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Kilodavis did try diverting Dyson's attention as a toddler by providing his day care with a little more flash for boys in the dress-up area. She brought in a red-and-gold karate outfit and a band uniform, but they were no-gos for Dyson. "The next day when I went to pick him up he was in a yellow dress," she said. Forward to age 4, when Dyson and his 8-year-old brother went shopping with mom for Halloween costumes. Older brother settled on a ninja turtle. Dyson begged for Cinderella. The worried mom made the purchase and made sure his private school was aware of his costume choice. In solidarity, three "stereotypically macho men" who work at the school dressed up as ballerinas, but Dyson wasn't there to enjoy a little dance they put on in his honor, or the annual holiday parade. His mother couldn't bear to send him, afraid it would be too much. Dyson did go trick-or-treating in his Cinderella gear. "Somebody laughed at him, a lady at a house. She said,
'Oh my gosh, I can't believe you're dressed up as a girl. You're a gender-bender.' He asked,
'Why did she laugh at me, Mommy?'" Kilodavis said. "People would make comments at stores, like
'Are you really going to get that Tinker Bell outfit?'" That's when she got busy on the book. Requests for it have skyrocketed since Dyson's story hit the Web. The family is now in search of a publisher. "People are walking into stores looking for the book. They're e-mailing me, saying I wish you were my mom when I was a princess boy growing up." Wendy Rosen in suburban London bought the book for her own princess boy, 8-year-old Cameron, and reached out to Kilodavis on the book's Facebook page. By telephone, she said Cameron accessorizes his school uniform with ladies' pins and a sparkly Hannah Montana bookbag. "The book really hit a button for us," said the legal secretary. "I think it's the only time he's seen a boy dressed as a girl." How does Cameron handle teasing? "I just ignore them," he said. "It doesn't bother me much. I really, really like to wear glittery stuff." The book doesn't mention Dyson by name. It doesn't even give the princess boy a face (the illustrations look more like an acorn in a dress), but Kilodavis used real life to tell the story and urge tolerance. "I'm still going through the process, too. This is a journey," she said. "I'm not professing to know all the answers. I have the heart of my little boy in my hands." ___ Online: Kilodavis family interview on KING5-TV:
http://bit.ly/akXA4j
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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