Prepare for the question: "Poppa, what's a sissy?"

posted on Thu, Sep 15 2011 1:53 pm by Steve Majors

This is not what I envisioned.

I was sure that one day, years from now, when my two daughters were teenagers, they would face some sort of harassment in school because they have gay dads. In my daydream, they would stand up on the cafeteria tables and belt out some incredible song about diversity, inclusiveness and love. The entire school would join in at the chorus. After the closing line, the bullies would come up and give my daughters a hug. Ok, so maybe that was just an episode of GLEE- but a dad can dream, right?

Instead of what I envisioned, my now 7-year-old daughter came home this week- the second week of school- and asked me, “Poppy, what’s a sissy?”

For a second I choked. “Well, honey in what context did you hear that word?”  Blank stare.

As it turns out, she heard the word in a story that fortunately did have a happy ending with the bullies calling the book’s character “super” instead of “sissy” by the end of the story.

But it did open up the dreaded conversation about bullying a lot earlier than I had hoped. So we talked about words that hurt people because of the color of their skin, who they pray to, and yes who their parents or friends are.

I thought my kids were ready for school. They were armed with ready answers about why they had two dads, what adoption means and why families come in all sorts of colors.

But I was wrong. They were not ready. Perhaps more accurately, I was not ready. I should have been.

This month, I helped prepare our Family Equality Council materials on creating safe schools for all kids. Of course parents should talk to their kids and to teachers and to administrators and other parents about bullying and harassment, I thought to myself. Obviously, parents should do their homework and make sure the school and district have broad protections against bullying. But I had done none of these things nor had I followed any of the other 8 great tips for sending kids back to safe schools.

Now, I’m encouraging all of you to do what I encourage my kids to do. Read, Write and Research.

Read our Back to School Tool Kit and use the tips to help make your kids feel safe and protected in schools.

Write your Senator or Congressman and encourage them to support two key pieces of legislation that would ensure that schools across the nation explicitly protect kids from bullying, harassment and discrimination.

Finally, research the policies in your own schools and school districts. If you think your own great school and great teachers have the power the protect your kids, take a moment and read this recent New York Times article that details the battle being waged by our own families in Minnesota. Their stories will certainly ensure you don’t lapse into the dream world that I did and that you’re more prepared than I was.
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