A young boy resting his head on his arms as he sits in a classroom looking bored

Things were easier when my boy was a baby. If someone questioned my gender or asked where my baby's mother was, my infant was unaware. Now, he just turned five years old, and he understands everything. He is perceptive. And he is due to go to kindergarten in September.



My partner and I have always been completely open with our kids about how they came into this world. They know that I carried them and gave birth to them, and they know I'm transgender and what that means. When I became pregnant with our second, we used Cory Silverberg's fantastic "What Makes a Baby" to explain conception, pregnancy and birth. Silverberg's book uses correct terminology like egg, sperm, uterus and vagina but does not attach those terms to gender identities. Our son learned that to make a baby, you need an egg and sperm, and you need a place called a uterus for the baby to grow. Some people have eggs in their bodies, and some have sperm.

I transitioned before my kids were born. They are growing up knowing me as Trevor, their Dada. Since we live our lives this way every moment of every day, this is our normal.

So how do I explain to my kid that other people see our family as incredibly unusual (if not immoral)? How do I explain that it really isn't a funny game to open the bathroom stall door at a crowded public market before I've got my pants up again after having a pee? How do I explain why people ask us over and over again where his mother is or where we got him from?

In "Like Me and You," the renowned children's entertainer Raffi sings that everyone is "the child of a mother and a father." My partner and I frequently sang loudly over the lyrics, "the child of a Dada and a Papa!" One day, about a year ago, I pressed pause after that line, and said, "He's forgetting some families, isn't he?" My son nodded. We talked about our own family, and some of his friends who are raised by single mothers, or two moms. It was the beginning of an ongoing conversation.

We're not religious, but we live in a conservative, rural area where most people attend church regularly. Last week, a lesbian mom made our local news because she asked her school board to lift its prohibition on classroom discussions of same-sex relationships and diverse family structures. She received some good public support and also a lot of backlash including a threat that she reported to police.

Also last week, my son asked me what God is. Oh, the questions of a five-year-old! I tried to explain how different people have varying beliefs about God and evolution. And then I told him about the Bible. I told him that it says a "man shall not lie with a man." I said that some religious people take that rule very seriously and others don't. I also told him it says things like you shouldn't wear clothing made from mixed materials, and that no one seems to pay attention to that particular rule.

I told my son that the law says it's okay for two men to love each other and live together and have a family, even though some people don't like that. I reminded him that we have family friends who believe in God, and that those friends also believe that the Bible tells them to love others and treat them kindly regardless of their gender identity. I reminded him that we have always been welcomed by that family. I did not tell him that the mom expressed to me how worried she is that attending school here could adversely affect her daughter's current open acceptance of gender-diverse people like us.

My son heard me gasp aloud the other day when I saw a headline about the latest "bathroom bill" in the U.S. "What?" he asked. I said that some politicians passed a law that would require transgender men like me to use the women's bathroom, and transgender women to use the men's. His eyes widened and he said quickly, "But that's in other countries, right?" Yes, I assured him.

It feels like a lot for age five. But don't you dare tell me that I shouldn't have had kids because I am transgender, because "look how hard it will be for them." Instead, you can teach your kids that some families have two moms or two dads, and that some people transition. I don't want to have to teach mine why certain families keep their distance from us, why we are treated by some like a curiosity, or why kids of LGBT parents are getting bullied at school.

If school kids aren't proactively taught to respect diverse family structures equally, then I am left needing to teach my kids about the transphobia and homophobia that is directed at us. Calls to keep education about LGBTQ families limited to discussions within the home are in fact calls for LGBTQ families to teach their kids how to grapple with bullying and discrimination in schools without support from teachers or administrators. On the other hand, including classroom discussions about diverse family structures would remove some of that burden.