Everyone's in a tizzy about
it right now. Again.
Slut-shaming.
First it was Miley's VMA
tragic travesty with its twerking gone wrong, sleaze, and mocking black women. In
the last couple of weeks, Miley has probably received more letters than Santa
Claus.
Then, a Mrs. Hall went
viral, scolding those lascivious girls who post scantily-clad photos of
themselves on social media. How dare
those harlots flaunt their wares in front of her wholesome sons! Sons who, were
photographed in the same shirtless, smiling and seductive poses she condemned.
Her detractors, rightfully
so, unleashed hell upon her.
Enter the second wave.
Slut-shamer-shaming.
Women who disapprove of
teenage girls posting photos of themselves braless must be fearful ladies,
threatened by a teenager’s sexuality.
Wrong. Mrs. Hall’s post was outrageous, but the
above ain’t necessarily so.
I don’t fear a young girl’s
sexuality. I just think broadcasting it to the world online is a horrible idea.
I’m a dancer and dance
teacher. I have taught hundreds of
teenagers and choreographed scores of hot little numbers on them. It’s my job to help dancers find and develop
their artistry and individuality, in which sexuality plays a definite part. Dancing without sensuality, without sexuality,
is flat and boring – like watching paint dry.
What I fear is that girls
are getting the idea that being dazzlingly, traffic-stoppingly sexy is the only
thing that matters. I hate that secretaries of state, presidential candidates, professors, artists, heads of corporations – brilliant women are praised or dismissed based on their
physiques and hairstyles.
It enrages me.
Surely there are some
badass-I-don’t-take-shit-from-guys-I-post-these-photos-‘cuz-I-like-to girls out
there. I'm willing to bet however, that many girls show these photos because
they think Maxim-style photos are the best way, if not the only way, to get a
man’s stamp of approval.
Their brains don’t
matter. Their strength doesn’t matter. Their power is a function of how sexy, how available,
they can make themselves for a man.
I never want my daughter to
believe that.
A woman's relationship to
her sexuality is a journey; my daughter will have to find her own way. As
much as I want her to have fun with her appearance, I want her to know that she
never has to be untrue to herself – to make herself into something she’s not –
for any man.
Ever.
I want her to feel free
enough to discover and experiment, while knowing that I'm there to talk. If she doesn't want my wisdom, I hope she has another trusted and older
woman friend there for her.
I want her to be free –
it’s her body after all. But I want her to be smart too.
We Gen Xers are getting
older. We are now shaking our heads saying, "These kids today!"
and longing for the good ol’ days of “Darling Nikki” and “Like a Virgin”. We
think the Millennials are the way they are because they were never told "no". Everybody told them everything was okay.
Let's be parents. Let's
guide our children. Let's help them make good choices. Let’s show them how to be responsible
citizens, drivers, friends, students, employees, and Internet users.
Let’s be there for them
when things don’t go their way.
But also let’s tell them
when they are wrong. Let’s tell them
when we think their choice is the b word.
Bad. Without shaming. Through
dialogue.
Shaming conjures up images
of scarlet letters and being pilloried in the town square. A humiliating form
of punishment that now seems archaic and cruel.
Not something we want to
return to.
A healthy sense of shame, however, is
an integral part of one’s sense of self-worth. Our girls can enjoy their bodies
and clothes and sex while staying true to themselves.
A sense of dignity and sexiness are not
mutually exclusive, and where they intersect depends on the individual. One woman's act
of confidence and defiance is another's act of self-betrayal.
And without question, it's not "asking for it". A woman can and
should be able to post sexy photographs of herself online if she so chooses.
But why does she need to?
BRAVO! Keesha, you have done it again. This is the most spot-on brilliantly worded piece I've read on this issue. Yes, yes, a hundred times over.
ReplyDeleteThank you for bringing this discussion to the middle and away from the polarised debate it was becoming.
If you were on stage, you'd be enjoying a standing ovation right now.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, Michelle. That d-word -- dialogue that needed to come into play here stayed largely absent. I worry that the desire to go viral makes people banish nuanced thought and arguments, although I suppose being dogmatic can feel pretty powerful.
DeleteThat's an excellent question: why does she need to? It all comes down to the individual, their reasoning, their motivation. I agree, it hardly seems necessary. But wrong? It doesn't fit way down on that end of the spectrum, either. Well said!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Robyn. I have done some sad things for male attention in my day, and I suppose these photos are the 2013 version. Looking back and seeing our cringeworthy actions is a part of growing up, but isn't some real-time analysis and conversation with others (and ourselves) a good thing? There I go with the questions again!
DeleteBoom, Keesha. "Let's tell them when we think their choice is...bad...through dialogue." Yessss!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you! If we don't stop telling our kids it's all okay, our kids will make the Millennials look like Pilgrims.
DeleteThis is an excellent post. And your last sentence was spot on. Why would she need to? So glad I read this.-Ashley
ReplyDeleteThank you Ashley! I guess we are all entitled to our cringeworthy moments, but there are definitely some where I wish someone had told me, "Do not do this, it will make you sick later."
Delete