Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Dear girls of the world today...

Dear girls of the world today;

There is nothing wrong with you.

Everything I see, everything I read, everything I hear, is geared toward telling you that something is wrong with you. You're too fat. You're too thin. Your skin is terrible. You look too young. You look too old. You're too smart, you're too dumb, you talk too much, you don't talk enough, you're broken, you're flawed, you're bad. And all those things are lies. They are exaggerations. They are designed to pick on the things you feel insecure about, and convince you that you will never be happy unless you force yourself into their standards of perfection.

They will tell you that you are weak; that girls can't deal with spiders or do math or love snakes or run nations or be scientists. They will tell you that you must be indecisive, flighty, more interested in the interests that are chosen for you than the ones that you choose for yourself. They will tell you that you have to change yourself to suit them, and then they will keep moving the goalposts, so that you're never done changing, and you're never allowed to be you. And they are wrong. They are so, so wrong, and you are better than the lies they tell you.

If you are a girl, you are a girl. Period, finish, end statement. It doesn't matter what you look like or what you enjoy doing. It doesn't matter what your assigned birth sex is or was. It doesn't matter who or what or why you love. All that matters is that you love, and that you accept that you are you, and you are awesome.

It's okay if you love pink. Some girls genuinely do. I genuinely do. Once, we would all have been viewed as cross-dressing and weird for liking pink, which was a male color. Times change. If you want to own your own pinkness, do, and don't let anyone tell you that makes you less of a feminist.

It's okay if you hate pink. You're not denying your gender or letting down the side, or anything else like that. You're a person, and there are a lot of colors out there to fall in love with. I recommend orange, green, and anything that sears your retinas.

Frills and lace and high heels and makeup are all fine. So are denim and combat boots and tattoos. So is everything between those extremes.

Collect dolls or knives or books or interesting rocks. Watch horror movies or romances or cartoons. Run races; go to spas. Eat cake or lettuce. Buy yourself a toy light saber and make your own wooooom noises while you wave it around; build a cardboard castle and chuck plush mushrooms at your would-be rescuers. Live your life, the way you want to live it, and understand that no one can kick you out of "the girl club" for doing it wrong, because you're not.

You're doing it exactly right, and I love you for that.

Corn maze love,
Me.
Tags: contemplation
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  • 381 comments
It's amazing what a good set of people can do for your attitude. I grew up in a house full of books, with two parents who, despite having come of age in the 50s (and early 60s, but that's still 50s in terms of culture), had no trouble understanding that there is nothing lesser about being female. My dad taught me how to use power tools and would brush my (then) long hair. My mom—paleontology geek from the age of nine in Wyoming, where you could actually get a pretty decent hands-on time—taught me about dinosaurs to the point where I can still identify a number of them on sight, and can come up with most of an alphabet of them without Google. (Allosaurus, Brachiosaurus, Carnotaurus, Deinonychus...) I was in Girl Scouts but wished I could be in Boy Scouts and actually got my wish when I got hired at a BSA summer camp. There was some casual misogyny (mostly from one source) but a determined effort to ignore it meant that I could really mess with people's heads when I wanted to. (Conservative Mormon troop leader asks what major I'm pursuing. "Engineering." Internal amusement as you could see him trying to reconcile that with his views of what's appropriate while not saying anything rude.)(Incidentally, decided against engineering in the long run but got enough to understand some pretty nifty physics concepts.)

Anyway. I've seen far too many of my friends have self-esteem issues and body-image issues and all I can say is, cut that crap out of your life. Cancel the magazines—studies have shown that just seeing the Photoshopped models makes women feel worse about themselves. Don't watch the shows that promote the bad images of women, nor the commercials that come with them. Kick butt and take names however you want to.

And look forward to the day when they stop using the phrase "strong female character." You don't have "strong female characters," Ms. McGuire, you have strong protagonists. Period.
I, too, look forward to that day.