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Protecting Children Quotes

Quotes tagged as "protecting-children" Showing 1-12 of 12
Mona Awad
“That I can’t protect you from my terrible places that I still go, can’t help but go because no one protected me, no one saved me, no one ever held out their hand and walked me away. But I’m trying to save you, Sunshine. I’m trying in my broken way.”
Mona Awad, Rouge

Lisa  Shultz
“I am against the rush to medicalize our children and young people to present as the opposite sex when they are confused or when other conditions such as autism are misattributed as trans.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“Only allowing affirmation indicates that a child’s feelings are facts, and we believe that feelings, which are often transient, are not facts. One may hold respect and empathy for those suffering from gender confusion and still say no to a destructive ideology that advocates the medicalization of kids.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“Everyone involved in our children’s transition failed to adequately address or treat the full range of each child’s complex personality and history. The affirmation care model and those involved in it also failed to preserve the precious parent-child bond.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Jessica Marie Baumgartner
“Something as simple as sitting next to a lonely girl on a park bench may be enough to deter predators.”
Jessica Marie Baumgartner

Lisa  Shultz
“On an individual basis, unless one has worked to address their feelings and issues through years of therapy and other gentle, natural options, and unless one has examined the personality, past, and underlying issues, as well as the relationship with social media, then healthy body parts should not be cut off. We are harming our children and pretending we are helping them when we do not allow them time to mature.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“I hope to see those who participate in the gender affirming care model switch to engaging in the examination of deeper issues and the exploration of other treatment options beyond immediate transition when gender confusion presents itself. Young people may need support with counseling to understand and heal from the root cause of their feelings and experiences of dysphoria.”
Lisa Shultz

Lisa  Shultz
“When a drastic and rushed medicalization approach based on trending controversial ideology is presented as the only option to solve the emotional, psychological, or physical discomfort of our kids, then we have failed to help the younger generation set themselves up for future health and well-being.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“There’s no need to rush life-changing, body-altering decisions that are difficult or impossible to reverse.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“Kids today are born into an era where gender identity ideology threatens to take away their right to mature naturally through puberty and into adulthood without damaging and altering their healthy bodies.”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

Lisa  Shultz
“I am not aware of any other mental or medical condition in which a kid or young adult self-diagnoses themselves after social media and internet engagement, undergoes no objective testing, and then receives irreversible medication and surgery upon demand”
Lisa Shultz, The Trans Train: A Parent's Perspective on Transgender Medicalization and Ideology

“Elephants join together and form a circle around their calves to protect them from danger. But gazelles continue to run away even if a predator catches their fawn, unable to protect their young. Did I live among elephants or gazelles?”
Shilletha Curtis, Pack Light: A Journey to Find Myself