I applaud the parents for having the right intentions (and I'm only talking about the gender issue here), though society will make it difficult. I think some people think by not bringing up Storm in a certain traditional gender role, they are forcing him/her to be the 'wrong' gender or be a non-gender. I don't think that's the case; they specifically said they won't push Storm to be anything before he/she has matured enough to understand and express his/her gender identity (and I don't think it's a choice, it's just a matter of understanding and coming to terms with it). I, personally, had a pretty good sense of my gender identity at a very young age (well before puberty), and I suspect many others do as well. The brain (mental gender) is sexed in the womb, more recent studies are showing, due perhaps to hormone levels, and may match or not match the physical sex which is determined grossly by sex chromosomes. No matter what I was taught, I'm sure I would still have the same gender identity as I do now (altho I may have a harder time with uncompromising parents).
Some have suggested that transsexualism may be the result of a mismapping of body regions in the brain, due to the brain being sexed differently. Some transsexual people therefore naturally have a map of the sex opposite of their physical sex, and that is why they feel a disconnect with their physical body. (It's not about not accepting what you were born with..) “Ramachandran (2008) found that while nearly two thirds of non-transsexual males who have a penis surgically removed experience the sensation of a phantom penis, only one third of MTF [male-to-female] transsexuals do so after sex reassignment surgery. Perhaps more remarkably, two-thirds of FTM [female to male] transsexuals reported the sensation of a phantom penis from childhood onwards, replete with phantom erections and other phenomena.”
Unfortunately, it seems maple has not had the opportunity to be transgender or experience 'gender dysphoria', or he/she might be more sympathetic. I did not choose to be who I am. And despite being seen by society and raised by my parents as male, I have always identified as female. If I had had parents more like Storm's, I perhaps could have felt much comfortable coming to terms with it and would not have wasted so much time living in the wrong gender (not to say my parents weren't good. I'd say they're much better than many of those horror stories you read about). And because my body did not match my gender (or my gender didn't match my body), I was teased as well in school, and became rather unwilling to be close to people because of what I thought they'd do to me if they knew about something that didn't even affect them. I'm only now trying to undo the damage all those years have done. However, all my life experiences so far have taught me that people are complex, and diverse, and that I shouldn't judge people when I don't know enough about them (like many are doing with the parents in the article).