Gender-specific toys, clothes, behaviour and music
Many of you are familiar with my long-standing rants about the British and how they need to colour-code their babies so that they can tell which sex they are. And how much I dislike pink, too.
I have recently begun to wonder (or possibly to realise) whether Linnea gets away with "worse" behaviour because she looks like a boy. The specific example I'm thinking about is from when we were out in a restaurant with some friends and their daughter, who was wearing a dress and tights - Linnea was wearing something Linnea-ish, which usually means gender-neutral trousers or dungarees. And gender-neutral means "boy" to most people. Anyway, the friends' toddler and Linnea were both running around between courses. Our friends were asked or told to pick their baby up and keep her in her seat - and we were not. Possibly the other baby was behaving more badly than Linnea, but I couldn't see it, myself - they were both running around the pathways at the edge of the restaurant, like a few other children during the course of the evening, and neither of them were yelling (though the one who was incarcerated in a higchair started yelling fairly quickly). The only difference we could see was that Baby A looked like a girl and Linnea looked like a boy.
Similarly, in playgrounds, people admire "his" speed, strength and agility, while cautioning their own daughters not to run or climb.
We wondered about Barbies and toy guns before she was born; I decided (unilaterally, like most decisions about Linnea - they seem to be filed in Rob's brain as "mummy's jobs" along with working out when clothes no longer fit and the weather is cool enough for another layer) that she can have guns and Barbies as gifts from other people if she asks for them. She won't be getting them from us. If she wants guns she can make 'em from bits of stick, and if she wants Barbies she can learn to make her own rib-cracking corsets and file her nipples off with emery boards, but I'm not paying.
(Ask us again in 6 years time - no parenting plan survives contact with the enemy).
I have a nasty suspicion that if she was a boy I'd buy her a Barbie less reluctantly. I am also pretty sure that if she was a boy I'd be less reluctant to dress her in pink. But she does have a pink coat! So I overcame that particular prejudice when confronted with 50 pence-worth of charity-shop washable warmness.
Boys don't sing the same nursery rhymes as girls. I have yet to perform a proper study of which ones the parents of boys sing, but I have heard a mother say that "that's a girl's book" about a book with a nursery rhyme in it. I don't know which rhyme it was though.
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Someone's gave her a B-toy for her birthday last month. Urgh. She's not getting any from us.
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(Anonymous) 2005-11-29 07:04 pm (UTC)(link)In my experience girls will play happily with dolls OR cars and guns, but at the end of the day, they want their dollies, and the boys generally want the guns and cars, whatever you do :-(
And I've come across many people (including daughters in law) who are quite prepared to put their girls in blue, whatever the comments, but would baulk at dressing a boy in pink!
Elaine
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(Anonymous) - 2005-11-29 21:33 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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By coincidence, Wingnut and me were discussing how active Linnea was a couple of days ago (this was sparked off by a sexist toy catalogue). We wondered what would happen if she went to school instead of being home educated, if she would become less active or if the early training would hold.
By the way, I heard a lot of very positive comments about Linnea from other party guests, all remarking on how lively and active she was!
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(Anonymous) 2005-11-29 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)But I really have to agree that, as you say, "no parenting plan survives contact with the enemy"! ;-D
Elaine
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I dressed him in neutral or 'boy' colours, but let his hair grow, as he had such beautiful long blond ringlets. he was mistaken for a girl SO much, no matter what we dressed him in! My daughter was dressed in all sorts of stuff, at first, then refused to wear dresses, but took to pink in a big way for a few years - now wears black, until they invent a darker colour. I tried not to have anything to do with things not being boy/girl. I banned guns totally - first one to come in the house was a cap gun bought as a 6th birthday gift by a new school friend. One Christmas dd was given a huge rag doll which looked like her - ds, then about 5 said, aww, I wish I had a doll just like me - so I made him one, and he was delighted - it lurked in his room til he was about 10, and is safely stashed away as requested.
Barbie? I decided pre kids that Barbie would be banned, and started a Barbie smear campaign as soon as I could - eg, belittling her for being a brainless fashion slave, saying, huh, nobody ever looks like that, etc, when dd was very small, and it WORKED! Someone gave her some, and they were hardly bothered with at all. So go to it, start the anti Barbie campaign as soon as you can!
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(Anonymous) 2005-11-29 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)In the park if people think she is a boy they just smile, if they know she is a girl we get a lot of comments like 'oh, isn't she very fearless' [am I imagining the subtle undertone of disapproval often present?]or 'what an adventurous little girl'.
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(Anonymous) 2005-11-29 10:00 pm (UTC)(link)This child's brother (age 3) insisted on going to a party as a fairy. They both love their Thomas wooden track and their Sylvanian Families dolls houses.
The middle niece, nearly 2, has an older brother and a mother who likes blue, so though she does have lots of dresses she also wears "boy's clothes" - and her shoes are "boy's shoes" too, apparently (very small child decided this).
The youngest isn't yet one, but her mother doesn't like pink either.
I dressed Christopher in pink babygros when he was little. (Well, they were 50p from the charity shop.) However I must have been influenced by my environment over the last 5 years because I look at old photos and feel a little uneasy, and I didn't use the pink ones for Oliver.
Oddly enough, my *father* bought us a set of pink Winnie-the-Pooh babygros when Christopher was first born. I'm still not quite sure what happened.
I know I have Deliberately sung "I love little pussy" to both my boys because it's always depicted as being told by a girl. ;-) Other than that, I hadn't really thought about gender and nursery rhymes.
LBs
Julie
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I feel a certain relief at having a boy, and a certain guilt about having that relief - it seems to me that the issues are easier in raising boys, but then I wonder whether I should think that. When he was tiny he had several hot pink items of clothing, but now I no longer dare dress him in pink. I encourage him to imitate me doing household tasks; but I'm aware that this is normally imitating me, not DH, because I do most of them! He won't get guns or barbies from us; if he had any interest in any of the stuffed animals he has, I might be more inclined to buy him a doll, but he hasn't. He loves cars and vehicles of all kinds. I've certainly encountered generalisations about what "the boys" and "the girls" like doing from the staff at his nursery, so even if I'm not giving him the gender stereotypes - and I'm sure I am, actually - he's getting them from there anyway. I think all I hope to do now is to make him aware that they *are* stereotypes, not rules.
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I was often mistaken for a boy because of my short hair and the fact that I was usually in trackies, or possibly because I was usually clutching a toy car, or that nearly all my friends were boys. I thought girls were, on the whole, rubbish. They didn't know how to play proper games and didn't do anything if it meant they'd get dirty.
I was usually the only person at any given party in a 'party' frock. Even then I was *very* particular about dressing up for parties, though most other kids didn't. I think I was about three when I threw a *huge* tantrum and cried my eyes out because my frilly pink frock didn't fit any more. I also remember a particular white one with gold trim I was very fond of. I was well into my teens before I stopped wearing bright colours.
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I dressed my son in a lot of gender-neutral stuff and a lot of boyish stuff. People still frequently called him a girl. My girls wear either hand-me-downs from my son, or very girly pinky purply stuff - and even in the pinkest of pink, half the time people call them boys (um, as babies. Obviously it gets more obvious later. My middle daughter wears long pigtails and likes to play princess...). Just yesterday at the pediatrician's office my 10 month old was complimented for being such a handsome boy. She was wearing a pink/red/dark pink/brownish pink striped outfit with pink leather boots!
On the playground, my daughter (age 3) is much more active and agile than my son (age 5) and no one has ever commented that she is "boyish" or "not girly" because of it. Similarly no one has said my son is not manly enough. People admire my daughter's speed and agility, and always have, as she speeds by in her princess outfit or clambers up the railings in her mary janes. People offer to help my son as he looks worriedly at the ladder to the slide, too.
No one has ever ascribed masculinity to my daughter because she is a "tomboy" on the playground, that's for sure. and I definitely don't hear people cautioning their daughters not to run or climb! Surely that is what the playground is for??
Oh - my kids generally sing the same songs. Right now, the favorites are "hinay ma tov u ma nayim" (pardon my complete failure to correctly transliterate the hebrew!) and "the poo poo train is coming" which is something their father taught them... but they are also quite keen on "down by the bay" and most of the sesame street repertoire.
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claire went head over heels into a pink phase, despite none of her close adults evincing the slightest trace of encouragement for such.
she did eventually grow out of it - but this took a couple of years...
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Mind you, perhaps I've given less opportunity for anyone to object - I don't allow running around in restaurants, for instance, regardless of gender. I do allow it in plenty of other public spaces, though.
Ahh...
(I could have cried when I read the part about the mummy's jobs. Honestly, I just had that discussion with my husband yesterday. Apparently as a mother I have a natural instinct to know how cold it really feels to her, and he's unable to give an opinion on whether or not her clothes are too small...he couldn't give an answer why I was better qualified to tell. I'm rambling. I just wanted to say thank you for making me realise I'm not the only mother who is solely responsible for most decisions relating to their child!)
Carly
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And so, late in the semester, the teacher came in terribly distraught. Her daughter had asked for a Barbie for Christmas, and she didn't know what to do or how to deal with this.
(I think eventually she decided that the best option was to get Barbie dolls for both of her children. My recollection that the upshot was that the daughter tired of her Barbie rather more quickly than the son did may be a fabricated memory, though.)
From within
(Anonymous) 2007-05-28 03:54 pm (UTC)(link)