are beginning to understand this seems to be something that happens,€ she said. €œBut there was a whole lifetime of feeling we could never leave him alone.€

  • #2
    SRS should be a treatment option for any person with gender identity disorder, regardless of age.

    Comment


    • #3
      there is a big article in the paper today about the youngest ever transexual, M to F at 12 yo in Germany  who is on hormones but not had the operation. I thought that this is quite common in Thailand so maybe the papers have not looked further than their noses. If anyone wants the link ill dig it out.

      Maybe someone here should write to the UK Daily Telegraph and tell them that a world exists outside of the EU.

      the youngest post op in the UK is 17 year old Anne Jordan. M to F.  ( i think Post Op Lover asked this around three years ago and im sorry for the late reply)

      Comment


      • #4
        Here's a piece about it from the Sunday Telegraph.
        Unhappy as a boy, Kim became youngest ever transsexual at 12
        By Bojan Pancevski in Vienna.



        A boy of 12 is believed to have become the world's youngest sex change patient after convincing doctors that he wanted to live the rest of his life as a female.

        The boy - originally called Tim, but now known as Kim - has started to receive hormone treatment, in preparation for the operation that will eventually complete the sex change.

        Tim was diagnosed as a transsexual two years ago, when doctors and psychiatrists concluded that his claims to be "in the wrong body" were so deeply felt that he required treatment. The therapy involves artificially arresting male puberty, with a series of potent hormone injections before the administration of female hormones to initiate the development of features such as breasts.

        advertisementNow aged 14, and officially registered as a female, Kim looks like a typical girl of her age. She dresses in fashionable clothes, has long blonde hair and blue eyes and dreams of moving to Paris to become a fashion designer. Her parents, who initially assumed their son was going through a temporary phase, eventually grew accustomed to seeing him as a girl.

        The family's full identity has not been made public. But Kim's father, known as Lutz P. €“ speaking to the German publications Der Spiegel and Stern €“ said that as a child, the boy liked to play with Barbie dolls, enjoyed wearing dresses and, from the age of two, insisted that he was a girl. "We saw Kim as a girl, but not as a problem. Our life was surprisingly normal."

        Kim reacted badly to the first signs of puberty, he said. "At that stage we realised that she was terrified of growing facial hair and her voice breaking."

        Kim's parents consulted psychiatrists across Germany. Some condemned their support of their child's desire to undergo a sex change, or suggested that Kim be kept under observation in a closed psychiatric ward. But others agreed that the child should receive therapy, because growing up to be a man would have damaged her personality.

        Dr Bern Meyenburg, the head of a clinic for children and adolescents with identity disturbances at Frankfurt University, concluded that the child was serious. He wrote in his diagnosis: "Kim is a mentally well-developed child who appears happy and balanced. There is no doubt of the determined wish, that was already detectable since early childhood. It would have been very wrong to let Kim grow up to be a man. It is rare to have such a clear-cut case."

        Kim is reportedly fully accepted by her fellow school pupils and teachers. The costs of the procedure are being covered by health insurance, as the condition qualifies as an illness.

        Dr Achim Wuesthof, an endocrinologist specialising in children and adolescents, who is treating the teenager at a clinic in Hamburg, said the procedure had been a success so far. Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph, he said that even though under-16s were not permitted to undergo a sex change in other countries, he and his colleagues felt that in this case it had been best to start earlier. He said: "To the best of my knowledge, Kim is the youngest sex change patient in the world. According to German law, two independent psychiatrists must confirm that the child is indeed transsexual and approve the sex change. Once that has been done, it is best to start as early as possible.

        "Transsexuals experience the onset of puberty, and the physical changes it brings, as a serious trauma. But there is a general lack of empathy with cases like Kim's, mostly because people know little about the condition. Imagine a man that suddenly starts growing breasts or a woman that starts growing a beard against their will €“ that is how Kim and people like her experience puberty.

        "They are not freaks, nor do they suffer mental illness. They are simply trapped in the wrong bodies. That is why it is best to help them as early as possible and reduce the trauma for them and their families."

        The problem that Dr Meyenburg and other psychiatrists faced was distinguishing a true transsexual personality from a temporary gender identity crisis. Dr Meyenburg quoted an example of a 15-year-old girl who wanted to change her sex, but who revealed during counselling that she had suffered brutal sexual abuse by her father €“ a case for psychological, rather than hormonal therapy.

        Should Kim change her mind before the surgery, the procedure could be reversed. Doctors admit that the treatment involves a risk, however, and that its effects on children as young as Kim are not fully understood.

        For legal reasons, the final stage €“ cosmetic surgery to remove the male genitalia €“ cannot take place until Kim is 18. Britain's youngest transsexual is Angel Paris-Jordan, who was granted an operation on the NHS at the age of 17.

        Comment


        • #5
          links as follows:

          http://www.spiegel.de/international/...462516,00.html

          http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news....m28.xml

          Comment


          • #6
            April 21 2007   teenage transexuals

            "BODY SWAP"  am i in the wrong body....

            A very interesting and concise article came to my attention today... Todays issue of New Scientist has a three page essay called body swap and relates to teen and pre- teen gender identity and how this is being tacked in the west.

            It basically rubbishes the newspaper article a few months ago that said e 12 yo german was the worlds first transexual(see above post) as the dear old Dutch have been dishing hormones out to 12yo for ages. Obviously Western Europe is not Thailand and the moral dilemmas about treating per pubescient and teenage kids may have a different slant due to cultural differences.

            Ill finish reading it tonight over a cup of Bovril and anyway you dont want to know whodunnit....

            PS
            for those of you who asked me last week, you can get New Scientist in the magazine shop just down Sukvit Rd near Nana or in any Bookazine. It comes out a week late in LOS as well....

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