I'm not actually? Ask anyone on this forum, hell anyone of my friends and family, i'm not. There's just a clear distinction about what's right and what's wrong in discussions like this and most people coming into this thread who disagree with what the parents are doing deliver ignorant arguments like assuming it's a matter of not giving the boy an identity or the fact that he's not being treated to gender roles.
I may have misread your post, and I can apologize for that, but please don't assum me for the type who throws a word around. I am the least likely to do so in this thread, you're the one assuming just because I'm adding on to the debate that agrees with these parents it obviously means i'm one to throw judgements around.
WaiT just a minute they told them his full name and posted a picture of him wearing girl's cloths?
This kid is going to murder his parents when he grows up he's gonna have fun in high school.
I was thinking the same thing! "We want him to have confidence" welp goodbye to that because when everyone makes fun of him for this article that confidence will go out the window.
like, raise your lil' boy like a lil' boy, let him do what he enjoys, discipline him when you have to and let him choose his path when he grows, but don't treat your child like a causonary tale
I don't know what to feel about this but he looks cute in those clothes though. I probably wouldn't be ashame to look at it if I'm reminiscing with my straight friends if i was him.
I understand where they are coming from, but forcing something upon him isn't the way to go if they want their son to make his own choices. He's barely going to turn two, there are plenty of toys for children at that age that are gender-neutral like blocks, and pre-school learning toys. Wait until he's older and starts showing some interest in things and just let him do that.