6 Sep 2011
You have touched upon a couple of things that I have in my mind for the past six years. Let me go paragraph by paragraph. Any one else from the blog-mom-o-sphere, please participate. Comment, do a post, what ever works for you.
Chula has been fitting in a size or two bigger clothing since she was four. It is the hips that take the blame. Till I shopped in the ‘toddler’ section(US size 2 – 5) life was peachy. When I ventured in to the ‘girls’ section (US size 5 – 14) I vividly remember being alarmed. Many of the clothes were inappropriately designed. I mean who ever came with this low rise jeans idea?! Shouldn’t designers have some basic sense about hip size : crotch-to-waist length holy ratio? One moron comes up with a design that would fit stick figures and the all major departmental chains go ballistic and stock ONLY low rise hip huggers. I mean these are 5 and 6 year old children who run and climb things. I tried buying two sizes bigger and altering the length, but eventually gave up buying jeans for my children. Since 2008, all they wear are cotton pants with elastic at the hips that covers the butt crack. Yes, the clothing section is brimming, but if you are looking for non-pink, non-Disney characters, slightly loose, appropriate clothing, something that will withstand the running and climbing, something that is not a mini version of adult clothing you might as well grow you own cotton and weave your own clothes.
Do I need to write anything about swim suits? Target has decided that if you are looking for 8+ size swim suit, it has to be three piece – a mini bra, a bottom that will fit inside a match box, a small match box that is, and a shirt. Mind you, none of these three pieces of clothing solve the purpose of covering your child’s body and it costs a about $50. If not, you can buy wet suits for double the prize. Finally after three months of searching I found swim shorts(low rise of course) and swim shirt at Old Navy, that too only because Feb is the time the stores stock swim wear.
Yes, that is the trend now good people. The thinking is no more, ‘This is current fashion’/‘this is swim season’ -> let us buy a little more in case there is a demand. The selling no longer caters to the different sets of people, with different shapes of bodies, buying a variety of things. For all that talk and noise about uniqueness, the only message clothing industry gives my children is to conform. Stores sell one standard thing at one standard time and you better stock up. If they sell low rise jeans, fit your body in to it. If they sell swim suits from Feb – July, buy at that time. If you think your child might grow out of the swim suit before, what stores perceive as, the next swim season, you stock up or you don’t get any. All in the name of popular demand!
Not exactly clothes, but while on the topic, I might as well spill my angst. If you are following this blog you will know that we just moved continents. Moving two children from one country to another, for good, is not fun. I wanted to cheer the children up and the bulb in my head switched on. ‘Hey, let me buy the children their own pull along suitcases.’ Again if you don’t endorse Disney or Barbie, then your choices are practically non existent. For boys it is easy, buy a pull along suitcase with Lightning McQueen and you are done. At least that is what it looks to me as a mother of two girls. What I buy is what I endorse to my girls. I do not want to endorse Disney Princesses, Bartz, Barbie and such. I found that if I have certain principles, then I enter in to the exclusive realm and I need to shell out the money even if I am not ready. Finally this came home, with a hefty price tag, of course, the most I have ever spent on a piece of luggage and my heart bleeds a little bit every time the children pull it a little too hard.
Good teachers/guides(parents are the first teachers and guides of young children) have this philosophy, to balance out the classroom and to maintain harmony in the classroom, they pair up children with opposing qualities. It is purely trial and error and if it clicks, they compliment each other very well. Now a small diversion. Children are born with no clue what so ever about the XX and XY factor. Finally they figure out that there is a divide called girls and boys. They look in the society and look for external signs and qualities that define what is a boy and what is a girl. Unfortunately society tells that girls NEED to wear pink, wear dresses, must giggle, form sisterhood, like chocolates, must be super sensitive, swing between extreme emotions, be delicate, do art work, talk about their feelings, give up things for the greater good, be responsible, be gentle, be caring…… Back to good teachers/guides, these good adults must bear in mind that young children gravitate to pink and pretty because in their flexible minds, if they do not they are not girls. Unfortunately the adults, innocently endorse this thinking that it is a phase. Yes it is a phase, but if dealt blindly becomes a way of being, way of existence. All it takes -sensible adults to keep reassuring that sex is a biological thing and does not change no matter what. Just like good teachers, good parents must expose their children to both ‘boy stuff’ and ‘girlie stuff’.
Media, again like the departmental stores works with the sole principle of making money. Boys play rough/girls read books and do crafts -> publish more books for girls with girls as central characters and balls/blocks and video games for boys. Now come in the unsuspecting adults, who look at the choices available – ‘Make your own friendship bracelets kit with pictures of a pretty girl’, Cam Jansen, Fancy Nancy in full splendor, ‘Monopoly in pink – special girls edition with boutiques and malls instead of hotels and houses’, designer edition pink Scrabble, Uno special pink edition… and end up thinking this is what girls need and inadvertently end up feeding the loop. Whose brilliant idea is it to sell Monopoly in pink? What is this message that girls must shop and spend money at the mall while boys get to do large motor activity, running around, playing regular Monopoly and developing their spacial skills? Why define pink is for girls and then sell pink board games and giving the message that girls play with girls and boy play with boys? Who exactly dictates that boys need to be powerful and play ball while girls need to be passive aggressive and shop?
Then this unique Indian message. The MIL switches the TV on and there is a lady lecturing that, the woman’s place is behind the man and by supporting the man she can better herself. She goes on telling the story of Valluvar’s wife Vasuki who defied gravity. At a point it gets to me, the mother of two girls and I end up buying Paper Bag Princess where the Princess not only saves the goofball of a prince but also ends up calling him a bum and walks out alone. Do I want to my daughters to end up alone? No, but I feel that is much better than being a Vasuki or a dainty princess. This is exactly how aggressive feminism grows. The past six years I have heard nothing but the roles and duties girls. Come on, my child is still pooping in her diapers and you tell me, ‘It is good to have a girl child first, she will be responsible and take care of the boy who will come next’?
That is why K’s mom, it is up to us, parents to stand up for our children, so that they can be well rounded individuals, have a full life, without any hatred for the opposite sex, choose professions that they are passionate about rather than to fit the bill and be sensitive. We as parents must put thought in to what we buy and what we endorse. Rather than picking the best of the worst, we must demand quality. If we let the advertising industry and corporates dictate what we need to buy for our children, we(men and women) might as well part ways, move to Mars and Venus and live happily ever after.
Reading suggestions: CINDERELLA ATE MY DAUGHTER by PEGGY ORENSTEIN. Words can’t tell how much I enjoyed and learned from this book. Five stars and a must read for all parents, irrespective of the sex of your child.
Previously blogged
Sexualization Of Young Children
Are men really from Mars and women from Venus?
20 Responses for "Standing Up For Our Children"
You couldn’t have posted at the right time. This was in the news last week. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/01/earlyshow/living/parenting/main20100427.shtml
Again a wonderful, well-thought out post!
UTBT SAYS: If only they would make Walmart pull out their cosmetics for 8 – 12 year old girls, that will be good.
Hello,
I enjoy reading your blog as I find wisdom and ideas in your posts. I do not comment usually since others seem to put it in a better way.
I have been going through the links in this post. I’ve a boy but I do agree with quite a lot of what you wrote in this post and other related ones. People specially relatives get upset when he starts cooking with his toy set but it comes natuarally to him since he sees his father cook most of the time. He once saw me put nail polish on my toes and wanted it. So, I put on his toes and my friends’ children were upset that a)he is a boy and why is he wearing nail polish and b) its pink!!
I do agree with you on the books, toys and clothes but I have the same problem as Kodimom about books having girl characters in a dominant way. I am looking for a more balanced representation that we can enjoy but its not to be.
Please keep writing and share your thoughts to help people like me.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks for your comment Gayatri.
I found this http://www.booksforboys.com/, I found some good titles.
Also check out the list Ranjani and Satish, (they blog for Saffron Tree) compiled – http://sathishr.blogspot.com/search?q=boys+books
Well said utbt, agree 100% and have nothing to add 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Oh, I had a hunch that you will agree 🙂
Totally agree!! For my first born, I did not even find out the gender of the baby so no one paints the house blue/pink but now our whole house suffers from pink-purple kamalai!!
My little one is into Diego now and wants a Diego cake for her birthday and my older one is appalled and is desperately trying to save her from becoming a “Tom girl”!!
UTBT SAYS: Sorry Me Too, I am not sure how I missed your comment! LOL at ‘pink-purple kamalai’ and the big sister who wants to show the lil sis the right way!
totally agree and so well written!
UTBT SAYS: Thanks HS. Hope you guys are doing good. Even yesterday the little one was talking about your older child.
Can I give you a tight hug for this post….please? It’s such a relief to see this said out loud by an Indian mom in India. Please don’t stop. I follow this blog and I love it http://blog.pigtailpals.com/
And to make you feel better, my daughter came home recently from an inter-school competition, and told me in a disgusted voice, “Amma, that other school had a ‘Dress-up-the-Barbie” competition, no wonder my friend S in that school likes pink fairies and Barbies, Yuck. I’m so glad my school is sensible.” 😀
UTBT SAYS: Sure, hug away Starry. Peggy Orenstein quotes this book Pink Brain Blue Brain, the author Lise Eliot, a neuroscientist says that girls have a primal instinct to gravitate towards dolls, strollers, cooking pots and stuff. Apparently even female vervet monkeys do it. So it is up to us parents to expose them to gender neutral toys.
Div said that?! Wow! Attagirl! Good job mom.
Loved loved loved what you wrote….I am a mother of a 3 year old girl and people tell me that…its good you have a girl first…next child will be a boy *how do they know go figure that* and the girl can take care of the boy…yaa right!
UTBT SAYS: Even at 33, some end up fighting and what is this ‘taking care’ business?! Makes me thing I am missing some trick! Also brings back movie images where the mother is busy working as a maid in homes and the older child is taking care of a whole bunch of critters!
i see that the girls clothing is ridden with mostly junk.
the market seems to cater more to girls – but comes loaded with all wrong messages.
and speaking of wrong messages, thats the theme that drives TV serials all over the world. what abt the sitcoms here? idiot husband messes up, smart wife cleans up after him, over and over. how do I counter that image?
could the paper bag princess slay a dragon instead and feel just as empowered? was it necessary to bash a prince to convey the message? if there were a book about a prince ditching a goofy princess, and end up alone, would his action be justified?
this is why I *loved* Shrek. (the first one and only that one) both save each other, both are gross, both are kind, both humans (well, not literally….). if there is one character logo i dont mind on their luggage it is Shrek and Fiona from part 1. we need more of these spoofs – one to break the disney spell, two, so kids get how cool the other gender is. thats all we need for respect.
UTBT SAYS: Not all over the world K’s mom. The TV serials in India seem to operate on the premise that the woman is the source of all evils and if she fails to maintain her prim, pure, proper form, she can upset the delicate balance of the world. The media is either over chauvinistic or tries an extreme form of balancing. They blame TRP and profit-loss for promoting serials/books. Less said the better!
BTW, this (http://amirite.net/627284/1382869) I loved . Apparently Princess and the frog did not make as much money because the title had princess and the boys did not watch it! When the sole aim is to divide and make money.
Nodded my way through this post. It’s so hard to control the pink explosion in the wardrobe.
Read this?
http://blogs.babble.com/strollerderby/2011/08/31/jc-penney-insults-girls-intelligence-with-dumb-t-shirt/
UTBT SAYS: The shirt has been recalled. Just another stunt like the ‘pole dancing kit’ for 8 year olds, thongs for 7 year olds and such. I think after a point we loose the sensitivity to such stunts!
You make a very valid point, and very effectively:)
When my son’s school announced a ‘color’ week and he had to wear pink on one of the days, there was not a store IN CHENNAI (ok, am exaggerating, but i hunted at least 10 shops)that did not stock anything remotely pink for boys and on top of that the sales folks in most shops thought it was a bad idea to make the boys wear pink!! I finally borrowed my nephew’s from my sis (which is what i shud’ve done first!) – a white tee with blue and pink stripes! And then, when the boy was 6 he came back saying his friends teased him for carrying a pink snack box! After a lot of reasoning, I had to tell him that even boys were born only with a pink tongue and not blue!
UTBT SAYS: Thanks for your comment Vidya. Really?! Even in Chennai! I thought men wearing pink is kinda hot fashion in India.
Your’s and K’s mom’s posts are just two sides of the same coin, not really a rebuttal. There are an equal number of horrid stereotypes that both genders have to deal with.
As an proud feminist and mother to one son and one daughter, I am quite disgusted at how much the pendulum has swung in reverse. Our sons pay the price for male chauvinists generations before, just as unfair as daughters having to conform to generations of suppression and much less spoken about. I find it much easier to bring up a daughter to be gender neutral. Must be practice of being a girl myself!
Gender neutral/non mainstream is the way to go for me.
p.s.: Did you know that there’s a ‘girl power’ section in Saffron Tree but no similar category for boys? If I did not know to click on the right labels with a bit of pain (after asking), I would not have found any!
UTBT SAYS: I remember Chox fwding your email about boy power 🙂 Will get on it and will definitely update you if I find any books.
Meant to say ‘yours’ not your’s. Pardon the typo.
I was surfing today and came upon your blog and couldn’t agree with you more with this thoughtful and well written post
.
The stereotyping of kids starts young and seems to permeate through all facets of society. Cases in point:
1. I wanted to buy a pink hat for my son. Took it to the clerk (about 60 years old) and was told in so much so words that I should not buy pink for my son because pink is the color for girls.
2. My son picked up a purple sippy cup with hearts and flowers on it because that is what he currently likes. He took it to school one day and an almost three old boy shouted out ” He has a girl’s cup”.
I still do not understand and get how and why colors and inanimate objects seem to have gender associated to them other than being purely media and Disney driven.
Do not even get me started on girl’s games or boy’s games, toys and of course why stores are filled with smaller version of adult clothes for kids.
Some links that might be off interest to you:
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/french-company-sells-lingerie-year-olds/story?id=14324742
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-logan-levkoff/talking-about-weight_b_943562.html?ir=Parents
http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/jc-penny-stirs-controversy-with-too-pretty-to-do-homework-shirt_b37343
UTBT SAYS: Thanks for the links Babushtika. Will check them out soon.
And to think in early 1900, people used pink for boys and blue for girls!
Standing up in support!
I was watching this episode of neeya naana on vijay tv – all girls episode where one side considers husbands as Gods and superior to them and the other side considers them as friends. You should see some of the points discussed – a lady (with an mba) claimed she would remove her husband’s socks and shoes everyday when he got back from work. And that her husband is superior and one step above her. I was shocked to see so many like her. Why blame men when we have women talking and believing this!
Went with a friend to a theme park a few weeks back. Every teen there was wearing a two piece swim suit. The only thing that came to my mind was – what will happen if that flimsy string snapped? Imagine the pressure the kids feel to look perfect esp while wearing such minimal stuff… the boys are much better off with decent length trunks for swimming. Is it a crime for girls to wear something as comfortable?
Here I am worrying about how to stop Dora from taking over the house … Sigh.. we need another world without all this nonsense!
UTBT SAYS: If the flimsy string snaps, wardrobe malfunction will happen. Oh, Reva we have moved beyond silly things like that!
Reg Dora, chk this out
I totally agree with you and K’s mom. I have so many things that I want to write – maybe I will do a post about it.
UTBT SAYS: Do send me the link, I would like to read.
*bows down to the UTBT* You said it girl. Wish you’d do more of these posts.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks TMM.
Did you see this?
http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/sexist_shirts/index2.html?rc=paste1&r_by=27328-2511936-vQuO15x
UTBT SAYS: What irks me is…at this day and age, the mentality is any publicity is good. People crave even negative publicity. By putting these shirts on the shelves and playing the stunt of pulling it out, imagine how much publicity JCP and F21 would have received?! Like mentioned in this article and else where, the shirts were not a surprise. There are at least a 100 people involved in the making of a shirt… and none of them advised that these shirts will not be well received? I find that hard to believe!
Totally totally hear ya on this one!! For the first two and half years, I (successfully) managed to keep away my daughter from the Disney influences ..(discovered that she was one of the dying tribes who actually referred to a stuffed Nemo as “fish”!)..but alas! I have to deal with “Why can’t I have a Princess or Barbie cake?” knowing fully well that she just feels the need to conform *sigh*? She knows who Dora/Barbie is alright..but doesn’t have a clue as to who the Princesses are…(and frankly, I’d like to keep it that way as long as possible). Sometimes I wish I could just be rude and tell someone who’s gifting yet another Barbie — sorry! But I don’t want her growing up with these unhealthy stereotypes..
Trust me to find this conversation six weeks after it happened!
It’s bad enough that most readymade clothes don’t fit our kids or our sensibilities but worse that the nice alternatives are so expensive (I don’t want to spend Rs 800 on a casual shirt for daily wear for a 5 year old, thank you). The saddest thing to me in this scenario is the growing dearth of tailors who will stitch or alter the cheap stuff to fit. I miss the tailors of our youth.
UTBT SAYS: Did you see this
http://jezebel.com/5859560/crotchless-thong-underwear-for-the-mature-7+year+old-in-your-life
When such stupidity is abundant, people are much less shocked abt the sensibility of the garment! The jeans might be low rise, but at least it has a crotch, so let me buy it attitude is going to come in soon!
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