top of page

Love as a Verb: Parenting Beyond Gender Boxes

A heartwarming "we care for all children and families" sign, on a background of an inclusive flag, at my kids' doctor's appointments the other day.
A heartwarming "we care for all children and families" sign, on a background of an inclusive flag, at my kids' doctor's appointments the other day.

As a doula, childbirth educator, and gender-inclusivity consultant, I think about babies and parents all day long—but I also think about the kind of world those babies are stepping into.



And as we close out Trans Awareness Week (Nov 13-19th), I want to offer expectant and new parents a reflection that goes beyond headlines and politics and lands squarely in the heart of parenting:



If your child—or your child’s best friend—were trans, what would you want them to feel from you?



Most parents say some version of the same thing:

Loved. Safe. Seen. Respected. Supported. Free to explore who they are without fear of disappointing us.



At its core, that’s what this week is about: building a world where every child grows up knowing—deep in their bones—that they are loved for who they are, not who we imagined they would be.


It’s not about politics. It’s about parenting with intention, and making love an action word.



Whether your child is part of the small percentage (1-3% of the U.S. population) who are trans or nonbinary—or whether they’re cisgender or if their gender identity is still unfolding—the way we talk, the signals our homes send, and the compassion we model shape the world they inherit.



Why this matters in pregnancy and postpartum


Pregnancy and early postpartum are actually beautiful times to consider these questions. You’re already imagining the parent you want to be. You’re already fiercely protective of your child’s dignity and potential. This is simply an extension of that care.



And because I wear many hats—including supporting LGBTQ+ birthing families as well as working with schools and workplaces to build gender-inclusive cultures—I see every day how much children’s wellbeing is shaped by the environments adults create.


It always comes back to families. Here’s what I know:


  • LGBTQ+ birthing parents deserve care that feels safe, affirming, and respectful.


  • All families deserve tools to parent with clarity, curiosity, and confidence.


  • And all children deserve a world where their full selves are welcomed—not judged or policed.


Expectant and new parents are in a powerful position to help create that world. The norms your child grows up around—the things they overhear, the way you respond to difference—become the foundation of their empathy and their sense of belonging.



ree

Let’s take a moment to open our minds and hearts.



There’s a lot of fear swirling around this topic—so let’s ground ourselves in facts, not fear-based misinformation.





A few common myths about trans kids (and what the research actually says)



Myth 1: “Kids are too young to understand gender.”


Reality: Children learn about gender from the moment they enter the world—and research suggests even before.


They absorb cues everywhere: pink vs. blue (a totally made-up cultural construct—see this fascinating history), who gets praised for what, who’s told to “toughen up,” who’s allowed to be gentle. Kids learn the rules long before they can verbalize them.


Most people have a deep, enduring sense of their gender identity. For many, it “feels obvious,” which is why it’s hard to explain. Children often know this about themselves very early, even if they don’t yet have language for it.


Some children feel aligned with the gender they were assigned at birth. Others don’t. Both are normal human experiences. And when trans kids receive support for social transition (name, pronouns, clothing), their mental health outcomes improve dramatically.


Gender doesn’t suddenly “turn on” at puberty—it’s part of how children understand themselves from the beginning.

 

 

 


Myth 2: “Gender diversity is new or unnatural.”


Reality: Gender diversity—and diversity in sexual orientation—has existed for as long as humans have—across continents, cultures, and history.


ree

Indigenous communities, ancient civilizations, and cultures around the world have long recognized more than two genders. The binary has never actually been a binary (though if you’re like me, that was not something you were taught growing up!). And the natural world is full of gender and sex variance too—species with fluid or non-binary sex characteristics, role changes, and adaptive behaviors that don’t fit neat categories.


ree

And importantly:


Being trans is not a disorder.


Every major medical and mental health organization is clear on this—but so are trans people themselves, and we must take their lived expertise seriously.


When someone tells us who they are, we believe them.

Someone else’s identity is not up for debate; that’s just basic respect.


The harm trans people experience isn’t because of who they are—it’s because of how society responds.



Gender diversity is part of the natural complexity of being alive.




 

Myth 3: “Being trans is a trend” (or kids are doing it to be cool).


Reality: If you look honestly at the bullying, rejection, discrimination, and violence trans youth face, the idea that someone would come out as trans to earn “cool points” is… frankly, bonkers.


If anything, kids face tremendous pressure to be cisgender and heterosexual. Not the other way around.


There is also no credible evidence of “social contagion.” What is happening is that more young people feel safe enough to express who they’ve always been — and more adults actually know what gender diversity is. That’s something worth celebrating.


ree

And while we’re here:


Inclusive bathroom policies have not led to increases in assaults or safety concerns.

Schools and municipalities with gender-inclusive bathrooms have seen no rise in incidents.



And inclusive bathrooms actually make everyone safer.

Meanwhile, trans people face significant danger when excluding them is sanctioned.


Being yourself is not a trend. It’s a human need. So is going pee.

 




Myth 4: “Most trans people regret transitioning.”


Reality: This one's almost laughable, if the costs of this belief weren't so devastating. But: NO! Regret rates for gender-affirming care are among the lowest of any medical intervention—less than 1%.


For comparison, the following have 10-20% or higher regret rates:

  • Back surgery


  • Knee surgery


  • Harry Potter tattoos

    ree

And among the very small number who do detransition, research shows the majority do so because of external pressures, lack of acceptance, safety concerns, or family rejection — not because they suddenly “realized they weren’t trans.”


Regret is rare.

Rejection is far more common (Half of all trans kids are rejected by their families….can we please change this??)


And affirmation is what saves lives.





But this isn’t only about trans kids. It’s about all of us.


I want to name something clearly:


Creating a more gender-inclusive world isn’t something we do for trans kids alone.

It’s something that frees every child — and every adult — from the narrow boxes that limit us.


In my consulting work with men and boys, I often ask:


“If we lived in a world with fewer rigid gender expectations—a more gender-inclusive and gender-equal world—how would that benefit men and boys?”


Their answers illuminate how deeply this matters:


  • “Pushing back on stereotypes is liberating—it takes so much pressure off men and boys.”


  • “A gender-inclusive world gives men more choices, more possibilities, and more freedom to live how we actually want.”


  • “A world with fewer gender constraints is a world where men can finally just… be themselves.”


This isn’t a political idea—it’s a human one.



And it applies just as much to:

  • a cis boy who can cry without shame

  • a cis girl who wants to lead and take risks

  • a trans or nonbinary kid who wants to live without fear

  • a father who wants to show up more as a deeply connected caregiver

  • any family that wants emotionally whole, curious, confident children


When we loosen the grip of rigid gender norms, everybody breathes easier.

 

ree


So what does this mean for expectant and new parents?


You have enormous power—not to shape who your child is, but to shape the environment that allows them to thrive.


You don’t need perfect language or a background in gender studies. You just need:


  • Love that makes room.


  • Curiosity that stays open.


  • Compassion that outweighs fear.


  • A home where differences aren’t “issues”—they’re truths.


  • A commitment to raising a child who knows their worth is unconditional.


If you want help making your home, school, or workplace more gender-inclusive—or if you’re an LGBTQ+ parent seeking affirming birth support—I’m here for that. Send me a message.


And for those of you already doing this work in your own beautiful ways—teachers, caregivers, parents, young people—I hope you’ll share what you’re learning too.

This isn’t a one-expert project. It’s a collective one, built from lived experience, creativity, and community wisdom.


Every child deserves a world big enough for their whole self.

And every parent deserves the community and tools to help build it.


ree

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page