The Citizen (Gauteng)

Parenty: not pink or blue

HUMAN FIRST: WHY INSTIL GENDER INTO YOUR LITTLE ONE

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Raise a person, not a little man or woman: welcome to gender-neutral parenting.

There are numerous benefits to consciousl­y rejecting stereotypi­cal concepts about boys and girls. We now have parents that are learning different concepts like conscious parenting. We can identify different styles of parenting based on how parents approach it.

Another rising concept is that of gender-neutral parenting. Gender-neutral parenting is a kind of parenting where you do not put your children in the girl or boy box. This means parents try to move away from the gender stereotype­s that exist in our society.

These stereotype­s may include the colour of clothing we buy our kids or the kind of toys that they play with. Gender-neutral parenting allows children to explore themselves as human beings without the limitation­s of the gender they are born with. This means that one does not impose gender stereotype­s on their child.

The child decides whether they want to be a girl or a boy. Kate Hudson and Pink have chosen to raise gender-neutral kids. Gender-neutral or gender-fluid parents describe this form of parenting as one that allows the child to fill in their own canvas early on in their lives.

The child is allowed to explore what it feels and looks like to be a boy or a girl. Critics are calling this extreme, and roll their eyes at the very idea of this concept. It’s described as extreme because not only does it attempt to eliminate gender stereotype­s, it also attempts to eliminate the labelling. This means regardless of the gender your child is born with, you do

not call them boy or girl. You call them “baby”.

Gender-neutral parents are being criticised on the basis that parents can raise fully accomplish­ed human beings without the extremitie­s of not putting them in a bracket.

So is there a way of unboxing our children with regards to gender, without eliminatin­g the labelling? I feel that this is possible. I was buying toys on an online store once and came across building blocks that I thought she would enjoy very much.

The packaging had a boy on it, and it was labelled “building blocks for boys”. Which made me wonder, “Are girls not meant to build?” Or if they are meant to build, are there different, more feminine blocks for girls? Perhaps they are just pink and not as multicolou­red as the ones marked for boys.

Needless to say, I went ahead and bought the boy toys. The reality is that our kids do not exist independen­tly. If they are going to school, they will be subject to society’s gender norms. When they are young, they do not completely understand why mommy is dressing them in tan or grey all the time. So they will inevitably engage with other children that choose to play separately, with toys that are labelled for girls and boys.

So is gender-neutral parenting completely possible? If your child is home-schooled and hardly has social interactio­ns with other kids, then it is.

In as much as you are teaching your children to not allow themselves to be defined by society, you are also running the risk of them getting teased, and possibly bullied. Boys can be teased for wearing pink and having long hair.

Girls can be teased for having no hair and wearing “boyish” clothes. Research shows that gender-neutral kids are more creative individual­s because they do not allow themselves to be limited by the gender they were born with.

It also teaches them about the freedom to choose who they want to be. This means they will grow up as individual­s who can make decisions that suit them and them alone.

Some argue that we are raising a generation of confused children, especially in a case where your son has shown interest in being a boy, but you insist on raising him as a gender-neutral child.

There is no perfect parenting style. Each has its advantages and disadvanta­ges. Parents just need to choose what works for them and their families and have the confidence to stick with it regardless of the external noise.

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Pictures: iStock
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