Rosie
One Too Many
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LizzieMaine said:Exactly how I see it -- it's the cultural implications that bother me more than how it might cause others to view me as an individual. I'm old enough and smart enough to take care of myself, and I don't think I'll lose a lot of sleep if some guy thinks I'm a prude.
But it's the culture my teenage niece is growing up in that bothers me -- a culture that pushes and pushes and pushes the idea that everybody's-doin-it. The poor kid doesn't *want* to do it, and she's actually asked me if I think there's something wrong with her for not wanting to carry on the way her friends do. If that's any kind of an empowered culture for young women, then somebody snuck in while I was asleep and changed the definition of "empowered" in my dictionary.
PSG, I know you and I have talked about "A Return To Modesty," the book by Wendy Shalit that goes into a lot of these issues -- but I'd also suggest "Female Chauvinist Pigs -- The Rise of Raunch Culture," by Ariel Levy -- which goes into a lot of the more overt cultural issues raised by this whole issue. Very interesting reading.
These are issues that both my niece and the children that I counsel are dealing with everyday. My niece at the age of 14 behaves the way a 14 year old should instead of the way teenagers are "supposed" to behave. The only thing I can say if she (both my niece, yours and any girls I deal with) have a strong foundation and has internal love (love from family and family friends) she won't seek validation from outside sources and feel the need to do what everyone else is doing.
When it came to dating/intimacy I was a bit on the slow side as compared with some of my peers but, I had a strong family foundation and didn't do things to be seen as cool or accepted. Much of my life has been lived according to my rules, not what is the norm and certainly not based on what others think. That assuredness (for lack of a better word) is one of the best things we can instill into children.
With an intelligent and wonderful Auntie like you Lizzie as a role model (I'd like to think the same for myself and my niece) and with your guidance, she won't have too much trouble becoming herself and finding her place amongst all the others.