Gwen Stefani Supports Her Sons Wearing Nail Polish The pop - TopicsExpress



          

Gwen Stefani Supports Her Sons Wearing Nail Polish The pop rocker says she supports her three kids gender expressions no matter what — a stance many psychologists agree is best for all children. By: Mitch Kellaway January the 13th, 2015 Source: Advocate Gwen Stefani and her sons, Kingston Rossdale (right) and Zuma Rossdale, and niece, Stella on October 6, 2014 In the tradition of celebrity moms like Angelina Jolie and Drea Kelly, pop musician Gwen Stefani recently opened up about actively supporting her kids gender expression. In an interview with PrideSource, the former No Doubt frontwoman explained how important it is that her three sons Kingston, Zuma, and Apollo know that theres no wrong way to express themselves, and shared a sweet story of playing Nail Salon with them. What I like to say is that being unique and original is what makes me happy, and I think that rubs off on them, Stefani said. My sons did nails just the other day … I literally have 400 bottles of nail polish, so they took them all out and put them all over the bathroom. We really played salon and we did tiger stripe nails. Experts in childhood gender identity commonly stress the importance of parents allowing children to discover their own genders. To explore what it means to be both genders is totally normal … You cant become what you are until you know what youre not, clinical psychologist Linda Blair recently explained to U.K. newspaper The Telegraph in response to Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitts 8-year-old child, who was assigned female at birth, wearing suits and asking to be called John. The power of familial acceptance — or lack thereof — was driven home recently with the passing of 17-year-old trans teen Leelah Alcorn, who expressed in a public suicide note that having her gender denied by her parents led, in part, to her feeling unloved and hopeless. In allowing male-assigned children to express femininity by wearing nail polish or otherwise, parents like Stefani are giving their kids space and agency to discover their own identities. Whether such children ultimately identify as trans, gender-nonconforming, or somewhere on the LGBT spectrum is impossible to say — and Stefani, for one, is modeling how to be okay with knowing this. A Nail Salon conversation Stefani recalled with her oldest son Kingston, age 10, says it all: I said to Kingston, Are you sure you wanna do pink, because youre gonna go to school tomorrow? Are you sure youre not gonna be embarrassed? He said, No, I dont care; its a cool color. I just love that. Its really important more than anything else to not be talked into something, to stand your ground and be able to be strong about what you feel.
Posted on: Wed, 14 Jan 2015 11:46:21 +0000

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