I was helping to babysit my two younger sisters – six and ten years of age – this morning by taking them to the beach. We had been gifted a pair of blue and green sandals after my father's friend had bought them for his son only to discover that it was a size too small. Not wanting for my six year old sister to get her new sneakers dirty, my mother tried to get her to wear the sandals, since they were the perfect size for her. My sister responded by throwing a huge tantrum over how "blue and green are boy colors" and how only her pink sneakers would do. It took a good ten minutes before my mother finally conceded and allowed us to leave with the sneakers.
Funny thing is, one of the likely reasons why my sister reacted in such a way was because of my mother, who has – for a good six years – bought nothing but pink baby and toddler clothing and toys for my sister. In fact, when I was asked by her to act as a shopping assistant in past years, my mother would always make it very clear that she thought that blue and green were for boys.
Well, all of that backfired in an incredibly amusing way today, when she spent a solid few minutes doing a 180 on everything she had ever taught my sister, by saying things like "they're just colors! They don't matter!".
My parents are both ultraconservative (my father pretty much thinks – almost without exaggeration – that marijuana is airlifted straight out of Tartarus by winged demons) and quite sexist. I am no fan of their idea of gender roles, since their insistence that women should ideally become housewives almost cost me the potential for a college education (fortunately, they've decided to let me go, on the condition that I "find a good boy there to marry"). So what happened today got me thinking about how effective and necessary their views of gender actually are.
Anyways, that's my Cool Story Bro. My questions to y'all are:
- what, in your opinion, constitutes a gender role (e.g. should the genders be assigned colors, blue for boys and pink for girls? Or is that too superficial to deserve concern?)
- are gender roles desirable?
- should parents enforce the concept of gender roles on their children?
Or just discuss gender politics in general. Whatever floats your boat.