hmmm… being friends on facebook isn’t the same as being friends IRL.
- Playgrounds… often empty. Parents are too scared, and with good reason, to take their children out to the playground least they be turned in to the police for allowing their children to run and scream and have fun outside. Often what children are at the playground, their language, :bigyikes: even on the playground at our parish after school hours we open the area up to the public, as I work for the parish I often am around that area and I’ve had to ask parents to talk with their children about that language… and I’ve even asked several to leave!
- Even in the Catholic preschool that I send my children to, the topic of family structure comes up. Children pretend to have families and cook etc… this is a well know developmental stage and the teachers have to deal with this concept. How will this teacher deal with the concept? What resources will she be using?
If you are Home Schooling (HS) then please look around and find the other families that are also HS and find out what resources are available. What I am hearing is that more and more HS families are doing what I call group schooling (my term

) where multiple families share specializations or topics much the same as one finds in traditional schools. You might have such a group in your area.
If that isn’t available, almost any parochial school (“High-Church” and preferably Catholic) would, IMHO, be a better choice. More likely to deal with homosexual family structures with respect and yet denote that such isn’t considered by our faith to be the normal structure.
I assure you, this topic will come up and is already being established in the public schools as soon as they can do so, the following is an excerpt from a professional that the NYC public school districts have used in the past:
Psychology Today:Teaching Your Young Child about Homosexuality and Transgenderism Teach about sexual orientation and gender diversity very early on
Post published by Fred Kaeser Ed.D. on Dec 14, 2011 in What Your Child Needs To Know About Sex (And When):
One thing that strikes me as all too common when I address older elementary school and middle school children is their discomfort with homosexuality and their overall lack of awareness of people who are transgender.
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And at what age did you start your conversations? Did you begin early? Say at age 5 or 6? Or did you wait until much later? Say 14 or 15 and beyond? Or again, have you not even started as yet?
My belief is it is never too late to begin your conversations with your child. But it can certainly be far better to start early. **I advise parents that the age of 5 is **a wonderful time to lay a foundation for what homosexuality is and to instill in your young child a sense of tolerance and acceptance for being lesbian or gay.
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Don’t get me wrong, tolerance and proper, human, treatment of people is proper in so much as we are all God’s Children. Even the CCC mentions those with same-sex issues and clearly states that these individuals deserve proper and human respect…
I think I’ll let that drop there as I see quicksand ahead :
One final thing…
It is thru the Catholic-pre-school, that my wife met the wonderful people that became my family’s sponsors, my oldest God-Parents (well one of them is anyway we split between two famlies), lead me to RCIA (OK, kicking and screaming the whole way

) by the example of their family and their life, and eventually in to the Catholic Faith.
You never know, you might meet a family, such as mine, that is sending their kids to the pre-school for whatever reason, and they need just that one example of what a good, holy, Catholic-Christian, family is (or can be

) to lead them to (or back to) the faith.
Bless you and yours