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On Having a Daughter

March 30, 2015 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 4 Comments

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For as long as I can remember I have always wanted to have children. I wanted at least three children and at least one of each sex. After we had Asher and got our boy, we were really hoping for a little girl and we feel incredibly blessed to have received Bennett.

I’ve always been a feminist. I’ve always fiercely believed in and advocated for the equality of men and women. I’ve hated gender stereotyping and pigeon holing. I’ve done my best to raise my son without any such gendered expectations imposed upon him. I’ve taught him that there is no such thing as boy or girl colors, rather there are only colors. His favorite color is currently bright pink and while, I hate the color pink I’m happy that he loves it and hope he is never made to feel like he shouldn’t. I try and let him choose his preferences when there is an opportunity to so as not to have my deeply ingrained, society influenced, gendered views influence him.

However since having a daughter, which, I admit hasn’t even been a month, I’ve been appalled to notice that I’ve been thinking about her future mainly in terms of her physical appearance. I keep hoping that she’ll be beautiful and imagining what she’ll look like as though beauty is the most important thing a woman can aspire to. This isn’t me! So, where is it coming from?!

As a woman, I am not above society’s influence. I feel constant pressure to conform to societal expectations of beauty for women, even though I know that my value is SO much more than that.

I have never once thought about how I hope Asher will grow up to be a good looking man, so why do I now find myself hoping that Bennett will grow up to be a good looking woman? It’s shallow and makes me incredibly uncomfortable to confront this part of myself but how can I hope to change and raise children that are better than me if I am unwilling to closely examine and work on my short comings?

I’d like to think that I hope she’s beautiful because that will make life easier for her in a world where woman are already disadvantaged, but I’m sure that isn’t all of it.

I honestly care most about the depth of her character (and Asher’s too for that matter) rather than the way she looks, and yet I find myself dwelling on the latter. I need to practice thought catching. I don’t want anyone to ever make her feel that her self-worth is mainly skin deep, but especially not her own mother. I want to empower her to be confident, to believe in herself, to value service to humanity, to have an outward facing orientation, to dream big and to be driven to chase those dreams. In order for those to happen, I have to lead by example to the best of my abilities and that means constantly working and striving to improve.

Filed Under: My life, Stereotypes Tagged With: beauty, daughter, equality, feminism, feminist, gender stereotypes, girl, influence, physical appearance, self-worth, society, stereotype, value, woman

For Your Reading Pleasure // How to Talk to Little Girls

July 20, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Lisa Bloom

We live in a world full of gender stereotypes.  Even before our children are born, the way they are meant to fit into and experience the world is dictated for them.  Little girls are ‘pretty princesses’ and little boys are ‘big and strong.’  Girls get inundated with pink, while boys get blue.  Girls get dolls, and boys get trucks.  It goes on and on.  This article by Lisa Bloom touches on one half of an issue that has been weighing heavily on my mind.

I’m extremely sensitive to gender stereotypes, primarily in how they affect the station of women in society.  I wholeheartedly agree with the point that Bloom is making.  We need to engage the minds’ of our girls and stop putting so much focus on the superficial.  However, I also believe that it’s important for little girls to hear that they are beautiful, especially since we live in a society that is constantly telling them that they will never be pretty enough.  So how do we strike this balance?  How do we instill in our daughters the truth of their beauty without making it the focal point of their lives?  Women are often lead to believe that they can be either beautiful or smart, but almost never both.  How can we break down these notions?

I mentioned earlier that this article only touches on one half of the issue at hand, and I said that because it fails to touch on how we talk to little boys.  This to me is crucial.  Not only will the battle for true equality never be won unless men are advocating for it just as fiercely as women are, but we are also sending our boys many messages about their own roles and the roles of their sisters in this world.  When we tell a little boy that he runs like a girl, we are really telling him that girls are ‘less than’.  When we tell our sons that big boys don’t cry, we’re really telling him that emotions are not a part of being a man.  The messages we send to boys are just as dangerous and insidious as the ones we are sending to girls, maybe even more so, since this is still a male dominated society.

The answer lies, in part, in actively engaging our children in discourse about the world around them and the messages that society is sending them.  We can’t shield them from the world or prevent them from being bombarded by these messages or even stop them from absorbing our own flaws.  What we can do is teach them to process all the information around them and to think about what they are taking in rather than mindlessly letting these things penetrate their consciousness.  I can ask my son what he thinks about when the phrase, ‘you blank like a girl’, is used, and we can discuss its intricacies and the effect they have on the people that hear them.  If I’m ever blessed with a daughter, I can sit down with her to talk about self worth and the idea of beauty and how it isn’t really what society wants us to believe it is.  I can also accept Lisa Bloom’s challenge to leave the superficial out when talking to little girls I meet, but I also leave you with a challenge of my own:  Let’s try to elevate the conversation with any children we meet, not just girls.  When we meet little boys, lets talk to them about something other than their Spider-man pajamas or their train collection.  Instead let us engage our children in a higher level of discourse and by doing so empower the next generation to bring about lasting change to the benefit of society and the world.

So go read this.

Filed Under: For Your Reading Pleasure, Stereotypes Tagged With: article, boys, children, for your reading pleasure, gender stereotypes, girls, parenting, social discourse, society, stereotype

For Your Viewing Pleasure // Embarrassed

July 8, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 2 Comments

This beautiful spoken word by Hollie McNish, really hit home for me.  For the most part I have chosen to breastfeed sans nursing cover because I hate how this society has deemed that the only acceptable role for breasts is a sexual one.  Women dancing around topless and completely exposed in a Justin Timberlake music video: totally fine, but a mother feeding her child in public: shameful and disgusting.

This must change.  I’m all for modesty.  In fact I believe modesty is empowering, but with that said, I do not believe a mother breastfeeding her child is in any way immodest.  Breasts are meant to feed babies.  This is their primary purpose and function.  What’s truly disgusting is twisting them into something so over-sexualized that they basically reduce a woman to the summation of her parts.

Am I totally comfortable nursing Asher in public?  No, not at all, far from it.  But it comes down to the principle for me.  I want to take a stand.  My heart aches every time I hear a story of a mother being shamed for nursing, or asked to leave or to cover up.  I feel like it shouldn’t be something we need to think twice about, or worry about or debate.  So I choose to nurse my son without a cover with the hopes that one day this will become a none issue.  Breast is best after all.

Filed Under: Breastfeeding, For Your Reading Pleasure Tagged With: babies, breast milk, breastfeeding, embarrassed, nursing, nursing cover, public, shamed, society, spoken word, youtube

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