Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Pink think adolescence and the magic years/children and their compliments
Seeing young girls dressed in dresses and ribbons in their hair. The initial reaction is to say that "aw you're so cute do you want to be a princess when you grow up?" and to the young males we lean towards "what a big boy you're growing up to be, what a heartbreaker you're going to be"
We encourage girls to have unrealistic goals of being a princess and then we encourage men to be cops or firemen or variations of heroes.
Regardless of how in adolescence we fuel certain paths to the different genders we can address how it was marketed to adolescents that sex needed to be saved for marriage and that if a girl was defiled beforehand she really wasn't worth marrying.
I believe the term Flinging the Woo created almost a comical outlook on teenage sex in the 20th century.
The pubescent teenage years proved to be challenging for parents messing with teenagers wanting to practice what they learned in sex ed rather than hearing about it in theory.
So to fix such a problem pink think began marketing marital sex as fun but not too much fun.
There is a point at which females values begin to change because your reputation can be tarnished if you are more tomboy or hang out with boys "heading down the road toward lesbianism" which should be something that we address and are beginning to in society today.
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