By Margaret Burin.
In 2014 Yolanda Bogert placed a birth announcement retraction in a newspaper introducing their 19-year-old transgender son. It was a loving act that she later came to question.
It’s 1995.
A tiny baby, two weeks overdue, is placed onto the stomach of 16-year-old Yolanda.
A teen mum who had grown up in foster care and experienced issues with homelessness, self-harm and substance abuse, the birth of her baby was not widely celebrated.
In fact people were forthright with their disapproval.
“Someone at the hospital dropped me off pamphlets about adoption and told me I was selfish for keeping him,” she said.
A couple of days later Yolanda walks out of the hospital carrying a capsule.
She waits for a tap on the shoulder – someone telling her that there’d been a mistake, that someone like her would not possibly be able to take a baby home.
Like most proud parents at the time, she places a notice in the local paper announcing the arrival of her daughter, Elizabeth Anne, and throws herself into loving her newborn baby.
Seventeen years later she placed another birth notice in a Queensland paper, this time a retraction, introducing her son Kai.
“He informs us that we were mistaken. Oops! Our bad,” it read. “We would now like to present, our wonderful son – Kai Bogert. Loving you is the easiest thing in the world. Tidy your room.”
Within days the ad, a joke between mother and son, became the centre of an international media storm sparking a flow of comments about Yolanda’s great parenting and raising positive awareness of transgender issues.