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I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans
I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans








I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans

She provides support to friends when they call crying. She will stop at nothing to support your kids, husband and family. She loves to laugh, drink flavoured coffee and eat chocolate.

I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans

Evans is determined, and ambitious, frank, persistent and supportive. Cheryl's close friend writes this about her: "As a person Cheryl B. In her spare time, Cheryl is an avid reader of non-fiction books and when she isn't writing or reading, she enjoys painting on canvas with acrylics. She has been happily married to her husband for more than twenty-three years and together they have raised two wonderful children, one of whom is transgender. Please just click here.Wife, mother, friend and award-winning author. We have comprehensive video courses helping parents love, accept & affirm their LGBTQI children helping LGBTQI heal shame from family, church and community and helping those in the faith community be fully inclusive. There is much life to live, much love to give. Go to the bathroom, wash your hands, and get on with your day. Instead, let me leave you with this advice… Who is the cisgender woman? (The one who is NOT transgender?)īecause when you use a public restroom and see someone who reminds you of one of these lovely women, you won’t really know, will you? Well, it’s not just one of these women who is transgender-it’s eight. I asked at the beginning if you could spot the transgender woman. What is really the most disruptive? Letting them use the restroom that fits their lived identity or the one on their birth certificate? Because that’s the seedy underside of this debacle: to require the latter will bring more upheaval than we now imagine.

I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans

So, take a look again at those photos and tell me… When your son uses the restroom, would he be traumatized, upset, uncomfortable seeing any of these woman in the same restroom? Yeah, I think so. The truth is that when a transgender person goes into a public restroom, THEY are the most vulnerable person in the room, subject to harassment and attack-the stats bear that out.Īnd the ones who may not be able to pass as easily as the women in the photos are in increased danger and in even more need of protection. Who really needs protecting? The one who says “ick”? So an entire group of people is being marginalized and oppressed and discriminated against, simply because we disagree with them, or just plain do not like them. We have been through this before with left-handed people, women, blacks, interracial marriage. Those who stir up fear pretend it’s about the children when it’s really about fear, and power, and personal dislike of trans people. We have been going to bathrooms with transgender people for as long as we have been alive. Most predators are straight men who already have arranged their lives for easy access to children. Honestly, they should be ashamed of themselves.Īnyone who takes an authentic look at this knows there is no connection whatever between transgender people and pedophilia.










I Promised Not to Tell by Cheryl B. Evans