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My son wears heels : one mom's journey from clueless to kickass  Cover Image Book Book

My son wears heels : one mom's journey from clueless to kickass / Julie Tarney ; foreword by Diane Ehrensaft.

Tarney, Julie, (author.). Ehrensaft, Diane, (writer of foreword.).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780299310608 (cloth : alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0299310604 (cloth : alk. paper)
  • Physical Description: xxi, 213 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: Madison, Wisconsin : The University of Wisconsin Press, [2016]
Subject: Tarney, Julie.
Parents of sexual minority youth > Biography.
Mothers > Biography.
Transgender children > Biography.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Evergreen Indiana.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Whiting PL - Whiting 306.768 T175 (Text) 51735011766382 Adult department Available -

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  • Book News
    Author Julie Tarney is affiliated with the It Gets Better Project, The Parents Project, and PFLAG Safe Schools Program. In this memoir, she charts struggles and triumphs raising her transgender son from a toddler to a college student and performer. Describing her day-to-day efforts to accept her son unconditionally, she chronicles not only the episodes of harassment and bullying Harry experienced at school, but also celebrates the many accepting friends and family members who supported her son as he grew into a happy, confident person. The book includes b&w family photos. Annotation ©2016 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)
  • Chicago Distribution Center
    A loving mother shares her journey of parenting a gender creative child, from toddler to adult.
  • Chicago Distribution Center
    In 1992, Julie Tarney's only child, Harry, told her, 'Inside my head I'm a girl.' He was two years old.

    Julie had no idea what that meant. She felt disoriented. Wasn't it her role to encourage and support her child? Surely she had to set some limits to his self-expression'or did she? Would he be bullied? Could she do the right thing? What was the right thing?

    The internet was no help, because there was no internet. And there were zero books for a mom scrambling to understand a toddler who had definite ideas about his gender, regardless of how Nature had endowed him. Terms such as transgender, gender nonconforming, and gender creative were rare or nonexistent.

    There were, however, mainstream experts who theorized that a 'sissy' boy was the result of a domineering mother. Julie couldn't believe it. She didn't want to care what her neighbors thought, but she did care. "Domineering mother' meant controlling mother. It meant bad mother. It meant her mother.

    Lacking a positive role model of her own, and fearful of being judged as a mom who was making her son 'too feminine," Julie embarked on an unexpected parenting path. Despite some missteps, and with no map to guide her, she learned to rely on her instincts. She listened carefully, kept an open mind, and as long as Harry was happy, she let him lead the way. Julie eventually realized that Harry knew who he was all along. Her job was simply to love and support him unconditionally, allowing him to be his authentic self. This story of a mother embracing her child's uniqueness and her own will resonate with all families.

    Winner, inaugural BeOUT Award for LGBTQ Visibility, awarded by Milwaukee Pride
  • Chicago Distribution Center
    In 1992, Julie Tarney’s only child, Harry, told her, “Inside my head I’m a girl.” He was two years old.

    Julie had no idea what that meant. She felt disoriented. Wasn’t it her role to encourage and support her child? Surely she had to set some limits to his self-expression—or did she? Would he be bullied? Could she do the right thing? What was the right thing?

    The internet was no help, because there was no internet. And there were zero books for a mom scrambling to understand a toddler who had definite ideas about his gender, regardless of how Nature had endowed him. Terms such as transgender, gender nonconforming, and gender creative were rare or nonexistent.

    There were, however, mainstream experts who theorized that a “sissy” boy was the result of a domineering mother. Julie couldn’t believe it. She didn’t want to care what her neighbors thought, but she did care. “Domineering mother” meant controlling mother. It meant bad mother. It meant her mother.

    Lacking a positive role model of her own, and fearful of being judged as a mom who was making her son “too feminine,” Julie embarked on an unexpected parenting path. Despite some missteps, and with no map to guide her, she learned to rely on her instincts. She listened carefully, kept an open mind, and as long as Harry was happy, she let him lead the way. Julie eventually realized that Harry knew who he was all along. Her job was simply to love and support him unconditionally, allowing him to be his authentic self. This story of a mother embracing her child’s uniqueness and her own will resonate with all families.

    Winner, inaugural BeOUT Award for LGBTQ Visibility, awarded by Milwaukee Pride

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