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Her mom alerted the school. "You know how we spoke about, that it might happen next year?" she said. "Well, it's happening tomorrow." They were ready, and allowed Sabrina to explain things to Ryan's classmates
-- that Ryan liked to dress in girl clothes and liked girl things. One of Ryan's friends also stood up: "I want everyone to know this is Ryan's first day as a girl, and everyone better be nice." One boy talked about how he'd once worn his sister's shirt when his own got wet. A girl said she'd worn her brother's boots. And then the kindergarteners moved on, Sabrina says. Of course, how a school staff and a community react still varies widely from place to place. But overall, attitudes about differences in gender identity have been changing, even in the last decade, says Eli Erlick, a transgender student and graduating high school senior in Willits, Calif., a small town in the northern part of the state. When Erlick began her transition from boy to girl at age 8, she says that even she didn't know what the word "transgender" meant. She just knew that she wanted to live life as a girl. "I thought I was the only person like this," she says. School was difficult. Some teachers made fun of her in front of the class, she says. To avoid dealing with which bathroom to use, she would pretend to be sick, so she could go home and use the facilities there. Now Erlick is the director of an organization called Trans Student Equality Resources, which provides schools with training and information about students like her. Erlick also has helped her school district and others in California develop transgender policies. Some schools in other states are doing the same. "There is definitely more awareness," says Kristyn Westphal, vice principal at Grant High School in Portland, Ore.
There, they've established a student support team to determine how well the school is meeting the needs of transgender and other students. Earlier this year, the school also created individual gender-neutral bathrooms that any student can use. Bathrooms often become a focal point because, when children are young, the transition is often more "social," a change in clothing and hairstyle. As some kids move into puberty, they might use hormone blockers and, eventually, start hormone therapy to help their bodies transform from male to female, or vice versa. But any kind of surgery, experts say, is still relatively rare, even in adolescence. Ryan's parents will consider these options later. But for now, Ryan sees no reason to choose one gender over the other
-- "at least until I get married or something," she says. So she uses a separate bathroom at school, as the principal has arranged with her parents. A separate bathroom was not, however, a workable solution for the parents of Coy Mathis, who are suing their school district in Fountain, Colo. Kathryn Mathis, Coy's mother, says it's about more than that. "If it were just a toilet, then just having the gender-neutral option would be fine. But it's really about being accepted," Mathis says. "What's happening now -- they will call you a girl but you're not really a girl, so you don't get to act like one. And that's incredibly damaging." The school district has declined to comment on an ongoing case. Mathis says she's heard from several parents who've made the decision for their transgender children to go "stealth." In other words, they make the transition
-- from boy to girl or girl to boy -- and then move, so no one knows. "That's how they're doing it ... because there aren't laws to protect them," Mathis says. Even in Ryan's case, the initial transition at school wasn't always smooth. While her own younger classmates were accepting, older kids called her "gay" and a "fag." Early on, a few followed Ryan around on the playground. "Are you a boy or a girl?" they'd ask repeatedly. Her parents had prepared her for this type of reaction as best they could. Ryan, who her parents say is a strong-willed, independent kid, was mostly just annoyed. Still, she was relieved when her principal quickly stepped in to enforce the school's anti-bullying policy. One mother also recalls how, early on, a few other parents worried about their boys being around Ryan
-- that it might cause them to be confused about their own gender. But that talk eventually dissipated, she says. Sabrina took it upon herself to speak about Ryan at school curriculum nights, to answer parents' questions. And now, the principal says, it as a nonissue. "Ryan is Ryan," she says. It's not been as easy at other nearby elementary schools, where there's been more friction over the few other transgender students. Some administrators have come to Ryan's principal for advice
-- and she's already been in contact with her counterparts at the middle school Ryan will eventually attend. No one expects that adolescence will be easy. "The more challenging times are up ahead, and we're clear about that," Sabrina says. But Scott Morrison, a transgender student at Grant High School in Oregon, says having support at home and at school, as he did, will make a big difference for kids like Ryan. Morrison, a graduating senior, moved to Oregon from Virginia three years ago. "Gender identity is probably the most important part of me," Morrison says. "It's the most important discovery I've made about myself." He transitioned from female to male a year later and says support from his mom, his friends and his new school
-- and help from a counselor -- likely prevented him from committing suicide. According to a 2010 National Transgender Discrimination Survey, 41 percent of transgender people surveyed said they had attempted suicide. That figure rose to 51 percent for those who said they'd also been bullied, harassed, assaulted or expelled because they were transgender or gender nonconforming at school. The survey was a joint project of the National Center for Transgender Equality and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. With more support and an ability to live more openly, however, some wonder if it will be better for Ryan and this up-and-coming group of transgender and gender variant kids. "I'll be really curious to see what this next generation looks like," says Masen Davis, the executive director of the Transgender Law Center, a civil rights and advocacy organization based in San Francisco. "I'm hopeful." Ryan is, too. "It's just made me feel more strong and confident," she says of the support she's gotten from her parents and her school. People who know her say that's true. She is a bubbly kid, they note. She loves to draw, sing and write poetry, loves sports and running. On the school playground, she can be found in the middle of a group of girls, doing cartwheels and playing tag. "Most people forgot that she was ever a boy," says one of her girlfriends, a fellow fourth-grader. If her parents ever question their decision to let Ryan go public at school, they say they pull out her first-grade photo and compare it with the one from kindergarten, taken when Ryan was still hiding her girl self. "There is a light and a twinkle in her eye that's unmistakable," Sabrina says of the first-grade photo. "And if nothing else, just looking at that picture, we're clear we made the right choice." ___ Online: Trans Student Equality Resources: GSA Network: http://gsanetwork.org/
http://transstudent.org/
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