The Little Boy Book (childrens` book when you need
Transcription
The Little Boy Book (childrens` book when you need
a special story about Daddy by Grandma & Mummy © Copyright E Kelly & E Webster 2003 All Rights Reserved FTM Australia PO Box 488 Glebe NSW 2037 Australia All proceeds from the sale of this book donated to FTM Australia ISBN 978-1-4116-7863-7 NOTE FOR PARENTS & CARERS Thank you for your interest in “The Little Boy”. The production of this book has been very much a family affair. Conceptualised by my mother and broadly telling the story of my husband’s life, it was written for our children. It never occurred to us not to tell the children about their father’s transsexual history, in fact our aim is for them to grow up not remembering a time when they didn’t know. We also hope they will appreciate the fact that transsexualism is merely a variation in the way people may develop, and not something to be afraid or ashamed of. Like most children ours love books, and bedtime stories are a well-established ritual. Introducing our children to transsexualism in this context has encouraged relaxed discussion and questions. Small children tend to have short attention spans (as you probably know!) and may become forgetful or confused. For these reasons we have found the book needs to be read and discussed more than once. In the book we have touched upon the origins of transsexualism, though nobody knows exactly what causes it. It is certainly a treatable physical condition, not a psychological one. It is thought likely that during the early stages of foetal development, for some unknown reason, parts of the brain develop in a pattern opposite to the rest of the body, and that once this has happened it cannot be reversed. “The Little Boy” supports this generally accepted theory, which corresponds with my husband’s consistent male sense of self dating back to his earliest memories. “The Little Boy” portrays one person’s experience of transsexualism. Experiences vary. Generally speaking, people who have transsexualism wish to live and be perceived by their society according to the sex they know themselves to be, rather than the sex they were assumed to be at birth. The combination of medical, social and legal steps, which unify mind, body and public presentation, is known as transition. Again, transition is an individual process and the outcome depicted in this book is just one person’s experience. We hope you and your family enjoy this book and find it helpful. Elizabeth Webster Once upon a time a baby was born in a hospital. The tiny baby looked like a little girl. “You have a baby girl” said the doctor to the baby’s Mummy and Daddy. “A little baby girl” said the Mummy and Daddy happily. They gave the baby a girl’s name. But do you know what? The baby was really a little boy! He was too small to tell them so nobody knew. This little boy was really very special. While he was growing inside his mummy’s tummy, getting ready to be born, something unusual happened. Sometimes things get a little bit mixed up while babies are growing. Sometimes a baby girl will grow to look like a baby boy, or a baby boy will grow to look like a baby girl. That’s what happened with this special baby! The Mummy and Daddy didn’t know about the mix-up. Nobody knew. The Mummy and Daddy treated the baby like a little girl. They dressed him in pretty dresses. They gave him dollies to play with. The Grandmas and Granddads and Aunties and Uncles all came to visit the baby. “What a lovely name! What a pretty dress! What a beautiful baby girl!” they all said. But the baby was a boy! As soon as he was old enough he tried to explain but none of them knew. The baby grew bigger. He did not like his dolls. He would not play with them. “Yuck, yuck, YUCK!” he said, and off he would go to dig in the sandpit with the boys from next door. He wanted to play with cars and trucks and tractors and bulldozers. He liked to build things. He liked to pretend he was a speedway driver. He tried to make them understand, but nobody knew. Every year the little boy had a birthday. He would not wear the frilly party dress or the big red ribbon in his hair. “Yuck, yuck, YUCK!” he said, and wore jeans and a t-shirt instead. Every year he blew out the candles and made a wish. He always wished for the same thing. That next morning when he woke up, everyone would know he was a boy. But his wish did not come true, nobody knew. He played with his cousins. His sisters played dolls and tea parties with the girls. “Yuck, yuck, YUCK!” he thought. He played footy with the boys. The boys teased the girls. He teased the girls too. He went to school. He wasn’t happy there. He wanted to play footy and cricket and soccer with the other boys, because deep inside, where all his thoughts and feelings were, he was a boy too. “GO AWAY!” shouted the boys. “You’re a GIRL!” But he WAS a boy, if only they knew. Finally the little boy grew up. He read a big book. “Go and see a special doctor” said the book. So he did. He went to see a special doctor. He told the doctor how he’d always felt. And the doctor knew! “Yes” said the doctor. “You are a boy. If you take some special medicine, you will look like a boy too.” He had always been a boy. He was a man now. AND AT LAST EVERYBODY KNEW! The End The Authors – E Kelly is a retired primary school teacher and the mother-in-law of a man who has transsexualism. E Webster is her daughter. The pair co-wrote this book for their children/grandchildren as a tool to help explain their father’s history. For information about transsexualism contact FTM Australia PO Box 488, Glebe NSW 2037 Australia mail@ftmaustralia.org www.ftmaustralia.org