Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eye roll. If your daughter is a bossy jerk then I would tell my daughter to steer clear.
Eventually she will meet up with my daughter...when she is working for her as my secretary.
You added jerk, because you are living in 1950s when it comes to attitudes about women and "bossy"
Not the PP but you sound like an asshole. There's nothing wrong with being a secretary. I hope my own daughter learns to treat all people with respect regardless of their occupation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eye roll. If your daughter is a bossy jerk then I would tell my daughter to steer clear.
Eventually she will meet up with my daughter...when she is working for her as my secretary.
You added jerk, because you are living in 1950s when it comes to attitudes about women and "bossy"
Anonymous wrote:Eye roll. If your daughter is a bossy jerk then I would tell my daughter to steer clear.
Anonymous wrote:Eye roll. If your daughter is a bossy jerk then I would tell my daughter to steer clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know where she got this from (just kidding- dad and I both have strong personalities and are go-getter types) but over the last year or two, my 5 year old's personality has really emerged, for better or worse.
-Extremely extroverted and thrives on social interaction.
-Kind, but intensely competitive at the same time
-Bossy- very, very, very bossy
-Very bright
-Analytical in the kindergartener sense- thinks about the "why's" and the "how's" and tries to get around things, very quick to point out rules/policies/actions that don't make sense to her
I'm curious if anyone had a little girl like this and what they ended up to be like as an adolescent or young adult. I am not sure how to encourage the good while also shutting down the bad. I have Sheryl Sandberg in the back of my head, saying that we shouldn't refer to little girls as bossy.. but she really is bossy, and I'm afraid this is going to hurt her socially. I guess I'm just not sure what to expect as a parent. I know there are plenty of other kids with this personality type, I just don't know any of them personally.
Thanks.
They grow up to be academic superstars, convert their smarts into big law partnership, and bank fat stacks of cash while never again talking to the asshole, misogynistic parents who called them names like "bossy."
Or at least that's my story.
Anonymous wrote:I be some a lobbyist ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, is your DD allowed to get away with this behavior? Are theirrelevant boundaries that need to be observed in your family?
What? WTF? Seriously?
Little girls who are "bossy" are natural leaders. They have terrific, innate leadership skills. It's not something that she "gets away with." It's something that is a tremendous asset and which she needs to learn to harness to make the world a better place.
Girls that are bossy are not natural leaders. Natural leaders take control sometimes yes, but they also listen to others, digest what people are saying around them and come up with better ways to do things.
Bossy girls on the playground always tell other kids what to do, don't listen or care what the other kids want to do or say, always is waiting to get a word in edge-wise, ignores adults, always has a rationale as to why they did something their way (even when they know it is wrong) and then stomp if they don't get their way.
Please don't think that bossy is a positive word. It has nothing to do with being a leader.
An immature leader is bossy. MANY bossy children turn into leaders, and they have the strength to do what is needed. You seem to be making a leap here that people can't learn and refine their skills.
A bossy child whose parents work with them and who can learn self-control and harnessing their power can and do turn into leaders. But at 8 years old, they aren't going to have those skills yet. Leadership is learned, but there are innate skills (often that manifest as bossy) that can lend to having a personality style well-suited for leading.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she is pretty, she will meet someone fabulous one day.
If she is average or below in looks, it will be a tough road for her.
Yep. It's really held Hillary Clinton, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Madeline Albright, Condi Rice, Amy Schumer, Tammy Duckworth, Elizabeth Warren, Loretta Lynch, Michelle Obama, Sheryl Sandberg, Barbara Walters, Barbara Streisand, and Margaret Cho back.
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If anything, it seems like bright, bossy girls only succeed if they AREN'T pretty.
I don't understand this sub-thread at ALL. A lot of the women on that list are (or "were," in their youth) very pretty. Even most of the "ugliest" on that list are/were pretty objectively better than average.
Michelle Obama? Really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she is pretty, she will meet someone fabulous one day.
If she is average or below in looks, it will be a tough road for her.
Yep. It's really held Hillary Clinton, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Madeline Albright, Condi Rice, Amy Schumer, Tammy Duckworth, Elizabeth Warren, Loretta Lynch, Michelle Obama, Sheryl Sandberg, Barbara Walters, Barbara Streisand, and Margaret Cho back.
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If anything, it seems like bright, bossy girls only succeed if they AREN'T pretty.
Anonymous wrote:I do recess duty. Bossiness does NOT seem to be the biggest problem kids face - rather it is meanness (purposely doing things to get a rise out of another child) and exclusion and rough play that gets personal. I wouldn't be overly concerned with bossiness.