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The 150-page guide was published by the American Academy of Pediatrics and released April 19. So we wanted to fill this void in puberty education so that kids, regardless of their gender, can see themselves in a book and learn about their bodies. They need to understand about erections and those changes in their bodies. But some girls – for example, transgender girls – might not get their periods.
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With traditional puberty education, whether it's in schools or in books, we talk about how girls get their periods and boys get erections. With this book, we're trying to change that language to be more inclusive. I think the other big need is kids who don't fit into a gender binary. That really sets the stage for healthy communication and intimate relationships, if they so choose, growing up. Kathryn Lowe: There's a real need for all kids to understand about periods and erections, so we all understand each other's bodies. It was the parents that were freaking out about it, and I think it's because they hadn't unpacked their own baggage about their puberty education. You know, kids are so much more comfortable with these conversations. When we put our boys and girls together, they were fine with it. I think within the last three to five years, it's really become we need to be more inclusive of everybody.
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But that was long before there was a better understanding of gender, and the language for it. When we started, we separated by gender. Trish Hutchison: We started Girlology as an extension of our busy clinical practices because we realized that puberty, periods, anxiety, anatomy, reproductive health – all these aren't easy topics for parents and we had such little time in the office to cover these topics. Why did you write this book? What gaps did you see that you were trying to fill? The book discusses how special feelings like crushes can stem from puberty or hormones. Stella also found a diagram about gender identity and expression especially useful, along with a section on "puberty gear" that explains things like bras, binders, athletic cups, period underwear. They identified with some of the book's characters (like Oliver, who had glasses like Stella's and a shared interest in cosplay). Stella thought the book was a good complement to what's taught at school. "I'm excited about growing up and also kind of nervous about the changes," they said, "The book was, like, very reassuring because it told me that everything is normal and your body is doing what it needs to be doing." Stella, 12, a sixth-grader from Chicago, who identifies as nonbinary and uses them/them pronouns, read an early copy (their mom is an acquisitions editor at AAP). The idea for the book grew out of interacting with kids and seeing the need for accurate information that avoids shame. The third, Lowe is a pediatrician who helps steer the AAP on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender health and wellness. Melisa Holmes, an OB/GYN, teach puberty classes and co-founded an online puberty education hub called Girlology.
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The text is strewn with colorful diagrams, fun facts ("Some people call an erection a 'boner,' but there's actually no bone in the penis!") and stories from a diverse cast of fictional characters navigating puberty. We try to normalize the variety of the human body goes through puberty and how there is no one right way." "We talk about how every body is different," Lowe says, "Breasts can come in all different shapes and sizes. Big feelings, big questions and growing faster or slower than other kids are all part of it. It explains body parts and how they change in clear, accessible ways, while assuring kids that there's a wide range to what is normal. The slim, 150-page guide, published Tuesday by the American Academy of Pediatrics, is one a handful of recent puberty books that aim to be more inclusive. They settled on You-ology: A Puberty Guide for Everybody. Kathryn Lowe, one of the book's three co-authors, who are all physicians and parents. Titles like "Hello Hairy," and "The Rollercoaster Called Puberty" weren't cutting it, says Dr. It's inclusive of the gender spectrum and the trans experience. The guide to growing up, for pre-teens 9 to 13, is written for all kids – girls, boys, nonbinary youth. The authors of a new book on puberty had trouble coming up with a name. In an inclusive guide for pre-teens going through puberty, girls, boys and nonbinary youth are shown navigating topics from feelings to body parts to puberty gear.