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Are we creating “teen angst”?

posted:  27:04:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Parenting, Culture

Interesting articles here and here by Dr. Robert Epstein.

Dr. Epstein maintains that the rebellious and irresponsible attitudes we see in teens are simply the result of artificially extending childhood, sometimes well into the 20’s. Cultures that do not recognize the period of “adolescence” do not have the phenomenon of teen angst.

“In most nonindustrialized societies, young people are integrated into adult society as soon as they are capable, and there is no sign of teen turmoil. Many cultures do not even have a term for adolescence. But we not only created this stage of life: We declared it inevitable. In 1904, American psychologist G. Stanley Hall said it was programmed by evolution. He was wrong.”

In recent surveys I’ve found that American teens are subjected to more than 10 times as many restrictions as mainstream adults, twice as many restrictions as active-duty U.S. Marines, and even twice as many as incarcerated felons. Psychologist Diane Dumas and I also found a correlation between infantilization and psychological dysfunction. The more young people are infantilized, the more psychopathology they show.”

Dr. Epstein has written a new book called “The Case Against Adolescence: Rediscovering The Adult In Every Teen”.

What do you think?

Do we artificially extend childhood?

Could this artificial extension be the very thing that causes teens to act irresponsibly?

Should we be giving our teens more freedom and responsibility, ie treating them more like adults?

I’d love to hear your thoughts…..I especially wonder about this in the church. My experience has been that in the church, we place even more restrictions on our teens than in the culture at large.

If you have or know a teen girl….

posted:  13:03:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Women, Parenting

The Goal

Empower Teen Girls and Save One, Ten, or Ten Thousand From Rape or Abduction

The Film

In what some describe as The Coolest High School Project Ever, two of Portland’s St. Mary’s Academy high school girls expect to put predators and date rapists out of business nationwide when their new film Just Yell Fire released on September 28th. Just Yell Fire is free to any teen girl either as a DVD or download from the website.

Dallas Jessup (14) and Catherine Wehage (15) saw the actual abduction of a teenage girl caught on a surveillance video camera on the television news. The abducted girl was soon found dead; her killer had a history of violence. Over the next weeks in two separate incidents there were attempted abductions of teen girls in Portland. They did some research on crime statistics and found that 1 in 4 girls presently in middle school or high school will be date-raped before they graduate college. The news is filled with brutal things happening to teenage girls. They knew that none of this had to happen and set out to find a solution.

I have not watched the film yet, as it is a huge download, but I intend to watch it and if appropriate, show it to my 3 girls. It apparently has 10 techniques for defense, has a dating bill of rights and talks about date rape. I happened to see a piece on it today on the news. Anything we can do to educate and empower our girls…

Where is Liberty’s Chastity Belt?

posted:  05:02:07,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  What hacks me off!, human trafficking, Women, Parenting

Oh boy. Here it comes. Another rant. I’ve just been full of them lately. It all started like this…

I was reading Molly’s many posts on women, patriarchy, male rule, and her ongoing recovery. Molly is absolutely brilliant and I encourage you to take the time to read her well thought out posts on these matters. Then, I hopped over to another favorite blog, that spoke about an article that highlighted “Purity Balls”.

I read the article with interest, but got a little creeped out towards the end of the article,

When Lauren Wilson hit adolescence, her father gave her a purity ring and a charm necklace with a tiny lock and key. Randy Wilson took the key, which he will hand over to her husband on their wedding day.

So, dad will keep the key to her locket, until Lauren’s future husband shows up. What strikes me is that we pretend that the key from the locket is the key to Lauren’s heart. But it’s not, is it? It’s the key to her mental and emotional chastity belt. Please don’t misunderstand me. I have 3 daugters and my hope, desire, and prayer is that they do not have sex until they are married. But I find it a bit sick to have a dad hold this key, and then “hand it over” to her husband, as though Lauren is simply a possession to be controlled. I don’t really have a problem with a “purity ring” or a “purity pledge”, but the “purity locket” just reeks of male domination over female sexuality. We wonder why we have so many women in the church that are hung up over sex.
NEWSFLASH

If we continue to imply that fathers and husbands have control over women’s sexuality, we will also continue to find that women do not know what it means to be sexual!!!

END OF NEWSFLASH-Resume your prior activity.

From a “purity locket” website:

It is important to properly set up the evening when you will present your daughter with the locket. Start by explaining the “covenant” part of the equation. Begin with, “Sue, thank you for this evening. It is one we both will always treasure. I want to commemorate this day and our covenant with this.” Then open the jewelry box and let the gold do the talking for just a moment. Then say, “This locket is handmade from precious metal - just the way God made you. This locket and what it stands for is the sentinel of your heart. (READ:vagina) Here’s why: from this day forward you will wear this locket as often as you wish. It will send the statement that you are waiting for your husband. It is more than that though, Sue. It has a lock on it. It can only be opened with this key. I will guard the key until your wedding. On that day, I will present the key to my little girl’s heart to your husband. He will take the key and open the locket, the only one ever to do so.”

Now, I want to be fair, so I will include this part of the website.

DO’s AND Don’ts

# Do let your daughter know this is not a setup process to “ostracize” her if she slips up sometime in her life.
# Do let her know how unconditional love applies from both you and God throughout her life - both now and always.
# Do let her know that all decisions have consequences and the past is irrevocable.

“We love you. Unconditionally. But remember, if you screw up, it is irrevocable.” Excuse me, but WHAT THE HELL????

As I was doing an internet search on purity lockets, I somehow came across another website that sells a line of dolls with the following vision.

The Beautiful Girlhood Collection aspires, by the grace of God, to encourage the rebuilding of a culture of virtuous womanhood. In a world that frowns on femininity, that minimizes motherhood, and that belittles the beauty of being a true woman of God, we dare to believe that the biblical vision for girlhood is a glorious vision. It is, in fact — a beautiful vision. It is a vision for purity and contentment, for faith and fortitude, for enthusiasm and industry, for heritage and home, and for joy and friendship. It is a vision so bright and so wonderful that it must be boldly proclaimed. We are here to proclaim it.

Note that purity and contentment are the first things that are listed. Way at the bottom of the list, we have joy and perhaps if you behave, your husband may let you have a friend or two. One of the dolls sold on this website is called “The Liberty Doll” —HA!

When a girl plays with a doll, she is preparing to be a mommy someday. Her first role model is her own mother, and her first opportunity at role-playing is with her dolls. With this in mind, we are pleased to offer the Liberty doll for your girls to cherish for years to come and then pass onto a future daughter.

Again, please understand me. I am NOT opposed to motherhood! Being a mother to my 3 daughters has been one of the most fulfilling things I have ever done. I value and cherish the fact that I was able to stay home with them. In fact, we made many sacrifices so that I could be a stay at home mom. I believe that being a mother is one of the most empowering things that we do, as women. BUT–this whole idea, purity lockets, teaching girls that the most important thing is that they are pure, content and industrious at home….it’s wrong. We are missing the point. I want to teach my daughters that they are STRONG, EMPOWERED FOLLOWERS OF JESUS. That THEY can change the world. That God intends for them to play a role in the REDEMPTION of the world, and that the role goes beyond learning to stay pure and bake cookies (though purity and cookies are great concepts).

Perhaps if we taught our girls to be strong, empowered women, we wouldn’t have as much of the game playing and posturing that we find among so many women in the church. Molly has a facinating post entitled: Matthew Henry on Women. Please take the time to read the whole thing, but I want to steal a bit of it here.

Matthew Henry, on Genesis 3, states:

Though perfect in her kind, yet we may suppose her inferior to Adam in knowledge, and strength, and presence of mind…. Observe here how mercy is mixed with wrath in this sentence. The woman shall have sorrow, but it shall be in bringing forth children, and the sorrow shall be forgotten for joy that a child is born, Jn. 16:21. She shall be subject, but it shall be to her own husband that loves her, not to a stranger, or an enemy: the sentence was not a curse, to bring her to ruin, but a chastisement, to bring her to repentance.

To which, Molly states:

Repentance? See, this really confuses me, because it appears that female subjection is never taken away, so bringing her into repentance does…what? Repentance so that she might live meekly under a curse that is never lifted? I’m not sure I understand. With Fatherly discipline, one would see repentance and the discipline would be lifted. But, it would seem to these theologians (again, if I’m understanding them correctly), the punishment of Eve never ends. The best one can do is to bear it patiently with meekness, for being born female is to be born under a special sentance that the Cross could not fully atone for.

BRILLIANT. Just brilliant. A special sentence that the Cross can not fully atone for. We teach our daughters that women are under a curse that the cross did not/will not atone for.

Knitting and knitting and knitting….

posted:  17:12:06,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Parenting, knitting

I thought I was really preparing well. I began my knitting for Christmas in early November. Little did I know that one of the projects I chose would end up taking forever. I found an absolutely fantabulous Griffindor (Harry Potter) scarf pattern for my youngest daughter. However, this stupid thing must have taken 40-45 hours to knit. I chose to knit a scarf for my middle daughter, mittens for my eldest and yet, another scarf for my aunt. I’m down to one mitten to knit. 8 days before Christmas, so I think I’ll make it.

In the meantime, however, some of our “adopted” sons have also asked me to knit for them. Mittens, scarf and yet another Harry Potter scarf (which I can guarantee you I will adjust the pattern, so it doesn’t take eleventy hundred hours). I am afraid I will be knitting from now until my first social security check comes.

I have all the Christmas presents wrapped (except for the one lonely mitten waiting for it’s mate). However, even with my preparedness, I will be knitting like a crazy woman in an attempt to get these addtional items finished as close to Christmas as possible. My posting levels may be down, as my fingers will be bleeding and mangled.

Next year, I’m doing nose cosies!

Nice?

posted:  15:12:06,  by:  morethanstone,  in categories:  Random Thoughts, Parenting

Here we go. My eldest daughter, 18, is moving out. She has found an adorable studio apartment and will be signing the lease this weekend. Of course, I have mixed emotions. I am excited for her. I am scared. I am sad. I can’t really fathom her living somewhere else. Over my years of parenting, I have heard so many parents say that they were happy and relieved when their 18 year old went away to college, or moved into a dorm or apartment. That there was just too much conflict between the child and parent. I do not feel that way. I’m just beginning to cross over that boundary that my daughter and I relate more and more like equals and less and less like parent and child. I’m enjoying it. If there was a time that I would have preferred she moved out to avoid conflict, it would have been when she was 15. Of course, I think that’s against the law.

She will only be a few miles away, so I should consider myself fortunate that she’s not in a college halfway across the country, or as several of her friends, IN another country. But call me selfish; I will miss her coming home every night and recounting her day. She’s an avid and humorous storyteller. She can make the most mundane event entertaining. In fact, I’m certain that her new venture of independence will yield mountains of great stories.

Since my children are all 2 years apart, I knew that once the first one left home, (even if she did come back), that it would be with head spinning speed that the others would follow. We will be making trips this spring to universities for my middle child. My youngest is now a freshman in High School. Yep. Head spinning speed. My husband I will turn around one day very soon to find an empty house. When my children were small, my husband and I would “fantasize” about the empty nest years. “Won’t it be wonderful,” we would say to each other, “to have the house clean and to be able to do what we want. Won’t it be nice to
Sleep through the night,
Not change diapers;
Not have to potty train,
Not have to carpool,
Not have activities and clubs and games to keep track of,
Not have teachers telling us that our daughters talk too much in class,
Not have to ground anyone,
Not have to deal with the drama that only middle school girls can engage in,
Not have to consider whether we should buy stock in Kotex,
Not have to worry about nose piercing,
Not have to worry about 16 year olds driving,
Not have to worry about boys and dating.”

Well, now that I’m staring it in the face, I’m not sure it will be nice. It might be quiet. But nice…. I’m not so sure.

May 2008
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