Yes, but it's not about boys. Girls aren't competing with boys, but with other girls.
I mean think about it- if I get dressed up and go out to some shin-dig, I'm looking at the other women, not the men. If some woman makes a catty remark about something I'm wearing it bothers me a lot more than if some man does. Even I 'really' don't give a shit what she thinks it still sticks in your head a bit.
I can say that 'if' I had a girl, I would seriously consider an all-girls school. I may even think about it for high school for the dude. As much as I 'liked' being around boys in school, they were a HUGE distraction for me. I never fell for the 'act dumb to get the boys' thing but lots of girls do.
In some ways I think we're trapped by the fact that we have choices that not everyone has. I mean my clients certainly don't have much of a choice in where they send their kids. Maybe they can get them into a magnet or charter school but for the most part- those kids just walk out the door to the local public school and the matter is decided.
I'm struggling with making the 'right' choices. But IS there a right choice? and if there is, how do you know it's the right one except in hindsight? (same with wrong ones!)
Heck- I walked to the end of the street with all of the other kids in the neighborhood (except for the few who went to private school and we honestly didn't hang out with them, not even in the summers) and we all caught the bus and that was that.
Jenn
I mean think about it- if I get dressed up and go out to some shin-dig, I'm looking at the other women, not the men. If some woman makes a catty remark about something I'm wearing it bothers me a lot more than if some man does. Even I 'really' don't give a shit what she thinks it still sticks in your head a bit.
I can say that 'if' I had a girl, I would seriously consider an all-girls school. I may even think about it for high school for the dude. As much as I 'liked' being around boys in school, they were a HUGE distraction for me. I never fell for the 'act dumb to get the boys' thing but lots of girls do.
In some ways I think we're trapped by the fact that we have choices that not everyone has. I mean my clients certainly don't have much of a choice in where they send their kids. Maybe they can get them into a magnet or charter school but for the most part- those kids just walk out the door to the local public school and the matter is decided.
I'm struggling with making the 'right' choices. But IS there a right choice? and if there is, how do you know it's the right one except in hindsight? (same with wrong ones!)
Heck- I walked to the end of the street with all of the other kids in the neighborhood (except for the few who went to private school and we honestly didn't hang out with them, not even in the summers) and we all caught the bus and that was that.
Jenn
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