Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
Without parental guidance, our daughters may only notice the external beauty and power of princesses in books and movies, and not the valuable character qualities that will make them true leaders. Building character in your young daughter requires your attention, intentionality, and patience. Here is how some parents have combatted this cultural push in the lives of their young girls:
When my daughter started preschool, she told me how some of the kids were mean and pushed or hit her when they wanted a toy. I asked her what she could do when this happened.
She said, “I could hit them back.”
So I taught her how to instead use an assertive voice to tell her peers how she felt. I explained that an assertive voice is a big, strong voice that lets you tell someone when you don’t like something. We practiced using the voice at home by role-playing and encouraging her to say, “I don’t like it when you push me!” or “I don’t like it when you take my toy.” If that didn’t work, then she needed to talk to her teacher.
Over time she began using this confident voice at school, and it helped her solve many of her problems before asking for an adult’s help.
—Autumn Shaffer
My 5-year-old daughter didn’t like wearing an eye patch to kindergarten to correct her lazy eye. It made her feel self-conscious and other children teased her.
One day when I picked her up from kindergarten, she was crying and didn’t want to return to school.
I reminded her of all of her wonderful qualities, struggling with how to convey the idea that she was differently abled for the time being.
“You have a superpower,” I said. Before she could inquire, I asked her what she thought it was.
She considered the question for a moment and then brightened. “I can see so good with one eye that the other eye became useless.”
She went to school the next day more confident than ever. Some weeks after the patch was removed, we met a little girl with leg braces at the park. My daughter looked her up and down and then smiled.
“You have a superpower,” she announced.
—Pamela Fay
We live in a time when raising girls to be confident in their own skin is a tremendous challenge. Everywhere we look, in advertisements and popular entertainment, a woman’s self-worth is linked to her beauty. Because of this, girls are constantly battling against the world’s obsession with beauty, starting when they are toddlers.
One day I noticed that I was unknowingly reinforcing this concept with my 4-year-old. So many of the stories I shared with her began, “Once upon a time there was a beautiful princess.”
When I think of all the qualities I want my daughter to strive for — godly, loving, kind, courageous, honest, hardworking — beauty, according to what our culture dictates, is not high on my list. But I noticed that the stories’ focus on the physical beauty of these heroines was affecting my little girl. As she mimicked the same phrasing in her own imaginary stories, I wondered why I was highlighting only one adjective to describe the main character.
The fix? I omit the word beautiful from the books I read and in my made-up stories. My stories begin: “Once upon a time, there was a brave, funny, kind, godly and super-cool princess named Rapunzel.” It didn’t take long for my 4-year-old to tell her own stories to our 2-year-old in the same manner.
Before long, all our stories began to center on being a good friend or being brave, rather than focusing on going to a ball or wearing a pretty dress. We were reinforcing what’s important — a person’s (or princess’s) character.
—Jason William Fisher
When asked what a princess is, my 4-year-old daughter answered, “A princess likes to dance.”
Sure, cartoon princesses are skilled in the social graces, but I’m concerned that, without my guidance, my daughter may notice only their external elegance and beauty.
In recent years, princesses have become big business — much more than the normal merchandising tie-ins that accompany kids’ movies. Books, bicycles, costumes — it’s difficult to find products not offered in pretty princess pink. But is the onslaught of princess products healthy for young girls? How does the excessive focus on outward appearances impact their view of beauty and personal self-esteem?
At our house, guidance is the key to addressing these concerns and building character. Interestingly, a look at the movies themselves reveals that not all cartoon princesses are focused on their own beauty. Snow White teams up with her woodland friends in a home-improvement campaign, Cinderella exhibits joy in difficult circumstances, and Belle sacrifices her freedom for her father. Ironically, it’s often the nemesis of the story — the Evil Queen, the Wicked Stepmother, or the buffoonish Gaston — who makes a big deal out of physical beauty or social position.
So the next time my 4-year-old and I sit down for a princess tale, I’ll acknowledge her admiration for the elegance and beauty of fairy tale characters. But I’ll also remind her that what God would value above Snow White’s, Cinderella’s and Belle’s physical appearance is their kindness. Emphasize their joyfulness and their sacrificial love to help build your daughter’s character.
— Ashleigh Slater
We knew early we had a bossy-pants on our hands. My daughter didn’t hesitate to tell me what to do, bossing me about the bowl she’d use for breakfast and the book I had to read first. And she told friends exactly where to sit and what to do. Scoldings, explanations and sisters yelling “Stop bossing me around!” didn’t curb her commands. What finally helped was drawing names from a hat.
When our family goes out to dinner once a week, the child whose name is selected gets to choose the restaurant — without any input or comment from her siblings. On weeks when we can’t afford to go out, she chooses the dinner we make together at home. Regularly allowing each daughter to make an independent decision helps the bossy one submit to her siblings; it also gives the more passive ones an opportunity to speak up and be heard. Drawing from the hat works for other decisions, too, such as choosing a game or movie.
— Marlo Schalesky
Barbie’s friend and fellow musketeer whispers, “We came to protect the prince, not date him!” Moments later, these women valiantly engage in combat against those sent to harm the soon-to-be-king. All the while, the highly trained male musketeers sit nearby, helpless.
For Barbie to be fencing, mastering martial arts or even wanting to be a musketeer does not bother me. I welcome portrayals of strong, confident females in the movies and television shows my girls watch. From bilingual explorers to little sisters to pink-haired storytellers, entertainment for young kids can encourage children to embrace their potential.
But instead of pointing girls toward excellence, some shows promote “girl power.” Girl power says that girls are stronger and smarter than boys. Their strength is contrasted with the glaring weaknesses of others, often male counterparts or authority figures, such as parents or teachers. As a result, girl power encourages comparison and rivalry in the quest for excellence and identity, and it defiantly cries, “I’m better than you.”
The Bible calls us to humbly use our strengths to support and encourage one another, rather than excelling at the expense and embarrassment of others.
How should you teach your child “girl power” as God intended? Does it mean no more Barbie or Olivia the pig? Perhaps. Or could it mean taking advantage of teachable moments to discuss whether a character’s bold attitude is serving others or is merely self-serving? The key is to help your child realize that her identity isn’t found in demeaning others but found in the One who’s given your child powerful gifts so she can humbly help those in need. Building your daughter’s character requires your patience. It’s a long journey. Make sure you’re there every step of the way.
— Ashleigh Slater
The post Building Character in Your Princess appeared first on Focus on the Family.
Continue reading...
Without parental guidance, our daughters may only notice the external beauty and power of princesses in books and movies, and not the valuable character qualities that will make them true leaders. Building character in your young daughter requires your attention, intentionality, and patience. Here is how some parents have combatted this cultural push in the lives of their young girls:
Use your big voice
When my daughter started preschool, she told me how some of the kids were mean and pushed or hit her when they wanted a toy. I asked her what she could do when this happened.
She said, “I could hit them back.”
So I taught her how to instead use an assertive voice to tell her peers how she felt. I explained that an assertive voice is a big, strong voice that lets you tell someone when you don’t like something. We practiced using the voice at home by role-playing and encouraging her to say, “I don’t like it when you push me!” or “I don’t like it when you take my toy.” If that didn’t work, then she needed to talk to her teacher.
Over time she began using this confident voice at school, and it helped her solve many of her problems before asking for an adult’s help.
—Autumn Shaffer
Everyday superpowers
My 5-year-old daughter didn’t like wearing an eye patch to kindergarten to correct her lazy eye. It made her feel self-conscious and other children teased her.
One day when I picked her up from kindergarten, she was crying and didn’t want to return to school.
I reminded her of all of her wonderful qualities, struggling with how to convey the idea that she was differently abled for the time being.
“You have a superpower,” I said. Before she could inquire, I asked her what she thought it was.
She considered the question for a moment and then brightened. “I can see so good with one eye that the other eye became useless.”
She went to school the next day more confident than ever. Some weeks after the patch was removed, we met a little girl with leg braces at the park. My daughter looked her up and down and then smiled.
“You have a superpower,” she announced.
—Pamela Fay
The true beauty of a princess
We live in a time when raising girls to be confident in their own skin is a tremendous challenge. Everywhere we look, in advertisements and popular entertainment, a woman’s self-worth is linked to her beauty. Because of this, girls are constantly battling against the world’s obsession with beauty, starting when they are toddlers.
One day I noticed that I was unknowingly reinforcing this concept with my 4-year-old. So many of the stories I shared with her began, “Once upon a time there was a beautiful princess.”
When I think of all the qualities I want my daughter to strive for — godly, loving, kind, courageous, honest, hardworking — beauty, according to what our culture dictates, is not high on my list. But I noticed that the stories’ focus on the physical beauty of these heroines was affecting my little girl. As she mimicked the same phrasing in her own imaginary stories, I wondered why I was highlighting only one adjective to describe the main character.
The fix? I omit the word beautiful from the books I read and in my made-up stories. My stories begin: “Once upon a time, there was a brave, funny, kind, godly and super-cool princess named Rapunzel.” It didn’t take long for my 4-year-old to tell her own stories to our 2-year-old in the same manner.
Before long, all our stories began to center on being a good friend or being brave, rather than focusing on going to a ball or wearing a pretty dress. We were reinforcing what’s important — a person’s (or princess’s) character.
—Jason William Fisher
Building character in the princess culture
When asked what a princess is, my 4-year-old daughter answered, “A princess likes to dance.”
Sure, cartoon princesses are skilled in the social graces, but I’m concerned that, without my guidance, my daughter may notice only their external elegance and beauty.
In recent years, princesses have become big business — much more than the normal merchandising tie-ins that accompany kids’ movies. Books, bicycles, costumes — it’s difficult to find products not offered in pretty princess pink. But is the onslaught of princess products healthy for young girls? How does the excessive focus on outward appearances impact their view of beauty and personal self-esteem?
At our house, guidance is the key to addressing these concerns and building character. Interestingly, a look at the movies themselves reveals that not all cartoon princesses are focused on their own beauty. Snow White teams up with her woodland friends in a home-improvement campaign, Cinderella exhibits joy in difficult circumstances, and Belle sacrifices her freedom for her father. Ironically, it’s often the nemesis of the story — the Evil Queen, the Wicked Stepmother, or the buffoonish Gaston — who makes a big deal out of physical beauty or social position.
So the next time my 4-year-old and I sit down for a princess tale, I’ll acknowledge her admiration for the elegance and beauty of fairy tale characters. But I’ll also remind her that what God would value above Snow White’s, Cinderella’s and Belle’s physical appearance is their kindness. Emphasize their joyfulness and their sacrificial love to help build your daughter’s character.
— Ashleigh Slater
“Stop bossing me!”
We knew early we had a bossy-pants on our hands. My daughter didn’t hesitate to tell me what to do, bossing me about the bowl she’d use for breakfast and the book I had to read first. And she told friends exactly where to sit and what to do. Scoldings, explanations and sisters yelling “Stop bossing me around!” didn’t curb her commands. What finally helped was drawing names from a hat.
When our family goes out to dinner once a week, the child whose name is selected gets to choose the restaurant — without any input or comment from her siblings. On weeks when we can’t afford to go out, she chooses the dinner we make together at home. Regularly allowing each daughter to make an independent decision helps the bossy one submit to her siblings; it also gives the more passive ones an opportunity to speak up and be heard. Drawing from the hat works for other decisions, too, such as choosing a game or movie.
— Marlo Schalesky
Girl power and building character
Barbie’s friend and fellow musketeer whispers, “We came to protect the prince, not date him!” Moments later, these women valiantly engage in combat against those sent to harm the soon-to-be-king. All the while, the highly trained male musketeers sit nearby, helpless.
For Barbie to be fencing, mastering martial arts or even wanting to be a musketeer does not bother me. I welcome portrayals of strong, confident females in the movies and television shows my girls watch. From bilingual explorers to little sisters to pink-haired storytellers, entertainment for young kids can encourage children to embrace their potential.
But instead of pointing girls toward excellence, some shows promote “girl power.” Girl power says that girls are stronger and smarter than boys. Their strength is contrasted with the glaring weaknesses of others, often male counterparts or authority figures, such as parents or teachers. As a result, girl power encourages comparison and rivalry in the quest for excellence and identity, and it defiantly cries, “I’m better than you.”
The Bible calls us to humbly use our strengths to support and encourage one another, rather than excelling at the expense and embarrassment of others.
How should you teach your child “girl power” as God intended? Does it mean no more Barbie or Olivia the pig? Perhaps. Or could it mean taking advantage of teachable moments to discuss whether a character’s bold attitude is serving others or is merely self-serving? The key is to help your child realize that her identity isn’t found in demeaning others but found in the One who’s given your child powerful gifts so she can humbly help those in need. Building your daughter’s character requires your patience. It’s a long journey. Make sure you’re there every step of the way.
— Ashleigh Slater
The post Building Character in Your Princess appeared first on Focus on the Family.
Continue reading...