Here
‘s a doozy …
National Geographic magazine put a transgender person on its cover for the first time and the special issue is making waves, as you’d expect in today’s environment. Titled “Gender Revolution,” the January issue examines the shifting landscape.
The topic is (sadly) controversial in and of itself, but the photo has drawn out naysayers in big numbers: it’s a pic of 9-year-old Avery Jackson, who was born male but identifies as female.
Now we have a perfect storm of all the controversial elements: the topic of transitioning, a trans CHILD of all things, gracing the cover of a credible, world-renowned publication. Nat Geo says they put a trans child on the cover because they hope the gender stories…
“will spark thoughtful conversations about how far we have come on this topic-and how far we have left to go.”
The naysayers are having a field day, as you might imagine. It’s enough to make their poor, close-minded heads explode.
BUT! Duh-duh-dunnnn…
One response in particular caught my attention. This guy, Walt, who transitioned from male to female for 8 years, and then transitioned back.
Walt calls Avery “a cross-dressing boy.” He says that cross dressing a young boy is a form of emotional and pyschological abuse that should be stopped, not celebrated. And he says that putting Avery on the cover will…
“encourage a child to question his or her gender and sex and act out accordingly.”
I’m at a loss. Yes, the cover may encourage a child to question his or her gender – but I gotta believe only if they were already questioning it. It’s difficult for me to think that someone would look at a magazine cover and suddenly be interested in transitioning to the opposite sex if they weren’t already inclined to do so. I don’t look at GQ and think, “Geez, now I wanna be a man!”
Ludicrous, in my mind. Mr. Walt Heyer, I’m truly, honestly, sorry you were confused in your childhood. I’m equally sorry you felt that you made a mistake by transitioning, and I’m glad you transitioned back to what felt right to you. I hope it made you happy and feel at home in your body.
BUT!
Please, remember…
Life requires a lot of introspection to figure out who we are … and who we are changes as we age. I’m not the same person I was at 15, 25 or 35. I personally never had occasion to question my gender. I’m not saying that Mr. Heyer didn’t have reason to. I’m just saying it’s a shame that someone who, at one point, understood the need to physically transition can’t afford others the same opportunity without calling it “abuse.” I’m stumped at his reaction and really, just kinda left mystified by it.
Whaddya think?
1. Is Avery a brave, young girl acting on her instinct who should be applauded for breaking down barriers?
2. Is she being duped or misled into transitioning?
3. Is transgenderism — as Walt Heyer puts it — “B.S.?”
We gotta talk about this. Wherever you fall on the yay/nay spectrum, this is real. This is life. And THAT is why Nat Geo put a trans child on the cover.
Time to get those thoughtful conversations going… please start one here by commenting on this post.
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