Emily started puberty blockers during a raging state and national debate

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Inside a home on a quiet street in southern New Hampshire, a mom scrubs at dirty fingerprints, food stains and some dog hair on a wall she’s preparing to paint.

It’s one of many projects underway, so the family can sell the home next month if New Hampshire lawmakers approve anti-transgender bills advancing through each chamber.

No one in the family wants to move. Rosie and her husband, Ian, grew up in New Hampshire. Their parents and immediate family live here. The house is on a quiet street with other children for their three kids to play with. There’s a good size yard for chickens, trees just right for climbing and a small creek.

“We’d prefer if New Hampshire stayed a safe place for our family,” said Rosie. “I go between being bummed and depressed about it, and being really pissed off that people don’t seem to understand — these things have real life consequences.”

One of the bills could make it a felony to provide Rosie and Ian’s middle child, Emily, the medication they take to delay the start of male puberty. WBUR agreed not to publish the family's last name because of the legal risks they could face if this legislation takes effect.

Another bill would let businesses, schools and government agencies require that 8-year-old Emily, who has long blue, or sometimes green, hair and a love of purple clothing with rainbows, use a men’s bathroom. The bills passed the New Hampshire House and are pending in the Senate.

“I don’t think it’s worth living here under that threat,” said Rosie, “so our hands are tied.”


More than two dozen states have already enacted laws that ban or limit prescriptions for drugs that pause puberty and the hormone therapy given to teenagers who want to transition from male to female or female to male. A Trump administration report released early this month is the latest effort to press for that ban nationwide. It says psychotherapy not medications should be the main treatment for anyone under age 19 who identifies as transgender or nonbinary.

The report followed an executive order that said the U.S. would stop funding “these destructive and life-altering procedures.” A judge has temporarily blocked that order, but in the meantime, some clinics have already stopped offering what’s known as gender-affirming care for youth.

Emily's family, and many like them, are disturbed to find themselves at the center of fierce cultural and political debates.

“It’s just so weird to make really personal decisions in this political climate,” Rosie said. “We’re constantly having to prove to the world that being transgender is real, that it’s not something I’m making up, that my kid has a right to exist.”


About Emily​


Emily loves to read, rollerblade, ride a bike, practice the piano and play video games. Some days the passion might be drawing, tumbling, shooting nerf guns, or cuddling with the family guinea pigs or dogs. Emily says they don’t feel like a boy or a girl. "They" is Emily’s preferred pronoun.

“Because it means I can be myself,” Emily said. “I can do what I need to do to let me be me.”

Sometimes Emily’s friends mess up, but they don’t mind.

“I let my friends call me boy or girl because, like, I know they know who I am,” Emily said.

Emily was born with a rare brain disorder called apraxia of speech that made it hard to express thoughts out loud. A speech therapist helped Emily learn to send the right signals to their muscles, lips and tongue. Most people couldn’t understand what they were saying until Emily was about 4 ½. Among Emily’s first requests: a dress.

Rosie, a mental health counselor, and Ian, who works in construction, added dresses to Emily’s wardrobe and books about kids who weren’t specifically a girl or a boy to the family library.

Emily remembers asking at bedtime one night to hear more about being trans. Emily was 5 at the time.

“A few days later, I said, ‘Mom, can I be trans?’ ” recounted Emily in a recent interview with Rosie and Ian on the family couch. As they remembered those early days, Emily lay draped over first one parent's lap, then the other's.

Rosie has worked with transgender adults. But she had no idea what being transgender would mean for her child.

“They were telling us that there’s more,” Rosie said, pausing to consider what there was more to.

“To me?” Emily offered.

“Yeah, that there’s more to you. I like that,” said Rosie. “We felt a little out of our league though. I didn’t know what we should be doing and what we shouldn’t be doing.”

“But you supported me,” Emily interrupted.

“We always try and support you,” Rosie said, patting Emily’s leg.

Supporting Emily, and making sure they are safe and feel loved, have become touchstones for Rosie and Ian even as doing so has become more confusing, frustrating and scary.

Emily's question — “Can I be trans?” — came as a growing number of Republican-controlled state legislatures were finding ways to answer, "No." It came as gender clinics for children were becoming targets for threats, and as President Trump was pledging to dismantle the “woke agenda,” including transgender rights.

Ian was hesitant himself, at first, about calling his child transgender.

“I felt it was kind of young,” Ian said. “But through research and just being around it, I figured out that you just feel the way you feel, like how I felt straight. You just feel it at an early age.”

Ian is angry at politicians for “energizing people to hate people they’ve never met and don’t understand.” He tries not to ruminate on ways that hate could be turned against his child.

“I feel pretty fearful of the harm and emotional damage to them if they meet the wrong person on a bad day,” Ian said. “But if Emily is happy and safe and feels welcome, then dealing with the politics will all be worth it.”

At age 6, Emily started seeing a therapist in New Hampshire who had some experience with transgender children, and going to a gender clinic for children in Boston. The next year, Emily and Rosie spent a week at a summer camp for trans kids and their families. The family joined a group of families with nonbinary kids to trade information and arrange playdates.

Rosie watched Emily grow into a child more confident, playful and at peace with themselves. But she knew puberty wasn’t far off. Emily's older brother began showing signs at 9. Emily was clear, they did not want to be hairy like Ian or have a deep voice.

If Emily started developing as male, Rosie worried that “they would be constantly at war with their body.”

A doctor at the gender clinic said the first step to avoid that war for Emily would be to put puberty on hold. Rosie expected to map out a plan for doing that before Emily turned 9 this June. Then Trump won the election and their plans changed.


Starting puberty blockers​


Emily, Rosie and Pearl, one of the family guinea pigs, headed to the clinic in Boston the Friday before Trump began his second term.

“I think we got the last appointment before the inauguration,” Rosie said.

Trump signed his order to enact a ban on gender-affirming care for children eight days after he was sworn in. The ban hasn't taken effect amid a court challenge.

Given the political climate, the family said they made the right decision starting Emily on puberty blockers some months earlier than expected. But it's not what they wished. Rosie and Ian wanted to choose the best time with their doctor.

“The biggest bummer was being forced to do it then, instead of waiting,” Ian said.

The World Professional Association for Transgender Health recommends pausing puberty after it has started for children who feel intense discomfort with their changing body. Rosie said the benefit of starting Emily while they were still sure they could outweighed any risk because Emily has consistently said they want to look like Rosie, not Ian, when they grow up.

“My kid is very indecisive around everything else in their life,” said Rosie. “So for them to have this be so consistent is — that's all I need to know.”

On the inside of Emily’s upper left arm, a 1-inch implant slowly releases the puberty suppression medication. The effects are reversible in that puberty will resume when the implant is removed or the medicine runs out. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) says delaying puberty gives children time to explore their identity, get counseling, develop coping skills and learn about future treatment options.

Some research shows that transgender children who received puberty blockers are less anxious and depressed than trans kids who don’t. Other reviews find little impact. The blocker may pose risks for developing bones and fertility.

Many doctors who treat transgender children say bone density catches up when patients resume puberty, as does sperm or egg development if the child continues puberty in their sex determined at birth. If they transition to the opposite sex, they may have fertility problems later in life. That decision is four or five years away for Emily.

“I think about those risks a little bit, but it feels pretty far off,” said Ian. He shrugs and adds the family is, “just trying to get through” the challenges right in front of them.

For the first step of suppressing puberty, published research on the long term effects for bone health and fertility is “limited” and “varied,” according to the AAP. The group still supports the use of puberty blockers to treat children with gender dysphoria as does the nation’s largest group of physicians, the American Medical Association. But the United Kingdom and some other countries have concluded the risks outweigh the benefits and have largely banned their use. The Trump administration points to those decisions as evidence the U.S. should do the same.

Some parents of transgender kids struggle to make sense of competing research and reports in this fraught environment.

“It’s a new science, which scares me a bit,” Ian said. “But the puberty blockers are reversible if Emily changes their mind. So I have comfort in that.”

If Emily does not change their mind, the implant will need to be replaced every year or two until Emily is ready to begin puberty as a girl or as a boy.

Rosie and Ian hear all kinds of pronouncements about how to raise a transgender child, ranging from “just follow their lead,” to “children aren’t mature enough to make such life-altering decisions.”

“There's a lot of things I don’t follow my kid's lead on, like if I let them follow their lead on cleaning their rooms, we wouldn’t get very far,” Rosie said with a laugh. “But I’ve learned that there’s a lot of things that our kids actually do really know that I can’t know. And so, I have to trust them.”


In a holding pattern​


Rosie needs to finish painting the stairwell a misty, hide-the-dirt, gray. Ian is replastering walls in the basement. Rosie has a spreadsheet of seven cities and towns in northern Massachusetts where the schools seem good, the communities seem welcoming for a trans kid and where they think they could afford a home. Rosie is collecting guidance through webinars and from other parents of transgender children about how to have the “we’re moving” conversations with her three kids.

The kids have lots of questions. Will the new yard have a treehouse? Will we have to share a room? What school will we go to?

Emily has come crying about a move, worried their brother and sister will be mad and blame Emily. Rosie told Emily the blame will be on state lawmakers in Concord who are afraid of things they don’t understand.

Ian and Rosie have assured the kids they’ll have a family meeting before making any final decisions. The New Hampshire Legislature wraps up business for the year by the end of June.

Even if they move states, there’s no guarantee transgender care will continue to be available for Emily. State health leaders in Massachusetts have pledged to maintain access for kids. But the president’s deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, described gender medications and surgery for minors as “barbaric” and “child abuse” earlier this month, confirming the White House's commitment to curtail if not end it.

Plan B is Thailand. Rosie can work remotely. Ian has trade skills that might be useful there. And it’s a longtime haven for transgender people seeking care.

“I have to plan for the worst so that I can stay and continue to fight,” Rosie said, with a nervous laugh. And Rosie feels sure of what she’s fighting for.

“I want to make sure that Emily knows they are loved, no matter what,” Rosie said, standing in her driveway one afternoon, watching the kids ride bikes. “It’s not their name, it’s not the clothes they wear, it’s not the way they cut their hair, it’s who they are, in their heart.”

This segment aired on May 20, 2025.

Photos:
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I'm more worried about the girls he'll almost certainly rape.
Nah, puberty blocked children never really develop a sexuality, and will permanently lose IQ and stunt their mental development. He's probably going to end up like Jazz, clueless about sexuality, depressed, and only really able to enjoy food.
 
Emily was born with a rare brain disorder called apraxia of speech that made it hard to express thoughts out loud.
You fools! By the Special Covenant, the bloodlines cannot be mixed! The strength of a tard and the rage of a troon will create an abomination! You know it, because you have seen it done before... in the land of Virginia, in the great fortress of Charlottesville, the one whose name you dare not utter...
 
Inside a home on a quiet street in southern New Hampshire, a mom scrubs at dirty fingerprints, food stains and some dog hair on a wall she’s preparing to paint.
Ive pointed it out before but all these articles seem like they’re written by the same person to the same rules. They all start like this, setting a domestic scene that suggests a poor lovely child who is completely sweet and vulnerable and harmless and their loving parents. Then they segue into descriptions of how the child is being abused and then they scold you for not applauding it
 
A lot of parents have been essentially brainwashed into destroying their children, and they will be fighting to their last breath to make sure their lives are completely screwed forever. Their natural protective instincts have been corrupted. It is horrifying to see every time this scenario comes up, but short of a cultural change that will outlaw transing children and turn the people doing it into social pariahs, it will keep happening. It's doubtful the specific parents can be saved; most of them are far too gone because contemplating the idea that they themselves had a hand in allowing heinous evil to happen to their children is too much to think of. They will always rationalize it. These children are just lost. Others will only be saved when this will have the stigma of trying to have your kids lobotomized, after which the craze will go back to the fringes of society.
 
Rosie, a mental health counselor,
Always always always

PSA: DO NOT THE RAPE YOUR CHILDREN

^ Troon raped two boys, his attorneys call the older victim a rapist and demand muhmentalhealth records (if any) of the younger victim to then label him incompetent to testify.

By submitting your children to the the rapy cult, you permanently damage their rights. Then the only way they can get ahead in life is committing to the bit and forever playing the victim, which is a very specific type of ahead.

"But my insurance covers it" -- your insurance should cover euthanasia

and Ian, who works in construction, added dresses to Emily’s wardrobe and books about kids who weren’t specifically a girl or a boy to the family library.

Emily remembers asking at bedtime one night to hear more about being trans. Emily was 5 at the time.

“A few days later, I said, ‘Mom, can I be trans?’ ”
qed

Another bill would let businesses, schools and government agencies require that 8-year-old Emily, who has long blue, or sometimes green, hair and a love of purple clothing with rainbows, use a men’s bathroom.
Per the pedo parents, he's a they/them, why can't he use the men's?
Should a girl in pants be forced to use the men's? (pointless question, you aren't supposed to engage with troon "logic", only clap along)

“Because it means I can be myself,” Emily said. “I can do what I need to do to let me be me.”
Someone told him he needs to be castrated to "be themself" and that other, normal children are brainwashed npcs.

Emily, Rosie and Pearl, one of the family guinea pigs, headed to the clinic in Boston the Friday before Trump began his second term.
So, two of the family's guinea pigs headed to the castration clinic.

“There's a lot of things I don’t follow my kid's lead on, like if I let them follow their lead on cleaning their rooms, we wouldn’t get very far,” Rosie said with a laugh. “But I’ve learned that there’s a lot of things that our kids actually do really know that I can’t know. And so, I have to trust them.”
This hypocrtical pimp of a "mother" is the one who trooned him out.

It's a minor thing but the """poem""" (see photo in OP) creeps me out, groomer shit. Children's poems always rhyme. He's not being raised as a "girl" (which would be bad enough), he's being raised as a troon activist.
 
“I think about those risks a little bit, but it feels pretty far off,” said Ian

Ian sounds like a massive retard throughout this entire article and I'm not surprised a feminist put a chain on him this easily.


Even the 8 year old is like "I want to be manly and tough like mommy, not a lil bitch like daddy"
Emily has consistently said they want to look like Rosie, not Ian, when they grow up.
 
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Man that whole "safe and reversible" line has really done a number on people's willingness to sign their kids up for a fast track to sterilization, bone loss, and permanent IQ deficits.
They act like these drugs are comparable to popping a Benadryl.
A lot of parents have been essentially brainwashed into destroying their children, and they will be fighting to their last breath to make sure their lives are completely screwed forever. Their natural protective instincts have been corrupted. It is horrifying to see every time this scenario comes up, but short of a cultural change that will outlaw transing children and turn the people doing it into social pariahs, it will keep happening. It's doubtful the specific parents can be saved; most of them are far too gone because contemplating the idea that they themselves had a hand in allowing heinous evil to happen to their children is too much to think of. They will always rationalize it. These children are just lost. Others will only be saved when this will have the stigma of trying to have your kids lobotomized, after which the craze will go back to the fringes of society.
Helen Joyce has it— these people will be the last to concede the grievous harms they committed against their own children, if they can ever even bring themselves to admit as much.
At 1:07:20.
 
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The fact that these future suicide statistics are getting glowing puff pieces is hellishly dystopian.

Media niggas need Jesus and butchers and perverts masquerading as doctors need jail.
Media niggers, butchers, and perverts masquerading as doctors should face death penalties, the cruel and unusual kind. There aren't fires in hell hot enough for these scum.
 
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Emily's parents started sodium pentothal during a raging state and national debate, then potassium chloride was next...
 
Emily loves to read, rollerblade, ride a bike, practice the piano and play video games. Some days the passion might be drawing, tumbling, shooting nerf guns, or cuddling with the family guinea pigs or dogs. Emily says they don’t feel like a boy or a girl. "They" is Emily’s preferred pronoun.

“Because it means I can be myself,” Emily said. “I can do what I need to do to let me be me.”
Whoever told this boy he can't do that as a boy can go fuck themselves.
 
Whoever told this boy he can't do that as a boy can go fuck themselves.
That list of things is a list of things all children like to typically do. Just playing. But a lot of them are active things you'd expect would be good for boys: rollerblading, biking, tumbling around, nerf guns.

He's a typical nice little kid. People are evil.
 
Whoever told this boy he can't do that as a boy can go fuck themselves.
Rosie, a mental health counselor, and Ian, who works in construction, added dresses to Emily’s wardrobe and books about kids who weren’t specifically a girl or a boy to the family library.

Emily remembers asking at bedtime one night to hear more about being trans. Emily was 5 at the time.

“A few days later, I said, ‘Mom, can I be trans?’ ” recounted Emily in a recent interview with Rosie and Ian on the family couch.
Rosie watched Emily grow into a child more confident, playful and at peace with themselves. But she knew puberty wasn’t far off. Emily's older brother began showing signs at 9. Emily was clear, they did not want to be hairy like Ian or have a deep voice.
Maybe I'm assuming a lot here, but this entire thing points to a pretty specific interpretation of events. Kid's got some developmental disability, can't talk or express themselves until like age 4, needs a ton of time with specialists and therapists, mom is also in therapy professionally. Kid asks for a dress - like basically all young boys do at some point - and the parents jump to grooming the kid, giving them books on """being trans""", prompting the kid to ask about it. As a mother, this chick should know that once kids learn to talk they enjoy the power words have, like little kids will just yell "NO!" because they learn it lets them assert authority. No wonder that after spending years unable to speak, really, this kid is now enamored with being able to shape the world around them with mere speech. Some kids say they're dinosaurs, or princesses, but you tell a young kid in the middle of this that if they say they're a girl, they can become a girl? Yeah no shit they're gonna start hammering that, it gives them control and no doubt made their parents dote on them EVEN MORE; and sure the poor kid had some hardships growing up, but especially as the youngest he's probably used to getting tons of attention.

That line about "if I troon out then I'm free to just be me" is the most telling to me, though. That SCREAMS that the parents hammered the poor kid with "well you know girls like pink and are helpless skanks, except when they're bigdick girlbosses", and "boys don't wear dresses they're bad and toxic and play football" and this little nigga just wants to shoot nerf guns and read books. And YEAH NO SHIT puberty is scary, nobody likes the idea of puberty, it's weird and awkward and young kids are generally adverse to change. You get told you're going to have to deal with all kinds of bizarre changes to your body, and all you've known is just running around and shooting nerf guns and now people are telling you about kissing girls? EWW gross, I don't want to grow a beard, beards are what daddy has and this entire idea is outside my comprehension... wait you're saying if I say I'm trans then I don't have to do any of it? And you can just make me a girl, who DOESN'T have to deal with any of those problems? Okay mommy, I love you, and I see how excited this makes you, in that case I'm trans!

They should move to Canada if they're scared about Trump, I have a feeling that poor kid is gonna need some Canadian Healthcare (tm) in the future.
 
Mom is a monster and dad is a moron.

Someone needs to clue the dad in to what the mom is really doing. Then convince him to dump the mom and get himself and the kids a restraining order against her.
 
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