Courtesy of Martie Sirois
|
09-15-2016
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Martie Sirois is the mother of a 10-year-old boy who does not conform to gender norms.
He had always been interested in shopping for the feminine clothes at Justice, a store for tween girls that sells clothes in all shades of pink and orange, in every texture from feathers to sequins.
“My son doesn't identify as a girl, at least he hasn't for as long as he has been able to communicate, although he has always acted like a stereotypical girl, played exclusively with stereotypical girls toys, and has almost exclusively female friends,” she said in the open letter she shared on Facebook.
She says that he may one day go on to become LGBTQ+ or not, and that their family is “open to whatever, as long as he's happy, true to himself, and not hurting anyone.”
Sirois and her son live in Raleigh, North Carolina. After years of shopping for her unhappy son in the boys’ section, and then weeks of research after the anti-trans House Bill 2 was passed, Sirois was finally ready to take her son shopping at Justice. Despite the transphobic legislature, they easily found allies in the staff at their local Justice store.
Stephnie, the store manager on duty, was happy to help for long after her shift at Justice ended. She spent the evening helping Sirois’s son pick out sequined skirts, tops, and slim jeggings.
The mother was so grateful for Stephnie’s judgment-free expertise that she took to Facebook to share the story and included some truly adorable pictures of her son in his brand-new clothes.
Read Martie Sirois’s Facebook letter below.
He had always been interested in shopping for the feminine clothes at Justice, a store for tween girls that sells clothes in all shades of pink and orange, in every texture from feathers to sequins.
“My son doesn't identify as a girl, at least he hasn't for as long as he has been able to communicate, although he has always acted like a stereotypical girl, played exclusively with stereotypical girls toys, and has almost exclusively female friends,” she said in the open letter she shared on Facebook.
She says that he may one day go on to become LGBTQ+ or not, and that their family is “open to whatever, as long as he's happy, true to himself, and not hurting anyone.”
Sirois and her son live in Raleigh, North Carolina. After years of shopping for her unhappy son in the boys’ section, and then weeks of research after the anti-trans House Bill 2 was passed, Sirois was finally ready to take her son shopping at Justice. Despite the transphobic legislature, they easily found allies in the staff at their local Justice store.
Stephnie, the store manager on duty, was happy to help for long after her shift at Justice ended. She spent the evening helping Sirois’s son pick out sequined skirts, tops, and slim jeggings.
The mother was so grateful for Stephnie’s judgment-free expertise that she took to Facebook to share the story and included some truly adorable pictures of her son in his brand-new clothes.
Read Martie Sirois’s Facebook letter below.
An Open Letter to the Tween Girl's
Clothing Store, Justice:
(Raleigh, N.C. branch at Poyner Place, behind Triangle Town Center)
(Raleigh, N.C. branch at Poyner Place, behind Triangle Town Center)
Dear Justice,
This weekend you made a little boy's
dreams come true.
My 10-year-old gender non-conforming
son has been wanting to shop at Justice since he was 4, when he would tag along
with his big sister shopping for clothes. After about age 11, she outgrew
Justice and we hadn't gone in the store for years. He ended up always
begrudgingly trying on clothes from the boys departments along with his older
brother. But he hated it. He avoided trying on clothes at all costs.
Back-to-school shopping was a chore he dreaded to the extreme.
Every time we made a trip to your
neighbor store, Target, my son would longingly look in the windows of Justice
and say, "I wish I could shop there." But we never went in. There was
just something off-putting about those words on your window, reading,
"Just for girls," that kept us away time and time again. My son
doesn't identify as a girl, at least he hasn't for as long as he has been able
to communicate, although he has always acted like a stereotypical girl, played
exclusively with stereotypical girls toys, and has almost exclusively female
friends.
We've all been on a journey to
understand his gender non-conformity, but finally my husband, myself, and my 2
older cisgender children are all on the same page, and we're just looking for
ways to support our gender creative, in transition, born-male child. He may one
day be LGBTQ+. He may not. We're open to whatever, as long as he's happy, true
to himself, and not hurting anyone.
Well, this year I was planning a
trip with my son to Justice over Spring Break for some much wanted
"sparkly" clothes. All excuses aside, I was going to take the plunge.
I was literally planning on going the day after HB2 became NC law, March 23rd.
This new law would ban transgender
people from using public restrooms, showers, locker rooms, and changing rooms
that aligned with their gender identity. For example, a trans man who has a
full beard, the build of a man, the voice of a man due to hormone blockers and
testosterone injections, dresses like a stereotypical male, and for all intents
and purposes appears very masculine would now be legally required to use the
women's restroom, if he has not had "bottom surgery," or wasn't
assigned male at birth. And vice versa - trans women who haven't had bottom
surgery are legally required to use men's facilities.
Instead of going to Justice that
day, I ended up glued to my laptop, trying to understand what to make of this
new, horrific anti-trans, excruciatingly discriminatory law based on hyped up
fears over a "potential" crime that has never actually happened. I
wondered what this meant for my son's future, especially if he ends up
transitioning to female.
The summer came and went. My son
settled on "boys" back to school clothes, and 2 pairs of
"girls" Twinkle Toe sneakers, along with a hot pink, peach, and
purple backpack, and pink lunchbox shaped like a purse.
I mentioned my son's Justice wish to
a support group I lead for parents of gender non-conforming and trans children.
I wondered out loud whether a clothing store that touts itself as "just
for girls" would be open to a boy trying on their clothes. I wondered
whether they'd have a legal right to deny my son entry to a female dressing
room.
Thanks to a hero mom, Lisa,
all the vetting out was done. She physically went to your store, spoke to
Stephnie, the store manager on duty, and asked questions from, "Would you
let a boy try on clothes here?" to "What would you do if another
customer made rude comments to a little boy looking at or trying on clothes
here?" And much more.
Lisa reported all good news back to
our group. The store manager assured her that "everyone is welcome at
Justice," and any rudeness or discrimination from fellow customers would
not be tolerated. She spoke of how Justice's parent company, Ascena, helped
donate without question after the Orlando massacre at Pulse Nightclub. We
definitely had an advocate at this store.
Then, another hero friend, Hannah,
sent my son a Justice e-Gift card that I could use right from my phone. It was
then a done deal. We were going shopping.
My son wanted to go immediately, but
we had to get to school and it was 7:15 a.m. on a Tuesday. I told him,
"maybe Friday." So Friday afternoon at 4:45, I was leaving work and I
decided to call the store to make sure our advocate, Stephnie, was working. She
was, however, she stated her shift was over at 5:15, but that the girl taking
over after her was just as welcoming.
We rushed to get there, and just
around 5:10 arrived. There were no other customers in the store. My son's eyes
were huge and overwhelmed with possibilities. Stephnie came right over to greet
us didn't bat an eyelash, and basically took on the role of my son's personal
shopper for the evening.
After getting a feel for what
colors, textures, and patterns he liked, Stephnie showed us several
possibilities, from sequined mini skirts to slim jeggings. My son LOVED them
all. We went to the changing room, and my son couldn't get those clothes on
fast enough. Once that first outfit was on, he posed and admired himself in the
mirror, spun around in circles to see the skirt poof out, and studied himself
from all angles in every possible combination of outfits. It was pure joy. My
son dropped his frequent doom and gloom look and suddenly sprang to life in these
clothes. There was no denying he became a different, more confident, and
happier child when wearing pretty things.
I was blown away by the fact that
Stephnie stayed well-past her shift's end, just to continue working with us.
She made my son feel beautiful and totally free of judgment. I want to thank
her for that precious, precious gift. I rarely get to see my son being his full
potential, his absolute true self in public. She encouraged that and even
helped bring it out. I felt so much hope for the future.
We left the store 2 hours later with
2 full bags, and I snapped a picture of my son standing by the store window
that reads, "just for girls." He was clutching his 2 bags of new
clothes, standing beside those words, and challenging the notion of "just
for girls."
I will leave you with a few pictures
I took of some of his new outfits. Please look at his smile. It is as genuine
as it gets. I think his cheeks hurt from smiling so much when we left.
I want to say an extra special thank
you to Ascena Retail Group, and to the Raleigh branch of Justice, at Poyner
Place behind Triangle Town Center. I want to say a super-duper thanks to store
manager, Stephnie, who went waaaaay above & beyond, and gave my son a safe
place for 2 hours of his life that will no doubt impact his future in a big
way.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Martie Sirois, parent of a gender
non-conforming 10-year-old boy transitioning to become someone even more
beautiful than he already is.
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