In the darkened room that served as the dance floor, girls in skirts that were too short, heels that were too high and pants that were slung way too low shook their asses (and other parts) to the beat of popular hip-hop. These white, Midwestern girls were mimicking rap video dances, and were not executing the moves with any particular talent. They pressed their hips, grinding and swerving, onto each other for the attention of the boys. They bent over and flung their hair and touched their bodies suggestively. They paraded around the place in strings of six and seven and eight, all holding hands, moving purposely from dance floor to bar to bathroom, shaking unsteadily on their ambitiously high heels. Their main concern was attention, and this was an entirely different breed of attention-grabbing than I was used to. In more than one case that evening, it was the most attractive girls who seemed to do the most posturing. It was the girls with the enviably petite, tan and toned figures, and the most perfectly bleached and highlighted hair that were dancing the dirtiest and grinding the hardest. Their eyes shot frenetically around to see who was looking at them. They were the ones to grab their friend’s hands demandingly and lead them in a group to the next stop on the frat-party circuit. Their desire for acceptance, it came from some very deep rooted place. These girls made me nervous for their personal safety. Their personal emotional and physical safety.
I was a hippie in college, more apt to wear my curtains than some too-tight, too-low jeans. Not to mention, they don’t make jeans like that in my size. At least they didn’t a few years ago. I danced to hip-hop, but I did it in abandoned warehouses with skateboard punks and homeless train-hopping travelers. My version of the bump-and-grind dance was to participate in an educated discourse on theThere’s an equation as simple as one plus one. Girls who are raised with a sense of self worth are not blindly, self-deprecatingly promiscuous. They do better in school. They are more successful in life. Period. Instilling a sense of self worth is a tall order for any parent of adolescents, and I have to wonder where these particular girls' parents went wrong.
5 comments:
Girl, you had me till the last paragraph! I think I was raised with a healthy sense of self-worth and my parents did a fine job, but I am promiscuous and I love a fella's attention. Mama may have, papa may have, but baby we got our own...
Okay, you. Firstly, you're not promiscuous. You're a slut. Hahaha! Naw, naw, I kid.
You just have a healthy sexual appetite! No? And think about the um... sexual appetites of your adolescence. Weren't those impulses different than what you experience now? I can't even really use you as an example for any of this stuff because you're not like anyone else. Your internal make-up is the variable in the model of the human condition. I mean... you don't get lonely ever.
Regardless, I love the fellas' attention too. I would never decry the desire for the fellas' attention as something "wrong". I'm talking specifically about young girls, and the WAY they're putting themselves out there.
Okay, you. If I'm a slut its YOUR fault. AND your republican dad's.
Right, okay, young girls, their way of getting attention.. sorting my thoughts, sorting..
Still, there are so many factors, I think you should give parents a break. We can blame ANYTHING on our parents, but also the whole villiage has crumbled and fragmented, that one villiage that it takes to raise etcetera. It REALLY takes more than 2 people to do the incredibly profound task of making a person. We have TV instead, pharmacuticals instead.. i digress, but, so, if you were a parent, how would you go about instilling self worth into your kids?
Are you taking my new blog as a personal challenge of some sort?
Parents, eh? Instilling self worth? This blogpost initially started as an article about how self-worth isn't based strictly on whether you're fat or not, which is an obvious point to those who aren't and have never been... fat. I switched it, to be just about what it's about, instead of being about self-esteem issues not just being for fat chicks.
But one thing parents (and aunts and uncles) can do to instill self worth is to NOT make weight and appearance be the most important thing. I mean, I'm all for dressing up, and for dressing your kids up. But teaching the kids to use their brain... really use them to challenge and ask questions and critique established ways of living. I think that's one way of instilling self-worth. Encouraging kids to create a version of their own reality instead of just existing inside other people's. That's something I had to figure out for myself.
How bout you?
Haha, you sound like an old lady! ;)
*ahem* sorry... No, very cool post. And yeah, it's sad.
I don't think the self-worth/promiscuity equation is quite that simple, though. While, on one hand, I think you are right, I also think there is a flip-side. Promiscuity isn't necessarily a bad thing, nor is it necessarily a sign of a poor self-image. It certainly can be, but it isn't always. It can also simply be a sign of someone (male or female) who just likes sex, and doesn't subscribe to the sexual politics of Western culture and it's ideas of what is "normal." (And no, it's not just Western culture, but that's the only culture I can speak about from experience.)
And in response to your other commenter... Come on, what fun is life if you can't blame all your problems on your parents? ;)
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