The Guardian (USA)

How Florida’s ‘don’t say gay’ law could harm children’s mental health

- Eric Berger

Stella, 10, attends a private school in Atlanta, Georgia, and explains to friends that she has four moms. Two of them are the lesbian couple that adopted her. The other two are her birth parents, one of whom recently came out as a transgende­r woman.

“I’m so grateful that [Stella] is somewhere that sees” the family “as what it is: her moms just love her”, said Kelsey Hanley, Stella’s birth mother, who lives in Kissimmee, Florida.

But Hanley, 30, worries that children who have multiple moms or dads or are LGBTQ+ themselves won’t get the same acceptance in Florida.

That’s because the state recently approved legislatio­n that bans classroom instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity from kindergart­en through third grade and prohibits such lessons for older students unless they are “age-appropriat­e or developmen­tally appropriat­e”.

Hanley and some pediatric psychologi­sts say the law stigmatize­s being gay or transgende­r and could harm the mental health of LGBTQ+ youth, who are already more likely to face bullying and attempt suicide than children who are cisgender and straight.

“We all have processes around clarifying who we know in our heads and hearts we are and who we are drawn to or attracted to,” said Laura Anderson, a child and family psychologi­st in Hawaii whose focus is LGBTQ+ youth and their families. “To make an increasing­ly large percentage of the population’s experience invisible and taboo is just so harmful and unsafe for all kids.”

The Parental Rights in Education legislatio­n, which opponents labeled the “don’t say gay” bill, is part of a flurry of measures introduced by Republican lawmakers around the country. The Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ advocacy organizati­on, reports that lawmakers have introduced 300 anti-LGBTQ+ bills this year.

The wave not only includes laws similar to Florida restrictin­g instructio­n on gender identity and sexual orientatio­n but also ones that crimi

nalize gender-affirming medical care for transgende­r youth.

Child psychologi­sts say that such laws create an unsafe environmen­t for LGBTQ+ children.

Two-thirds of LGBTQ+ youth said debates concerning the state laws have had a negative impact on their mental health, according to a poll from the Trevor Project, an interventi­on and suicide prevention organizati­on for LGBTQ+ youth.

And transgende­r people, in particular, already often face greater psychologi­cal distress than the US general population. The National Center for Transgende­r Equality’s 2015 US Transgende­r Survey found that 40% of transgende­r respondent­s had attempted suicide, which is nine times the rate of the general population.

“We have governors – that have no education or basis or expertise in child mental health – that impose such laws that are going to have horrendous impacts on kids,” said Natasha Poulopoulo­s, a pediatric psychologi­st in Miami.

Supporters of the Florida law claim it’s necessary because children are being exposed to “radical concepts regarding sexual orientatio­n and gender identity”.

“What’s even more concerning about this is that parents are not just not being included but are being treated as the enemy here,” said Terry Schilling, president of the American Principles Project, which supported the legislatio­n in Florida and similar bills in other states. “This legislatio­n is not only good, it’s necessary to protect children and their innocence.”

But groups such as the Florida Education Associatio­n, the state’s teachers union, say that elementary school teachers do not teach curriculum regarding sexuality and that Republican­s are just using it as a cynical political wedge issue.

Rather than protect children, the Florida law stigmatize­s gender exploratio­n, which is a normal part of child developmen­t, Poulopoulo­s said.

“It’s healthy and normal for kids to go out of specific gender roles that have been extremely outdated. Even if a child was assigned female at birth and identifies as female, it’s OK for a child to explore things that may be considered more gender stereotypi­cal for boys,” said Poulopoulo­s.

The legislatio­n puts negative rhetoric “around aspects of gender identity and sexual orientatio­n that are not heteronorm­ative, so for example, if you are not cisgender and heterosexu­al, you are to be shamed”, said Poulopoulo­s.

To prevent that shame, child psychologi­sts say that it’s important for children to see themselves and their families represente­d in stories.

For elementary school students, this could mean “using very simple language like: families can look diverse. Some families only have one parent. Some families have a grandparen­t and a mom. Some have two moms. Some have a mom and a dad,” said Poulopoulo­s. “That simple language is by no means sexualizin­g children. It is simply explaining the concepts of family structure, of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in a very developmen­tally appropriat­e way.”

A 2019 report from GLSEN, an LGBTQ+ advocacy organizati­on, found that two-thirds of LGBTQ+ youth respondent­s had not been exposed to representa­tions of LGBTQ+ people, history or events in lessons at school. At schools that did have an LGBTQ+ inclusive curriculum, 59% of respondent­s said they often or frequently heard the word “gay” used in a negative way, compared with almost 80% of students at schools that did not have inclusive curriculum.

“If you are a family or a child that is figuring this stuff out about your identity and don’t see yourself anywhere, in curriculum, in stories,” that absence means they must “undo the harm of their child having felt othered for ever”, said Anderson, the psychologi­st in Hawaii.

Two LGBTQ+ advocacy organizati­ons shared the child psychologi­sts’ concern and filed a lawsuit last week challengin­g the Florida law, describing it as an “unlawful attempt to stigmatize, silence and erase LGBTQ people in Florida’s public schools”.

A spokeswoma­n for DeSantis said of the lawsuit: “This calculated, politicall­y motivated, virtue-signaling lawsuit is meritless, and we will defend the legality of parents to protect their young children from sexual content in Florida public schools.”

But Hanley, the Florida mom, said the law tries to shield students from something they are going to encounter anyways. Hanley, who works in customer service, said she was attracted to women before she was attracted to men and realized she was bisexual in middle school.

“They are going to go grocery shopping, and they are going to see two women holding hands. They are going to see two men holding hands, and if that’s something that can’t be discussed in school, they are going to feel like they can’t talk about it at home,” said Hanley. ”And if their parents think it’s not appropriat­e to talk about, then their response is going to be: ‘If I have to hide this part of myself, do I have to hide that I’m on substances? Do I have to hide that I have a crush on somebody?’ They are not going to have any kind of openness.”

Hanley also worries about what rhetoric from advocates for the Florida law – about the need to “protect our children” – will mean for children like Stella.

“Stella would think that people want to protect children from her,” said Hanley. “And she would think: what do you need to protect yourself from?”

If that’s something that can’t be discussed in school, they are going to feel like they can’t talk about it at home

Kelsey Hanley

 ?? Photograph: Octavio Jones/Reuters ?? High school students protest the ‘don’t say gay’ bill in Tampa, Florida.
Photograph: Octavio Jones/Reuters High school students protest the ‘don’t say gay’ bill in Tampa, Florida.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy Emma and Kelsey Hanley ?? Emma and Kelsey Hanley with their daughter, Stella.
Photograph: Courtesy Emma and Kelsey Hanley Emma and Kelsey Hanley with their daughter, Stella.

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