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Reflection Paper

Decent Essays

Do you remember what your priorities were when you were eight years old? When I was that age (1965), I was in third grade. One of my jobs was to make breakfast on weekday mornings for some of my younger brothers and sisters. At that age, my primary goal was to figure out ways to get out of work around the house, so I could go outside and play with my cousins who lived in the neighborhood.
By the time I was eight years old, I had received my first communion and once a month, would go with my Saint Mark Catholic School classmates to the church so we could all go to confession. In preparation for my first communion, I had learned several prayers, including the Act of Contrition, Act of Faith, Act of Hope, and Act of Love. I knew the mysteries of the Rosary by memory because my mom insisted that we pray the daily rosary together as a family.
I had already learned and accepted as true that I was a child of God and that I was created by Him to know, love, and serve Him in this world, and to be happy with Him in Heaven for eternity.
My memories of being eight years old were triggered on Friday (August 4) when I read an article about a discrimination lawsuit that had been filed against Heritage Oak, a secular private grade school in California.
The lawsuit was filed by the parents of an 8-year-old child who was born as a boy, but shortly before turning seven years old, decided that he wanted to be a girl. At that time, he told his parents, “I am a girl. I went to be called a

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