(25-07-2023, 12:49 PM)C_T_Russell Wrote: Logical answer is no, the article is paywalled, but you get the idea what direction this is going.
And yes litter boxes are now a thing in NZ schools.
I have a reliable source who has a child attend a school in the Wellington region and they tell me their childs class has got one.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/the-listener/...7KUU3XP5M/
I'm not sure that article suggests anything like what you allude to CT - if anything I would say the author is somewhat mocking the claim of litter boxes...
here's a snippet from it, doesn't seem to be paywalled for me.
Quote:Playing at being animals, sports stars, TV characters and cartoons, cowboys and the like is developmentally healthy. Photo / Getty Images
OPINION: To take it from some media reports, the new consciousness of gender fluidity has broadened to embrace the animal kingdom. Children are now flocking to identify as animals.
To take it from other reports, this is largely an alt-right hoax intended to panic kindly liberals, and the worldÔÇÖs schools are not, in fact, putting out litter trays and nosebags to cater for their self-proclaimed cat, dog and horse students.
To take it from the children themselves, longing to be a favourite animal is a normal part of being a kid, but if some adults suddenly want to indulge this fun fantasy, then woof, woof: letÔÇÖs see how far we can take this.
The writer knows of one canny three-year-old who identifies as a fox, because foxes are nocturnal and he takes strenuous issue with his ordained bedtime hours.
There is a potentially serious side to this, which is why a British school is in crisis after a staffer was taped defending a little girlÔÇÖs right to ÔÇ£beÔÇØ a cat. The teacher assistant told other children who didnÔÇÖt believe she was a cat that they were being meanly unsympathetic.
Playing at being animals, sports stars, TV characters and cartoons, cowboys and the like is developmentally healthy. But what are adults to do when a child genuinely appears to believe their bipedal body is wrong for them, and persists beyond the normal phase of such a preoccupation? Could it be a sign of abuse?
If not, cognitive behavioural therapy might suggest itself, but some grown-ups apparently think it kinder to accept the childÔÇÖs chosen creature.
Trouble is, itÔÇÖs hard to make other, non-animal-identifying children grasp the appropriate social nuances. As is well known by any parent who has been mortified by their offspring asking at the supermarket, in an outdoors voice, ÔÇ£Why is that man over there so fat?ÔÇØ, children are apt to state their minds. When the English schoolchildren argued with the teacher aide that the girl could not be a cat, her push-back upset them. Grown-ups arenÔÇÖt supposed to pretend silly things ÔÇô thatÔÇÖs the childrenÔÇÖs job.
However, there is a well-established sub-culture of adults who do, to varying degrees, pretend to be animals. Activities such as cosplay and being a ÔÇ£furryÔÇØ entail dressing and acting as real or cartoon animals for extended periods and even getting cosmetic modifications such as whisker implants. This is hardly more eccentric than staging battle re-enactments, dressing up like┬áStar Trek┬ácrew or lavishing hours on creating model-railway scenery, as legions of people do. Fantasy can be engrossing and an antidote to real-life stressors.
Some people might secretly be animal-human hybrids. We all know someone so tail-thumpingly buoyant and happy to be alive that thereÔÇÖs surely a bit of labrador in their lovely soul. There are those so bristling with feline entitlement, you can practically see a stripy tail lashing and twitching behind them when theyÔÇÖre thwarted.
For the elders of children simply pushing the quadruped-identity button for the craic, a few suggestions.
Our fox boyÔÇÖs parents might cash in on the fact that foxes are omnivores as an incentive to get him to eat his fruit and veges.
And the following might reawaken junior Homo sapienic urges:
ÔÇ£Sorry, darling, but weÔÇÖll have to put you in kennels when we go to Fiji these holidays.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£WeÔÇÖre having pizza, but you enjoy your Whiskas, sweetie.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£You can come to the beach, but youÔÇÖll have to stay on a leash.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£ItÔÇÖs hay, but you can have a sugar lump or a carrot later as a special treat.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£Sorry, honey, but horses arenÔÇÖt allowed to play netball. Have you thought about training for the Melbourne Cup?ÔÇØ
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/the-listener/...7KUU3XP5M/
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