Only a matter of time before midwives won't be allowed to say if it's a boy or girl.
Congratulations it's a gender neutral lgbtq+Citwylnrgaf.
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Only a matter of time before midwives won't be allowed to say if it's a boy or girl.
Congratulations it's a gender neutral lgbtq+Citwylnrgaf.
Do you really give a toss, i mean i'm not going to go this dress hasn't got a girls label in it, then she is not wearing that. Parents who buy the clothes will automatically gravitate to the gender clothes anyway, im sure the shop will separate the clothes anyway, with a section of tops that would suit both genders.
Nobody is normal, my girly girl is more than happy to spend a day down the football with me, my lad is happy playing girly games with his sister.
Not really, not enough to get worked up over, my girls have always worn a lot of navy, the colour suits them, it's readily available already in girls sections and doesn't need a gender free label on it.
i get worked up more by the martyrs making a bigger issue of it than needs to be made. Do we really need people campaigning for gender fluid clothing sections in the first place?
Mrs R put a link up with some fuss being made over a "boys will be boys" t shirt saying it was teaching our children that disrespecting women was ok?!??
Worlds gone mad
The so called Martyrs are fed by the ranters. People will always moan.
I dont think i would buy my son a 'boys will be boys' t-shirt, but then i wouldnt by any slogan t-shirts either.
The navy tops you speak of will not have a gender free tag, they will simply have no gender tag on them at all. If the item is a navy polo top it would be suitable for a boy or a girl.
I wouldn't put a navy Ralph polo with frills around the placket and shoulders on a boy but each to their own.
I usually shop in Bicester Village once a season for them and it's carnage enough in the Ralph shop where it's nicely divided into age and gender sections. I hope they don't follow the current trend and go all gender fluid.
Have you read the OP? It says John Lewis have done away with boys and girls sections in their stores.
I hope the stores I use don't follow suit because I'm an impatient bastard at the best of times without trawling through boys and girls clothes just to appease a tiny miniroty.
Netball is a strange one, just girls, i never understand that one
3 of our local Cricket teams have girls teams, infact the girls can play down by 2 years, my youngest plays with the softball on sunday and trains with the hardball on friday, the softball is under 9's, she is 9 now, but can play till she is 11, but we full expect her to play with the hardball next year, though will make a outstanding softball player as she can bat and bowl straight on and hits the wicket 7 out of 10 times ( which will mean her over at bowling will bring in some tidy scores )
Hilarious that people are getting so worked up over whether a clothes section in a shop has a sign saying girls and boys or not.
Let people wear what they like. I'm pretty sure it'll take more than that to bring down society.
my 2 girls both wore alot of " osh kosh b'gosh " the oldest had loads of it, ranging from polo shirts, T shirts, shorts and the odd dress, when she was in pre-school it was the " thing to wear ", we stumbled across a outlet store in Orlando ( i must tell you more about my Orlando trips, remind me one day ) the $ rate was close to 2 for 1 and this outlet store was ridiculously cheap, we got them to fit and then the next 2 ages up, we filled a suitcase with stuff, it was quality stuff and did the youngest when she hit the same ages a few years on
Now osh kosh b'gosh did not have " gender clothes ", they of course has dress's, but the shorts and tops were for both, which i commented on at the time, maybe it was the start, maybe it was that they just couldnt be arsed to have a girls and boys section ? ? ?
Good points and I hadn't thought of how much an influence parents have.
It isn't so much forcing the children down a route, as them naturally looking to follow.
My niece is all things make up etc. No doubt TV has not helped, but that would be picked up just from seeing her mother get ready to go out I guess?.
I think it varies. I remember a girl coming through the set-up the same time as one of my friends and they played all their cricket together at the same age, i think she jacked it in at U15 level.
I played senior cricket, and there was a girl in the opposition team the other month.
Sarah Taylor played first grade males cricket in Australia. That's a decent standard as well.
I think cricket can cross over, its a game with guile that can overcome power.
I think when they are in their youth it is fine, they mix and match.
Get to high school then that ends.
I wouldn't be surprised if that is changing now though with the increase in rugby/football womens coverage.
But I had a go at one of the handful of girls sports during high school, hockey. Far more dangerous than anything the boys did.
As the great Homer Simpson once said "Girls should stick to their own sports like naked mud wrestling, and foxy boxing, and such and such"