Parental Guidance: Speaking Frankly With Girls

(Andrea Bruce - Staff)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007

You thought your nights of lying awake would start with your daughter's first date. But she's still just a kid, and already you're losing sleep over her appetite for diet tips and body-baring get-ups. Deborah Roffman, author of "Sex and Sensibility: The Thinking Parent's Guide to Talking Sense About Sex" (Perseus Books, 2001), offers words of wisdom on some hot topics.

· What if your 10-year-old daughter wants to diet?

Roffman advises shifting the emphasis from an ideal of thinness to health consciousness. "The emphasis should be on eating healthy, feeling good about your body and being the best you can be, not on emulating some unrealistic standard," she says. "Girls are being trained to see beauty within a very narrow definition and to believe that's the one they have to fit themselves into." So go ahead and point out concerns you have about an excessive focus on thinness, she says.

This also is a great opportunity to explore your daughter's thinking, she adds. "I might ask, 'When you're with someone, what is it that you find attractive -- not just physically but in terms of their personality?' "

And she advises an even broader approach: "We have to make sure that girls are involved in many different activities that they feel good about, so they don't buy into the idea that their worth is dependent on how they look. We have to help them put appearance into perspective."

· What if your daughter wants to wear revealing clothes?

Your daughter yearns for those cami tops, but you refuse on the grounds that they look like underwear. Still, you're worried about making her feel left out.

Don't be swayed, Roffman says. "Anything that you think is not appropriate for your child, your responsibility is to say no."

But what about possibly sending a negative message about your daughter's budding body?

"It's appropriate for children to feel good about their bodies and to live in an environment where adults are fundamentally positive about sexuality. But it's misguided to think that means you have to allow your child to be sexual and adult-like in ways that are developmentally inappropriate. . . . It's not 'sex-negative' to say no to something that is sexually inappropriate for a child."


CONTINUED     1        >


© 2007 The Washington Post Company