Anyone can change a diaper. It takes a special woman to launder a daughter's thong.

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07 October 2009

The Curse of the Good Girl

An oxi-moronic title, I know.

If I actually owned a "good girl"  (beyond the dog, that is. . . ) would it really be a "curse"????

Perhaps not, but I read the book by Rachel Simmons none-the-less.  You know. . .  just to see what I was missing out on. Besides, I was curious about the subtitle:  Raising Authentic Girls with Courage and Confidence.

And it turns out that I should have read this book years ago, for I quickly discovered that many of the situations the author documents have been played out in my household time and time again.

Simmons, founding director of the Girls Leadership Institute and author of Odd Girl Out, gave me some powerful insight into the underlying factors that may motivate my daughters' seemingly irrational, wacky and erratic behavior.  Her basic premise?  That society in general (and mothers like me in particular) unwittingly condition their daughters to act and think like socially acceptable "good girls" instead of encouraging them to develop a more independent and authentic attitude in their relationships with each other.  In fact, the second half of the book is dedicated to giving parents specific tools to model this behavior for, and with,  their daughters. 

Could I have raised my daughters to think. . . do. . . respond. . .  for themselves instead of trying to be people pleasers like their mother?  Could I have taught them to stand up for themselves more often?  Should I have insisted that my daughters think for themselves, regardless of what the "crowd" is doing or thinking? Could their relationships with their BFF's gone smoother with the knowledge I have only so recently gained?

I suppose so. . .

But consider - for starters - Ponzi's knee-jerk reaction when she saw me reading the book in the first place. . .  What are you reading, you Psycho?  You're not reading that for me!  Are you????






Did I get paid to do this book review?  Of course not!  But I would have PAID someone to write these affirming words that I found on page 118: "The problem is that mothers appear to be the prime targets of children's anger. . .  If girls are experimenting with conflict largely on their mothers, it may be that women bear a special responsibility to reflect carefully on their behavior in conflict with their daughters.. . . It is mothers who teach their daughters the ABCs of conflict." 

So hit the deck, folks. Trigger is threatening to come home from college this weekend. . . .


10 comments:

mom3crazygirls said...

so, it's worth the read? do my girls still stand a chance?

trish said...

Thanks for being on this tour, Liz!

I love the passage you quoted. Moms and daughters have a unique relationship, that is often turbulent, particularly during the teenage years. Having some perspective can be invaluable!

Sandy aka Doris the Great said...

I'm pretty skeptical about these kinds of books. I believe that there's a lot of s--t inherited that even model parenting doesn't get rid of. Who modelled being irrational, rude, thoughtless women to my kids? Not me or their dad! They are who they are, and they'll (hopefully) outgrow it just like their older sister did. In the meantime, I fluctuate between not pulverizing them by putting my head under the pillow and screaming AND calming and peacefully giving them up to God. I need some heavy drugs and booze, man!!

A Woman Of No Importance said...

I do believe there's a lot of mileage, Liz, in the fact that girls and women are generally conditioned to be conscientious and to 'fit in'... And I grew up believing that if I was a nice person and worked hard, that I'd be rewarded in some way - And then we learn life's lessons and the office isn't generally that kind of meritocracy, is it?

I think it'll be a useful read, and one we might learn something from, definitely - I hope you'be got your hard hat out, and your lovely little 'me-room' insulated against the Rigors of Trigger, my dahlink! xox

atiredwife said...

"What are you reading, you Psycho? You're not reading that for me! Are you????"

Send my daughter home and tell her to quit talking to you like that!!

Seriously ... this sounds just like my daughter ... except I get "retard" more often than "psycho." She love me. I know it.

Maureen@IslandRoar said...

Trigger's coming home?
Let me know how that goes; I'll be in the same boat soon.
So it's still OUR fault if they're not good with their anger? I can't take any more guilt.

Pseudonymous High School Teacher said...

It's not just daughters. I seem to be the target for teen son's anger lately.

omchelsea said...

I feel a little scared... I have about twelve 10-13 yo girls in lessons at the moment. Might be time to start wearing my combat boots to lessons!

Stacy (the Random Cool Chick) said...

I better get this book now, then. Princess Nagger acts like 6 going on 30 sometimes, so I can only imagine what the tween and teen years will bring.

:)

Gigi said...

Hi stopping in from Brighton Mum-Teenage Angst.

I soo know what you mean. I just read How to Have a New Kid by Friday (sorry don't remember the author) and thought . . . WTH? Where was this book when my boy was small? Some of it is plain common sense and others was kind of eye-opening. The way you parent has a lot to do with the way the child grows up. Hopefully, I've done a few things right. But my boy had basically the same response when he found out I was reading the book! Funny how they think they are perfect.