March 26, 2024

Cultivating Diversity and Empowerment in Children's Books with Michael Tyler

Cultivating Diversity and Empowerment in Children's Books with Michael Tyler

Prepare to be inspired as we sit down with the extraordinary Michael Tyler, the man behind the message of acceptance and self-love in the acclaimed "Girls of the World Doing More Than Ever Before." Michael, alongside his co-author Lindsay Davis, has crafted a book that not only soared to the New York Times bestseller list but also ignites a spark of empowerment within young readers, particularly girls. We unpack the essence of their collaboration, the creative process that led to their book's success, and how their work is sculpting the character of our future generation. Join us for a conversation brimming with heartfelt dedication to the power of purposeful children's literature and the promise it holds for a more inclusive world.

Amidst a culture rife with labels and expectations, we open up about the journey to understanding and embracing LGBT identities. The discussion transcended into a broader reflection on the role of parents in breaking societal molds, nurturing their children's individuality, and fostering an environment where love is the bedrock of acceptance. This episode is a heartfelt testament to the unwavering bond between parent and child, and a reminder that our most profound duty is to nurture a world where every child can flourish, free from the constraints of labels and stereotypes.

About our Guest:

Michael Tyler is a writer, speaker, and author of The Skin You Live In and Mirror Face, children's books about acceptance and self-love. He advises educators on DEI and SEL curriculum, and has addressed forums for The Kin Centre, the Clinton Foundation, and Beyond Differences. He resides in Chicago.

Learn more about Michael and his books at https://michaeltylerwrites.com/


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Transcript
Heather Hester:

Welcome to Just Breathe. I am so very happy that you are here today. Today we have just a really, really extraordinary guest. He is the co author of the brand new book that is called Girls of the World Doing More Than Ever Before. His name is Michael Tyler. He wrote this book with Lindsey Davis. And oh my goodness, are you in for a treat with this interview with this discussion that we get to have. Michael is a writer, a speaker and the author of the skin you live in and mirror face as well. And he is also the co author of another book with Lindsey. And he talks, as you will see, but his whole purpose in life and what he talks about is acceptance and self love. He advises educators on DEI and SEL curriculum and has addressed forums for the King Center, the Clinton Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and Beyond Differences. So without further ado, I am so delighted to bring you this discussion with Michael Tyler.



Heather Hester:

Welcome to Just breathe parenting your LGBTQ team, the podcast, transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child. My name is Heather Hester and I am so grateful you are here. I want you to take a deep breath. And know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the just breathe Ness. Whether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies or lessons I've learned along our journey. I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having a cozy chat. Most of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey, right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.



Heather Hester:

Michael, welcome, welcome to the show. I am so delighted that you are here to talk to my really beautiful audience today. And to share about your new book, which I just heard, just hit the New York Times bestseller list. Congratulations. That is huge.



Michael Tyler:

Big thanks. So net, it is huge for any writer of any genre of any age group, to be able to reach that kind of an accolade that acknowledgement is it validates all of the lonely hours you spend. But for me, it's also an affirmation of what my intent is for writing. Because I'm one of those writers who, unless about writing stories and more about writing messages. Because I'm an interest in whatever it is that I put out into the world, particularly as it pertains to children is going to have some effect on what character they develop. I grew up coming into the civil rights era, where Content of Character was always foremost a focus. And my development. And I and I spoke my approach has always been to writing for children is how am I contributing to the content that they character? So when something like the New York Times bestsellers list says you did a good job at contributing to the content of the character. I feel good about that.



Heather Hester:

Yes, I would say so I would say so. So just so everyone knows the full title of this beautiful book, which Oh, my goodness is just gorgeous, as well as the content is beautiful. It is called girls of the world doing more than ever before. So this is the second book that you and Lindsey Davies have written together. Can you talk a little bit about I'd love to hear more about this book. And then kind of bigger picture about the two of you writing together why you've chosen to do this and kind of what you're trying to what message you're really wanting to put out into the world?



Michael Tyler:

Well, I think Lindsay is a chord with me in terms of actually doing message content material. Lizzy approached me to do this book, girls of the world after we had done the book we did last year the smallest part of the diet. So I went back up to that book. Because we had known each other for two or three years before we decided to actually get involved in a writing project. Lindsay had a couple of books remaining on a book, contract deal that she had done already. But she wanted to do something that was different than what she had previously read and ship workbooks that have done very well. And she had a experience where she was talking to some individuals and some students in a classroom. And part of the discussion turned to visions, as society and race, and she was introducing to them the concept, the Human Genome Project, and which a truth that came from the Human Genome Project is that 99.9% of all human beings are genetically identical, which is a fascinating thing. So what if we had a world based upon understanding that hate? Right? Well, 1/10 of 1% makes a difference. And so Lindsey contacted me after she had that outing with the, with the school, and said that she was so excited by how excited they were to learn that, that she knew that this had to be some kind of book. And that's how small spotted dot came to be. And it was after that one was done, that the simplicity of how we work together was such that she said, Well, you know, I've got one more book, I want to want to consider you to join me on doing Oh, which wasn't immediate, yes. And of course, why not? For me, as she said that she really wanted to do a book that spoke to girls, a book that spoke to the development of their own identity and their own sense of self. And that's something that I always wanted to do. I was always reluctant to write that book on my own, because I never wanted to be accused of mansplaining that issue. So I always felt that if I ever did that project, it would require me to have a co author who was female. And Lindsay had already proved that we knew how to run a fast dunk. So well, that's, that's why it was it was passed, and there was, and it was a joy to write. It was fun. We were on the same page right off the bat as we were the first time around. And it was easy, putting everything together putting the concert together. The one thing that I give Lindsay credit for is that she has a very pure sense of what it is that she wants to convey. And she definitely has trust that I can find the concepts and the words the work with her to get that to become verbalized. And it's not an it's not a difficult thing for us to do to come together, working with her as the easiest thing that I've had in terms of collaboration with anybody was piece of cake.



Heather Hester:

That's so nice. You're very lucky. Very lucky. I mean, really, really lucky. So are you the one who has the the talent with being able to rhyme and to really bring things together in such a poetic just the way it's, you know, it's written is so beautiful, and so pleasant to read.



Michael Tyler:

Thank you for saying that. Yeah, that is something that I do have a knack for Lindsay and I happen to like the same child poets we were. We're both big Shel Silverstein fans. We're both big Dr. Seuss fans. So we have that kind of lyrical DNA in our brains. And so when we sit down to write, I think we both rain that it informs how we write. But I am very adept at doing things quickly. I have a huge amount of words floating around in my head, and I can just reach out and grab them. But that lyricism, the poetic lyricism, that's always, in my mind, no matter what it is, I'm thinking about I tend to phrase things even if I'm writing prose. People have often said that when I'm writing prose, it's very lyrical. I just had that sort of rhythm in my head. And the subject matter that Lindsay and I were tackling was was so dear to us. We were so passionate about that. It just became easy to bring it out.



Heather Hester:

That is a gift. I mean, really, really a gift. Oh my goodness. I hope you both realize that. I mean, just individually, but then as a team that is really, really extraordinary. You're very lucky that you found each



Michael Tyler:

other You're lucky. We're lucky we realize that yes. Oh



Heather Hester:

my goodness. So, you know my audience is, is pretty nice. as well, a lot of people who listen to my show are parents and allies of LGBT kids, Q kids, youth, adolescents, young adults. So this is definitely you know, and I, this came into my inbox, and I was like, oh, you know, not a direct translation, but definitely a parallel, right? Like, there's a lot of stuff here that I love, and it's so beautiful. And so I'm wondering if you, you know, just some words of wisdom that can translate from, from what you wrote in this book, from what you shared in this book to a parent who might be, you know, just beginning this journey with their child.



Michael Tyler:

I think that there are a lot of overlays. Because whenever you're looking at any individuals part of a group that is marginalized or disparage on a broad scale, in society, many of the issues that they confront, are the same issues that others and other demographics confront as well. Because the overall issue is the dehumanization of that person. So you can be African American air on a racial caste system in America and your dehumanize, you can be poor, and a society that favors well, and you can be dehumanized. You look at the caste system. In India, for example, one of the most dehumanizing systems of apartheid anywhere. And so when you look at children who grow up LGBTQ A, they are constantly dealing with not only the peril of their own psychology, of constantly questioning themselves, harassing undermining their own value, because they're not find any value anywhere, even oftentimes, not in our own home. That's right. But the greater pressure comes from the peers that they're with because they can't buy community, which is essential, if you're going to have any sense of belonging, you need to find that community with your peers. And so their sense of dehumanization can be far more, have a far more gravity to it. Because as young people, they are yet not equipped to handle that, to emotionally deflect that or psychologically deflect that. F for parents who really are allies, I always say that they need to become more than allies. Because you can be an ally be passive. to MIT to me, they need to be active engineers, and the identity construction of their own children. I have a son who's gay. And I knew that he was when he was before he was two years old. I knew that he was. And at the time that I realized that I actually took some delight and knowing it. I did, because I, I didn't grow up with homosexual anxieties. I didn't grow up as strange to say that because I'm a kid of the 60s. But my mother was very open to lots of people. And she worked with a lot of individuals and fashion design. And so I got to meet a lot of people who were on the LGBT community committee, and had a comfort level with right off the bat. Also, by the time I was 15 years old, I developed a fascination for Life Sciences, part of which was genetics and evolutionary biology. And I started doing a lot of reading a research that was coming out of the Salk Institute out in California, and much of what they were concentrating on, was trying to understand if there was a biological genetic substrate for homosexuality as xx attraction. And finding out that there actually was it would legitimize the biology of it all. And one thing that I came to understand and what I'm saying I'm saying, because I hope parents who are listening, are picking up on the point I'm making with all this information is that this is what you need to know if you want to help your child. Okay? Because if you if you don't take it from the approach that I'm suggesting that you might take it from, what ends up happening as you become susceptible to the social pressures out there, because you're trying to fit in where everybody else is trying to tell you, you should be. And that's the last thing you can do when it comes to your own child. So when I was 15, I was learning for example, that Oh 8% of all animals will exhibit some sort of same sex attraction, and then even a similar amount will exhibit hermaphroditic presentation. And as humans we be considered out turned out to be intersex. Because hermaphrodites actually have functioning organs words is intersex don't they may have don't do a presentation but not functioning right And so what that told me at a young age was that there was no set determination of binary determination of what sexual presentation was, or what sexuality was that it existed on a gradation. And that, I saw it at that young age, as frontier of understanding what human the human animal was about, because we didn't understand this at all, because we already had a fixed notion of what it was. And we were just gonna roll with that and make everybody fall into that category. So from early on teenage years on, I never fell into that, I never felt that I had to subsidize an understanding of that. I was always fighting people, with that ended up having a very lonely teenage life. But what made me when I realized that my son at a very early age, was gay, as it made me immediately. And this was not something I had to make a conscious decision to do. It made me immediately embrace him as I would any other child, and maybe immediately embrace all of his humanity. Because I didn't see it as being an apparition. I didn't see it as being a perversion, I didn't see it as being a choice. I saw it as being an element of who he is, when I look at people and listen to people describe their sexuality, I don't hear it any differently than if you were to describe yourself as a person who wore glasses. Or if you are a person who had blonde hair, or if you were a person who was five foot eight. To me, it's a very benign adjective that describes who you are. And I think parents out there will have to start off with that as a foundational and a fundamental understanding of how to think about the relationship with their child, they wouldn't find it to be complex at all. Right? Right. So that's what I would recommend that they start off with doing that. Isn't that a more,



Heather Hester:

it's not that hard. It's like saying, You love your child unconditionally.



Michael Tyler:

Yeah, you just have to, part of what your love unconditionally is, is that you have to love the way I term it is you have to love with power. And what I mean by that is, is that you have to love knowing that you have to give them the strength to prevail, and exist in a society, that more likely is going to aggress against them, who is more likely going to and tagging it as against them. Now, my mother had to do that raising African American children. So what I say is, there's an overlay between the demonization of people, regardless of what demographic they happen to fall into, then it's the same. So my mother had to love us with power, she had to give us that internal strength, that internal power, and that truly fully embracing and accepting that your child is because if you don't, they're always going to think that there's something wrong with them coming from their own parents. Right? And you're the you're the people, mom and dad, people have to give them their greatest sense of self, their greatest sense of certainty. And so if you're operating with the thought, any thought at all any doubt, any hesitancy that some element of your child is something that is abnormal, or something that D legitimizes their humanity, being Europe, you're crippling them, you're going to harm them in some kind of way. So I look at it again, I look at sexuality as a benign characteristic. You know, I wear a size 13 shoe that person over there happens to like men and these men I don't see it any differently. I'd never have seen it this is the problem when you take the religious a tent, give it a political cause. And then you use it to persecute people. So I don't I don't have that problem. That complication. No,



Heather Hester:

you do not love so beautifully said. I feel like we should think that was kind of a drop the mic moment. There, we're done. All right. You really don't know how to improve or add to that. Best selling author who is just extraordinary. Oh my gosh, you just made my really made my entire day. Thank you so much.



Michael Tyler:

I appreciate you saying that. But as I caution everybody I can't talk for years off and LJ so we can go on and on. For example, I remember growing up and my mother having worked with individuals and put on fashion shows, and garments and so forth, and having met a few men who were in that business. And at the time, that was one of the sectors that they could go into where they actually earned income was was fashion. And it was beauty. And it was cosmetics. And it was hair styling, and so forth. So they were the ones who really were the experts at putting together fashion shows that was oftentimes were fundraisers for organizations in my neighborhood and by community. So I got to meet a lot of these men, and I got to befriend a lot of them. And I always found them to be fascinating, because there was a vitality to them that I just didn't see in other people. But I came to understand them also to be individuals who found their own community. And I got to be invited into that committee to really understand who they were as people. And so growing up, I was around them a lot. And I saw the person, I didn't see the thing, because that's what society wants to do with people that doesn't like it wants to call them a thing, instead of realizing that they are a person. Right. So that's where the name calling comes in. Name Calling is that thing. And I never saw them as things. I never saw them as alien people. I always saw them as people who had hopes and fears. People who had heartache and laughter. People had deeper understandings about elements of life, that many of us who aren't challenged as they are, when every single day your life as an issue of survive, come to live life with a greater understanding of how this is by right. And you come to live like what a great value of what living day to day actually is. And so many people that I've found who've been most disparaged in life are the people that I've gotten to my greatest lessons about what it means to be human. And I think that that is the question that we should all be asking. Any parent out there who was raising a child, with my sister, my sister's lesbian, my sister likes to call the alphabet community, and any parent is out there raising a child alphabet community should not be trying to understand that child, in terms of their sexuality, this is what I would recommend. I'm not saying this as an orthodoxy is what I would admit basically, seven and trying to understand, understand your child as being fully human, because that's what they are, yes, the full human. And if you help them understand that, then they can exist and be fully human anywhere they are in the world, anywhere they are in society, anywhere they are in any city that they had. And I also advocate that by doing that, because there's nothing bigger than being human. There really isn't. You can be a woman, but that's not fully human. You can be a man, but it's not fully human, I can be six with three, but that's not fully human, you can be five for three bussaco to be fully human, as this composite is so big, that it casts a shadow over everything else. So if you're developing that, there's no power anybody can handle you. And oftentimes it shuts down. What might be adversarial because people cower in power. So give them that power.



Heather Hester:

So good. It's beautiful. I mean, it really beautiful. So there's so much wisdom in that. Because I think as you know, what I hear from people so often is I'm so scared for my child. I don't know what to do. I and it's so easy to kind of get wrapped up in that space, right? Where you're, then you can't see. So you offering this wisdom is so empowering. And it's so freeing, and just incredibly good advice for everyone listening. So I hope you all are taking notes. I



Michael Tyler:

hope you regarded them. I really do. You said, for example, parents who fear for their child's existence, there is not a parent anywhere in the world anywhere in America, who has a daughter who doesn't fear for her existence. There's not a single one. So how are you processing that? How are you sending your daughter in the world when you know the hazards that face young girls and face grown women in his world that has a far greater for girls and women than there are for boys and men? And so are you handicapping your daughter in some kind of way because she's a girl entering a world where she might find aggressing but she might lie abrasions, where she might find misogyny and sexism. Because if you're not considering her full humanity to deflect that she will always be vulnerable to that. So I don't see that any differently than having a child who is a race minority who has to face that or having a child who has a disability and has to face that why is that any different? If we think it's different, then we will make a difference for our children. So we as parents can make that a problem. We don't need them without a problem for them. They should fully embrace who they are as may natural, you should fully embrace who they are as being natural. Yeah, there's, there's so oftentimes something wrong with how society sees them. But there's nothing wrong with how they see themselves. Correct. Okay, I go out in the world every day. And there's something wrong with how society sees me. When I see people grabbing their purses, and clutching in and follow me around in stores is there's something wrong with how society sees me. But there's nothing wrong with how I see myself. So I have a Teflon garment on my mind whenever I walk outside, so it just bounces off of me. Because I don't answer the world as a black man, or as an African American, or as an African American. Those are elements of who I am, I entered a world as a human as being fully human, there's nothing bigger than that. nothing bigger than that. So I would ask those parents out there to with care and love. And with the intent to power give power to the children, because they love a power law strongly love fiercely. That they will, they will be able to give them that same Teflon shield.



Heather Hester:

I love that. Thank you. That is just perfect. Just like that. I would love to talk to you all day long. But I am watching our time very closely. So I just want to give you one more I know we talked about the book just a little bit at the beginning. But I'd love to kind of circle back and with that as well. So I will let you end with whatever you would like to say about the book where people can find it and all of those good things. First



Michael Tyler:

of all, you can find it anywhere, anywhere you can get a book, whether it's your local store, whether it's a big chain, whether it's online, and your library, the book is available is keenly available, and I really hope people seek it out. The one thing I was most want to say about the book is it's easy to say that it's about girl empowerment. But to me it's more than that. Because I believe that no society whatever reaches Maxwell while deny haven't been citizens, and America has yet to reach his maximum. There's no society on the planet has done so because Patreon Grace most societies, it's the most societies that deny half their citizens, I want to live in a world where humanity is maximized. So to me as a matter of logic, than in order to have that that more perfect union or that ultimate civilization, you have to bring women and girls full on board, you have to get the most out of them that you can give them the belief that they can get the most out of themselves. So they can make the most contribution to any society that they're in. And they will have the most of wherever humanity can be. So to me, it's more than just an identity empowerment is how do we put a message inside of a child that's going to enable them to create the maximum society that any of us can live in? Disaster society I want to live in? Well, that's the last thing I will say about it.



Heather Hester:

Love it. Thank you, thank you so much for taking time out of your schedule to be with me, and to be with all of my people. So So appreciate it.



Michael Tyler:

Thank you. I really appreciate you giving me the time, because you gave me a chance to talk I love to talk.



Heather Hester:

Absolutely. Well, you know, that's what I do. Oh my goodness.



Heather Hester:

Thanks so much for joining me today. If you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful for a rating or review. Click on the link in the show notes or go to my website, chrysalismama.com To stay up to date on my latest resources as well as to learn how you can work with me. Please share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone. And remember to just breathe. Until next time