So what if my son is wearing hair clips and a necklace?

Family life
necklace

People are always telling me what a “real boy” my middle child is. Little Man O is now 3¾ and likes cars and superheroes, toy knights and castles, dinosaurs and spacemen, climbing and kicking balls about. Random strangers are forever saying things like “oooh, he’s such a boy” to me.

And yes, he does enjoy all the activities we traditionally associate with boys.

Recently, however, Little Man has been wearing a silver star-shaped ring and a beaded necklace. A couple of times he’s ventured out with two clips in his hair. People we don’t know, and even people we do, keep commenting on it. “Are you wearing a necklace?” they’ll laugh. “They’re for girls.” Or they’ll ask him, “Why are you wearing your sister’s jewellery?”

He often looks at me unsure of what to say; I can see my usually confident boy is worried and upset. I always respond by saying that they’re not just for girls, they’re for whoever wants to wear them and that as it happens I’m really proud of Little Man as he made the necklace himself by diligently threading beads onto an elasticated string. Personally, I think threading beads onto a string is a brilliant achievement for a child of his age. It’s a great way to encourage a host of skills, including hand-eye coordination, concentration and dexterity.

But more than that: it’s fun and something he enjoyed doing, which is the most important thing as far as I’m concerned. Why shouldn’t he be proud to wear something he made himself? He’s just as proud of a papier mache fish he spent hours making, and which has pride of place hanging from his bedroom ceiling.

A few of Little Man's favourite things

A few of Little Man’s favourite things

I don’t mind the people who ask in a kind, curious and non-judgemental way, but many of the comments are quite rude and unthoughtful. They say “it’s for girls” in the same sneering manner of voice you might use if you stood in dog crap or something.

Some of my other mum friends have experienced similar when their sons have worn “girls’” clothes and accessories.

One tells me, “My son – who is almost two – wears his sister’s bright pink Frozen cap and Hello Kitty handbag. He has insisted on wearing it on the school run several times. I’ve had a few people say ‘don’t worry he will grow out of it’. I’m not even remotely bothered if he doesn’t but I’m certainly not stopping him wearing it.”

Another mum friend says, “My two-year-old son was sporting mini bunches all of last week and regularly dresses up in a princess dress. He has also tried hair clips, etc. The other week someone told him boys don’t wear dresses. He didn’t seem to take it in but his big sister did. I was so proud when she said ‘But he likes wearing it, and so if he likes it and finds it fun then he can’. The same person has seen her dressed as a fire fighter and yet didn’t comment negatively about that.

“I could rant all day about gender stereotypes,” she continues. “Let children be children. Let them copy Mummy, Daddy, older sibling, Granddad, Nanna, a TV character, whoever. Let them enjoy their innocence, curiosity and sense of fun, with no labels and boxes for their roles in life, for as long as we can!”

I completely agree with her. I’ve already written on my blog about how I took Tesco to task for selling Halloween costumes that were labelled by gender. “Why can’t a girl dress as a skeleton?” I asked them via social media. Fancy dress is about imagination, not gender. And I love the Let Toys Be Toys campaign, which has seen a lot of major retailers stop branding toys as for girls or for boys.

Interestingly, the two friends above and I all had a daughter first and a boy second. I have another friend who had a boy first and then a girl. Her daughter often wears superhero costumes in exactly the same way as these three boys wear their sister’s accessories and dressing up clothes. As far as I know, her daughter has never had any negative comments. In fact, most people say how brilliant it is that she is shunning the princess stereotypes for the kick-ass superheroes.

It’s natural for children to learn by copying. Little Man was off and away on his big sister’s scooter as soon as he could walk. He started playing with her Lego Duplo at a much earlier age than she did no doubt because he was watching how much fun she was having with it and wanted to join in. He had a toy buggy (admittedly he chose blue) when he was not quite two because he played with his sister’s so much and it was causing rows between them. Baby Boy I, their 16 month old younger brother, is also now starting to copy them. Sometimes he wants to play with Little Man’s trains, other times his sister’s My Little Ponies. He adores his big brother and sister, and I’m certainly not going to spoil his fun by only letting him play with what some people view as boys’ toys. He doesn’t even know such concepts exist.

A couple of weeks ago Little Man went through a stage of wearing several orange clothes pegs clipped on to the bottom of his t-shirt – “so that everyone will know that orange is my favourite colour”. I tried to tell him that people don’t usually wear pegs attached to their clothes, but he insisted on wearing them, and so I let him, and soon enough the stage passed. Miss E recently made herself a hair band out of some gift ribbon and a giant gift bow. She was so proud of it and again, insisted on wearing it out and about. In both instances, people’s responses were that it was sweet and endearing, despite her looking like a giant birthday present, and him like he’d been plucked straight off a washing line.

So why is it so different when it comes to a “girlie things” on a boy, such as a beaded necklace and a silver ring? Children learn by imitating, by copying, by trial and error. Why is going out with several clothes pegs clipped onto you sweet, but wearing a hand-made necklace a mockable offence?

I want my children to be confident in their decisions. I want them to be able to express their personalities and to experiment with different ideas. I want them to learn from their actions and make their own mistakes.

What I don’t want is for people to ridicule them for their decisions purely because of their gender and to make them doubt themselves. What I don’t want is for them to be pressured into the idea that certain things are not available to them purely because of their gender.

With Miss E about to start in year one, and Little Man in pre-school, they are already coming home with talk of certain games being “just for boys” or “just for girls”. I know I’ll hear more of this as they get older and it makes me really sad that they might shun certain things they enjoy just because they think it’s not for their gender.

Childhood is so short and precious as it is; am I so wrong for wanting it to last a little longer?

What do you think about gender stereotypes when it comes to toys and accessories? What would you have said to negative comments about your child wearing something meant for the opposite gender? I’d love to know your thoughts in the comments below, on the Cardiff Mummy Says Facebook page or you can tweet me on @cardiffmummy

9 Comments to So what if my son is wearing hair clips and a necklace?

  1. I totally agree. Having pushed back at being told I couldn’t do something because I was a girl, I’ve always felt the same way about my two sons. My youngest saw me painting my toe nails and wanted his done too. And why not? My oldest’s favourite dressing up outfit in nursery was the mermaid. It was shiny and interesting, I think he has good taste. Unfortunately as they get older there is more expectation for them to conform to the gender ‘norm’ and fitting in is easier than standing out.

  2. Yup, my daughter dresses up as Bumble Bee (the transformer), and no-one bats an eye. Gender equality surely dictates that the opposite should also apply?

    It saddens me when adults put their judgements into the children’s thoughts when those judgements are without considered thought, understanding, or compassion, and especially when those judgements have the children think they have done something wrong by being who they are. It happens everywhere and not just with clothes. A worker in a supermarket providing taste samples of new smoothies was telling my daughter that she wouldn’t like 2 of the 3 available because they had beetroot and kale (respectively) and “children don’t like those”. Thankfully my daughter knows her own mind well and wouldn’t be disuaded. Kale and apple juice was declared “delicious!” much to the staff member’s obvious astonishment. She still persisted however, suggesting it is better with sparkling water. Her mind couldn’t comprehend a child enjoying something so basic. I replied to say that children often like many different foods if they aren’t first told that they won’t like them. She agreed with me, and then went on to tell the next child that he might not like the pink one because it had beetroot in.

  3. Kelly Allen

    Arggh this is my biggest challenge since being a mother, and I think it has actually got worse since my children started school. My son is older than my daughter, and he likes to wear princess dresses, hair clips etc and he was bullied in school for wearing a cardi 🙁 school kids as early as age 3/4 say things liek “pink cups are for girls, trousers are for boys etc…’ I feel it is a never ending battle to be honest… I hope one day we re the ones that win… be who you are and not what people think you should be. xxx

  4. This is a beautiful post! I love how uninhibited by social stereotypes children are. I blog about gender equality a fair bit. You sound right on my page with if!
    People make the strangest comments, the sneering you describe I have seen exactly…directed at boy when he was wearing a very fetching peach cardi blissfully unaware of how narrow minded some people can be. The two women didn’t realise I saw them sneering and laughing at him at a playgroup. I felt so incredibly sad for my boy on that moment. Great post, thanks Lucy at occupation: (m)other

  5. I couldn’t like this post more! Children should be able to like whatever they want. As a mum to a boy it does seem to me that it’s easier and more accepted for a girl to wear/use “boy” stuff, and be a tomboy, but not the other way round. Why can’t boys like pink and purple and cats and flowers? I got asked recently if I’d picked up the wrong cup for him because it was purple. Silly. Let children be children x

  6. Yes yes and yes. I don’t particularly worry about gender specific toys etc, but if boys or girls want to ‘play’ which is all they are doing when they wear or play with things at this young age, what does it matter? The other point is that people don’t make comments about girls wearing boy’s things but it is such a big deal if boys have girls’s things. I have wonderful photos of my now 9 year old son dressing up in girl’s costumes and he quite happily sat and had his nails painted by his cousin the other day and wasn’t worried and neither was I. Let kids be kids I say

    • Cardiff Mummy Says

      Yes, exactly, people generally think it’s great when girls play with boys’ things, but the comments when it is the other way make me so sad. As you say, it’s just playing, and the more playing kids get to do, the better, as far as I am concerned! x

  7. I agree with you on this! Let kids do what they want. I’ve been trying to find Eva some Disney cars clothes and they are all gender specific for boys so guess what! She is wearing boys pjs x

    • Cardiff Mummy Says

      Aw, that’s such a shame they brand them by gender. It makes me so sad that young kids are being dictated to about what they can and can’t like/wear/play with. x

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