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PARENTGUIDE
PARENTGUIDE

Cliche vs. Truth
Maybe you don’t really need to be scared of your daughter’s teen years.

by Karen Stabiner



PARENTGUIDE News June 2005

For the parents of girls, adolescence lurks on the horizon like a bank of thunderclouds. We expect that it’s going to pour; we just don’t know how bad it’s going to be, or when, exactly, it’s going to start— or how long the suffering will last. It seems that every week there’s a new threat, a new headline, a new rumor. No wonder we approach the tween years with a mixture of apprehension and dread.
We could use some good news, and here it is: Much of what we’ve heard about tween and teen girls is simply wrong— and what’s right doesn’t necessarily pertain to your daughter. The bad-girl stereotype has gotten way out of hand, and it’s time for a reality check.

First, let’s reevaluate some of the most popular assumptions about our daughters— look at the clichés, look at the statistical data and see where they don’t match up:

·Girls aren’t motivated. All they care about is clothes, make-up and boys. In fact, more girls than boys go to four-year colleges and get their degrees, and their numbers in graduate programs are rapidly increasing. On average, they outperform boys on standardized tests.

·Girls are promiscuous. In fact, teenage sexual intercourse has decreased every year for the past decade. Girls who do become sexually active tend to do so at a younger age— but the vast majority of them simply don’t.

·Girls use drugs and drink. Illicit drug use among children between 12 and 17 has decreased for the past several years. Alcohol use has remained stable, and unacceptably high, at about 18 percent, but parents need to think about how our behavior influences our children, since about 50 percent of us drink.
·Adolescent girls all suffer from eating disorders. Studies show something else: Three percent of girls have a clinically diagnosable eating disorder, and less than 15 percent report “issues” with food.

·Girls who aren’t obsessed with being skinny are way too fat. But more adults are overweight than are their teenage daughters, so shouldn’t we clean up our own act first?
·
Last but hardly least: Girls are rude, disrespectful, sharp-tongued brats. Psychologists say that backtalk is actually an important part of the separation process. One researcher I spoke to even suggested that talking back is proof of a daughter’s affection for her mother— the bond is so strong that she has to do something equally intense to set herself apart.
There are clichés, it seems, and then there is the truth. There is bad-girl literature— and then there are the vast majority of girls, who won’t experience the agonies we can so easily read about. The bad-girl books largely depend on girls in therapy or girls in trouble for information; an author looking into a particular problem talks to girls who have experienced that problem. Girls who are doing just fine have no voice in most of the books about adolescent girls, because they didn’t meet the qualifications for being included.

What about those girls, though? What about the radical notion that happiness is possible with a tween or teen daughter— that in fact, many girls are getting frustrated at the negative assumptions adults make about them. We may actually be contributing to the alienation and the drama, simply by regarding our girls as though they were ticking emotional time-bombs.

Women should be particularly sensitive to what’s going on. Any woman over the age of 35— which includes the vast majority of moms of adolescents— knows how unpleasant it is when people buy into the cliché of the middle-aged woman, who can’t possibly be interesting, attractive, vivacious, energetic or sexy anymore. It’s offensive to us— and yet anyone who makes blanket statements about impossible teenage girls is doing exactly the same thing.

We have marginalized our daughters, taken what is sadly true about a minority of them and applied it in advance to all of them. When I was researching my book about the tween years, I was struck by the reaction of a Mom I’d known since her daughter was in preschool. Six weeks before the girl’s 13th birthday, her Mom began to complain about almost everything the girl said, always with the same comment:

“Can you believe it?” she’d ask, as her daughter stood by, mortified. “I’m about to have a teenager in the house. I don’t know what we’re going to do.”
She was trying to joke about something that clearly terrified her, even though her daughter had yet to do anything to suggest that they were in for a bumpy ride. From the look on her daughter’s face, all that she accomplished was to drive a wedge between them.

I am not suggesting that adolescence is easy. The perfectionist “gamma girl” profile, of the girl who takes all advanced placement classes while she tutors less fortunate kids, stars on the soccer team and creates a successful student investment club is as unfair to girls as is the bad-girl caricature. Polarities aren’t real. Real girls are goofy, enthusiastic, moody, funny, impatient, eager and unpredictable— just like their moms were.

We too often forget that, and yet it’s our greatest potential resource. Today’s moms are yesterday’s tweens and teens. We’re the only ones who’ve been there, which puts us in a perfect position to reclaim our daughters— to revise Ophelia, to approach her adolescence with optimism and encouragement. We actually have a choice, here. We can give in to exasperation— often before there’s cause— and make matters worse, or we can stand next to our girls as their staunch allies.

My daughter was 10 years old when I decided to write my book, and all along the way, the naysayers said, “Just wait until she’s 12,” or 13 or 15 or 16. She’ll be 16 in five months, and so far, the predictions haven’t come true. There’s no reason to assume that they will for your daughter, either.


Karen Stabiner is the author of MY GIRL: Adventures With a Teen in Training (Little, Brown), a “reported memoir” about life with her daughter, Sarah, between the ages of 10 and 14. Visit www.karenstabiner.com to find out more about MY GIRL, including where to get a copy – and contribute to the “Our Girl” message board with your own stories.

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