No, of course my boys don't go to MCPS.. They go to an all boys school where they are allowed to be boys. Yes, they play tackle fottball. |
But people are not saying, "He's a stereotypical boy." They are saying, "He's all boy." |
| hey OP is your son circumcised? if not, correct your neighbor and tell her you son's not 'all boys' at all.. best rebuff ever! |
It's a self-fulfilling stereotype. THAT is the problem!!!!! By continuing to use stupid phrases like that and continuing to promote that stereotype, we create that reality. Let's drop the stereotype. There's nothing intrinsic about being a girl that makes her less interested in movement, in nature, in running around a playground. |
+1 |
Ha ha! My husband was telling me just the other night that in high school he used play soccer with a bunch of boys who went to an all boy school, and they were all, every last one of them, socially inept when girls were around. So good luck with that! |
See, now I am confused. About half of the children in my child's class at my child's MCPS school are boys. They are boys before school, they are boys during school, they are boys after school, they know they are boys, everybody knows they are boys, there's no secret -- there they are, all day long, boys being boys. At what school are boys not allowed to be boys? Girls' schools? |
+1. Exactly what I thought. Let's stop parroting these dumb sayings that perpetuate these outdated stereotypes. "Being athletic is a stereotypically boyish thing" is like saying "being quiet and obedient is a stereotypically girlish thing." |
semantics. you are insufferable. |
Well, and that's the other issue. In my experience, people who use the phrase and believe in it tend to be homophobic. |
Nobody is making them do or not do anything - but without media influence they just look like kids (not boys or girls), planting seedlings, holding worms, filling wagons with leaves to bring to the "dump", jumping off tree stumps, playing ring around the rosey, sweeping the grass. They all come in covered in mud. In the classroom, my son spends a lot of time playing with trucks on wooden roads, but so do the girls. He also cooks in the play kitchen, wears a baby doll, dresses up like a gnome (that part I don't get?), and loves the sparkly bracelet he got at a girl's birthday party. He has no concept of boy or girl toys. He's going to public school next year, and I know he will then be around peers who watch a lot of TV, so this is the end of that. I am not looking forward to his shrinking his world to just what he thinks he is supposed to be interested in. He does love (love!) trains, so no big harm done, but why can't he like trains and glitter? Because he will be told so by his peers who have been told so by the media. I have seen differences in my boy and girl children, but those mostly have to do with how wired the girl is for socialization - eye contact earlier, notices kids much earlier than him, upset when her brother is upset (he isn't bothered by her crying but she is by his). It has NOT manifested itself in stereotypical girly girlness or all boyness. Those are invented, imo. She did like dolls earlier than he ever did - but that is social - and he likes them a lot now (though he likes trains and elevators more). |
Really, no one should be playing tackle football. This isn't a gender thing. The brain research that is emerging is very scary. One concussion can cause eventual, long-term damage, and repeated concussions are devastating (personality changes!). We can't bubble-wrap our kids, but we can keep them out of activities likely to cause concussions! |
I wasn't talking about hitting people or being aggressive. Where did that come from? It has nothing to do with this. |
| I hate that phrase, too (mom of boys here), and it amazes me how many people in my generation still use it. Ninety nine times out of one hundred it is used either in a bragging way by the parent/grandparent of the child (read: thump chest (dad) or smile condescendingly (mom) while saying he's all boy!) or in a negative way by an observer (read: your kid is unruly, destructive, impulsive, etc.). This kind of comment is insulting to girls and boys. |
Because in my experience, that is the actual behavior that people try to spin as "rough and tumble." |