And if you don't have daughters then obviously you have not experienced for yourself that some girls do this too. Including cement trucks. You really don't know, PP. |
So what happens when they are adults and have to get a job that, wait for it, involves sitting most of the day and behaving and not acting out? Or is that work only suited for women? Sitting down and being quiet isn't "acting like a girl." And lots of girls have trouble with it, too. Your post is revealing, though. I'm guessing your kids are unruly, but you justify it with "boys being boys" or "they're all boy!" Ugh. |
Alternatively, let's drop the stereotypes, period. Now that's a good idea. (And yes, people actually are saying that quiet, book-loving boys are not proper boys; they're girly boys*.) *Girls, ew. Gay men, ew. |
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So what you're REALLY saying is that your boys were born interested in girly things. After all, you are a girl, and those are the things you were naturally interested in. Thus, they must by nature be girly things. See how much sense it all makes? |
| No one is saying you made your boys into boys. What we are saying is that the "way they are" isn't because they are boys. You could have girls who are just like that. Being "all boy" just means having male sex parts. It doesn't mean all of this other personality stuff that occurs in males and females. Boys who aren't like your boys aren't less boy than yours, so to say that those personality traits make your boys "all boy" is ridiculous and absurd. |
I'm sure there are. And my assumption would be that they are being themselves, not being coerced into playing with cement trucks by their parents, same with my boys. |
No the research I've seen also applies to high schoolers. I don't know they have studied elementary aged kids (their brains are more plastic and so may recover better but no way, NO WAY, would I chance it especially before research has been done). BTW, the "feminination of boys" fear has been going on at least since the early 1900s (groups like the boy scots were formed because a fear our boys were becoming soft, not allowed to be boys etc). |
I'll add to this: the PP who was "educated" by her sons that they innately like "boy" things - do you realize that you are putting your own filter on what they see? I'm guessing they've pointed out balloons, too, but that didn't trigger your internal "boy thing" alarm. But you noticed the cement trucks, and like most parents, you continued to point out objects of similar interest. And there you go - you've very subtly influenced your boys into liking "boy stuff". |
I don't feel that way at all, about gays or girls. i am always defending "princess culture" and pink and tiaras becuase these "girlie girls" are always vilified on these boards. leave them alone. Let people be themselves. Go ahead and drop stereotypes -- who cares? The results are the same -- you will find that most boys fall NEAR one end of the spectrum, a few fall on the very end, some are in the middle, a few are on the other side and fewer still are on the far other side. Same with girls. It takes all kinds to make the world go round -- and that includes the majority of people who have gender-typical behavior. Let people be. It is no slight against you to let others exist as they are (even "all boy" boys). |
Oh my goodness, yes dear, your male child is a boy too. No need to get your feathers all ruffled. Again, he doesn't fit the mold. Ask him when he's older (high school/college) if he feels he fits into the stereotypical athletic, jock like male characteristic. He'll say no, then ask if he feels like he's not 100% boy because of it, he'll say no. Your precious boy's ego will not be bruised for not being labelled "all boy", this is all about YOU. |
How about "typical boy" instead of "all boy"? Is that more accurate? |
No one is saying we should dress all kids alike and make them all like same things. Instead, let them be individuals. Don't imply with stupid sayings that a boy is less of a boy if he isn't athletic or into trucks. That doesn't mean that we can't let boys be into trucks or be athletic. let's just not imply that they're "more boy" than boys who aren't. It's really not that complicated. It's not about making everyone the same. It's about letting kids be interested in what they're interested in without suggesting that their interests make them any more or less of a boy or any more or less of a girl. |
Normal human development and puberty takes care of that. But a 8 yo boy and a 38 yo man, very different. Maybe more men would stop acting like boys if they were ever allowed to be only when they were one. But your thinking has led to the feminization of boys. (And of tom boys) |
Look at rugby... No helmet... Less head injuries. |