"A bit young?"
I was in Lush buying secret gifts for my seven-year-old, and chatting to the staff who were helping me choose and pay for the things I got. I said she'd circled every single thing in the catalogue, which they found amusing, and then I said "It's difficult being my daughter, I don't do things like this [indicate mounds of Smelly Pampering Things], but she's experimenting with expressions of femininity."
The woman at the till said "A bit young, isn't she?"
I was amazed. I said something about children playing princesses and Barbie and things, but I was very taken aback. I move in such a bubble that I forget people are unaware of how gender-expression is played out and trained in, I think.
The woman at the till said "A bit young, isn't she?"
I was amazed. I said something about children playing princesses and Barbie and things, but I was very taken aback. I move in such a bubble that I forget people are unaware of how gender-expression is played out and trained in, I think.
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And of course seven-year-olds don't have sexuality.
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(That brings back a memory - I think I was 8 years old and on my second girl-crush before I asked my mum what a lesbian was, and she got annoyed that someone had called me one over Perfectly Innocent Behaviour.)
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In either of the latter cases, the more usual phrase used about younger kids would be "he/she's going through an X phase". It has the same meaning of trying things out, but not in as consciously directed a manner.
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There's a bazillion different coulda/shoulda/woulda interpretations, many of which don't rely on unsavory assumptions by the cashier.
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