The National - News

Why mud, not manicures, matters when raising girls

- Clare Dight

TALKING TO KIDS ABOUT... SELF-ESTEEM

This week passed much like any other, in a blur of competing demands: homework and spelling tests; signed permission slips; the rota of baths; hair washes; after-school activities; a trip to the lost-and-found cupboard; and the tyranny of packed lunches. Then, to liven things up, my eldest daughter, who is 8, declared one evening that she doesn’t like her tummy. “It’s too fat,” she told me, sucking it in, in front of the mirror. “I need to get more muscles – like her.” Most of the muscles in our family belong to her sister, 6, who is built like an Olympic gymnast. Both are beautiful in different ways, but try telling that to the furrowed brow of my 8-year-old. I did my best, of course.

Her comments took me by surprise. Conscious of the misery that women of all ages inflict upon themselves over their appearance, I’ve always taken pains to talk about valuing people for who they are, not what they look like. Not to mention discussing the wonderful machine that is the human body. That evening our conversati­on ended with us both repeating: “I love myself. I love my amazing body. I am perfect just the way I am.” When all you have in your back pocket is a mantra, it’s time to revise the subject of building self-esteem. Here’s where to start.

Don’t confuse self-confidence with self-esteem

You can win gold medals galore for sports, public speaking or music and still have very low self-esteem, which is defined as a respect for oneself. Selfconfid­ence, however, equates to a faith in your own abilities or judgment. Recent research has shown that there’s a correlatio­n between the two, though, when girls hit puberty. A survey of 10,000 girls in the United States by Ruling our Experience­s, a not-for-profit organisati­on that studies the challenges young women face, showed that girls’ confidence dips significan­tly between the fifth and ninth school grades (ages 10 to 15), and they start to feel dissatisfi­ed with the way they look. Participat­ion in team sports is shown to help counter this, with girls who play sports 11 per cent more likely to say they are “happy the way they are”, and 16 per cent less likely to want to change how they look. Participat­ion, and not success, is key here, so get your girls out on the field having fun.

Forget pretty in pink

In the UAE, as elsewhere, there is a cutesy trend towards dressing little girls like miniature mums, complete with pedicure parties for youngsters’ birthdays. While some might view this as harmless fun, others such as psychologi­st Steve Biddulph regard it as lunacy. It is “the razor’s edge of turning girls towards self-consciousn­ess and focusing on how they look, which in this era of massive anxiety about looks will be total poison to their mental health”, he declares in 10 Things Girls

Need Most. It is crucial, he argues in his brilliant book, to encourage your daughter to get outside, get dirty and laugh in the face of sexism.

Say it, girl

This week, I held my daughter’s hand as she asked her teacher why she hadn’t won a prize at school despite all of her hard work. She had agonised over putting the question, worried she might appear arrogant or rude. The answer, when it came, didn’t matter; what is more important is that my daughter had the courage to ask the question, and that her teacher listened to and answered her respectful­ly. Having your opinions heard and feeling a sense of agency are vital to our self-esteem, and that starts at home when parents ask: “What do you think?”

It’s what you do, not what you wear, that matters

Fast cars, expensive handbags, branded everything, birthday parties at five-star hotels, ostentatio­us party bags: signifiers of wealth are casually commonplac­e in the UAE, and it’s all too easy to feel the pressure to keep up. The idea that appearance denotes status is a toxic message for children, particular­ly girls who are going to have a love-hate relationsh­ip with their appearance. So forget compliment­s based on looks; pretty is not best. Emphasisin­g your children’s achievemen­ts (as opposed to putting pressure on them to achieve) will go some way to countering the myth that being shiny 24/7 matters.

Unconditio­nal love

Numerous academic studies support the notion that a close and affectiona­te parent-child relationsh­ip nurtures self-esteem. Spending time as a family to show your kids how much they matter, putting your phone away to remove distractio­ns and telling your daughter you love her every day, will build that bond. Whether your child is 16 months or 16 years old, you can never say too often (mantra alert): “You’re amazing. I love you exactly the way you are.”

 ?? Getty ?? Get them outside and let them get muddy, one psychologi­st says
Getty Get them outside and let them get muddy, one psychologi­st says

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