Anonymous wrote:Another mom of a middle school girl here -- she was way into princesses until about age 7, then all of the skirts, dresses, pink, purple, glitter, etc. , all went in the giveaway bag. Now she's 13, and she asked if we could go to see Frozen 2 -- she, DH, and I all enjoyed it. DD and I were singing to the soundtrack the other day in the car, as I was taking her to learn about the weight room so she can get stronger to help her softball game. As others have said, "Let it go." The forbidden is always more exciting - better to discover it with your child and help her draw her own conclusions.
Anonymous wrote:Frozen is great. The princesses save each other and everyone else.
No damsels in distress being rescued by a man.
Anonymous wrote:Tremendous amount of defensiveness and projection in this thread. Not being into the whole Disney Princess machinery does not equal having a problem with frilly dresses and “girliness.” In fact, the conflation of the two kind of speaks to the success of said machinery. Also confused about how one is stubbornly and foolishly resisting The Inevitable Princessing by just... not watching a movie that, in many cases, the kid never even asks for. You MUST simply GET OVER YOURSELF and show your kid random movies you don’t care for— as if it’s actually hard work to simply... not show them to a kid who isn’t asking for them. If your kid is asking for them, well, that’s another story. But it’s totally fine for a parent not to show a THREE year old whatever they’d rather the child didn’t see... even if it’s a mild preference on the part of the parent. You don’t have to show them anything!
Anonymous wrote:Tremendous amount of defensiveness and projection in this thread. Not being into the whole Disney Princess machinery does not equal having a problem with frilly dresses and “girliness.” In fact, the conflation of the two kind of speaks to the success of said machinery. Also confused about how one is stubbornly and foolishly resisting The Inevitable Princessing by just... not watching a movie that, in many cases, the kid never even asks for. You MUST simply GET OVER YOURSELF and show your kid random movies you don’t care for— as if it’s actually hard work to simply... not show them to a kid who isn’t asking for them. If your kid is asking for them, well, that’s another story. But it’s totally fine for a parent not to show a THREE year old whatever they’d rather the child didn’t see... even if it’s a mild preference on the part of the parent. You don’t have to show them anything!
Anonymous wrote:Tremendous amount of defensiveness and projection in this thread. Not being into the whole Disney Princess machinery does not equal having a problem with frilly dresses and “girliness.” In fact, the conflation of the two kind of speaks to the success of said machinery. Also confused about how one is stubbornly and foolishly resisting The Inevitable Princessing by just... not watching a movie that, in many cases, the kid never even asks for. You MUST simply GET OVER YOURSELF and show your kid random movies you don’t care for— as if it’s actually hard work to simply... not show them to a kid who isn’t asking for them. If your kid is asking for them, well, that’s another story. But it’s totally fine for a parent not to show a THREE year old whatever they’d rather the child didn’t see... even if it’s a mild preference on the part of the parent. You don’t have to show them anything!