The Myth of the Perfect Girl: Helping Our Daughters Find Authentic Success and Happiness in School and Life
304The Myth of the Perfect Girl: Helping Our Daughters Find Authentic Success and Happiness in School and Life
304Paperback
-
SHIP THIS ITEMTemporarily Out of Stock Online
-
PICK UP IN STORECheck Availability at Nearby Stores
Available within 2 business hours
Related collections and offers
Overview
In today's achievement culture, many girls seem to be doing remarkably well—excelling in honors and sports and attending top colleges in ever greater numbers—but beneath the surface, girls are stressed out and stretched too thin as they strive to be “perfect.” In their efforts to juggle schoolwork and extracurriculars, family life and social lives, friends and frenemies, as well as relationships online and IRL (in the real world), many girls begin to lose sight of who they really are, and instead work overtime to please their friends, parents, teachers, and others.
With honesty, empathy, and a fresh perspective, The Myth of the Perfect Girl presents advice to empower both parents and girls themselves to discover what true success and happiness means to them — and how to work to achieve it.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780399537714 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Penguin Publishing Group |
Publication date: | 12/31/2012 |
Pages: | 304 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Author's Note xi
Introduction: The Paradox of Girls' Success: Why Girls, Why Now l
The Big Picture
How Success and Failure Are Sometimes the Same Thing
Filling the Box
Why Is Filling the Box a Girl Phenomenon?
Pleasing Everyone but Themselves
The Empty Box
1 The Perfect Girl Myth: Why It's So Prevalent and Such a Problem 15
What's Different Now?
Reason 1 Our Changing Academic Landscape
Reason 2 Getting Older Younger
Reason 3 Technology
Reason 4 Differing Views of Healthy
Reason 5 The Ultimate Myth
The Perfect Girl Problem
Leaning Forward, Falling Backward, Getting It Right
2 So Many Ways to Be Boxed In 47
The Overstressed Overachiever
The Socially Centered Starlet
The Pensively Private Thinker
The Caring Considerate Peacemaker
The Dramatic Queen of the Party
The Creative Wonder
The Constant Chameleon
The Worst-Case Scenario Worrier
3 Parental Attitudes and Approach: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution? 67
Parents: Part of the Problem?
Role Models Are Closer Than They Appear
Separating Your Dreams from Your Child's Reality
Hand-Holding and Helicoptering
Who Else Plays a Valuable Role in Your Daughter's Life?
Parents: Part of the Solution!
Embrace All Possibilities
Focus on Long-Term Efforts Rather Than Short-Term Results
Allow Girls to Become the Creators of Their Own World
4 Breaking Down the Boxes 90
Goals and Purposes
Active Living and Engaged Learning
The Entrepreneur's Model of Success
Taking the B
Redefining Failure
5 Putting Purpose into Organizational Practice 123
Girls Need Organization Too
Binders, Planners, and Other Essentials
Scheduling Homework and Free Time
Putting Organization into Practice
6 Rome Wasn't Built in a Day: Strategies for Quizzes, Tests, Projects, and Finals 151
Previewing Isn't Just for Movie Theaters
The Law of Diminishing Returns
Quizzes and Tests
Long-Term Group Projects
Final Exams
7 Social Wellness: Putting the Fun Back into Fun and Games 173
Reality Show and Cele-bratty Relationships
Virtual Relationships
Female Bullying: Cyberbullying and Otherwise
Distracted Relationships
Real Relationships
8 Emotional Wellness: Compensating and Problem Solving 201
It's All Okay, Except When It Isn't
Learning to Seek Support
The C's of Success
Creating a Core System of Support
9 Physical Wellness 220
Nutrition
Exercise
Sleep
10 Spiritual Wellness: Reflecting and Connecting 249
Editing, Reevaluating, and Letting Go
Hearing, Understanding, and Appreciating the Inner Voice
Reflection of the Outward and Inward Messages
The Overlooked Beauty of Selfless Service
Disconnection from the Everyday
11 Conclusion: Implementing the Strategies 264
Remember the Importance of Attitude
It's Okay to Outsource
Any Day Is a Good Day to Start
Sample Six-Step Strategy
Acknowledgments 271
Notes 273
Index 281
What People are Saying About This
"An essential book...The Myth of the Perfect Girl challenges both girls and the adults who care about them to deeply reflect on the most important issues girls will face as they reach their full potential."
—Rosalind Wiseman, author of Queen Bees and Wannabes
"Whether you're the parent of an adolescent girl or a savvy young woman yourself, the insights in this book could just change your outlook — and make the turbulent teen years a little less of a pressure-cooker. Ana Homayoun is the counselor, expert, and friend every parent — and girl — needs."
—Michele Borba, Ed.D., author of The Big Book of Parenting Solutions
"Offering fresh insights and vivid examples, Ana Homayoun makes sense of the enormous pressures facing girls today. More important, she shows what parents and educators can do to help girls navigate these turbulent years with confidence and purpose. A great addition to the field."
—Michael Gurian, Author of The Wonder of Girls
"A smart, funny and engaging study on how to give girls the tools to figure out what they really want - and how to get it. A must-read for girls, mothers, educators and anybody who wants to understand half the population."
—Susan Shapiro, author of Unhooked: How to Quit Anything and Only as Good as Your Word
"As our society grapples with who we want and need females and males to grow up to be, it is no surprise that our girls and boys are confused about what is expected of them. The Myth of the Perfect Girl dives deep into how this is unnerving our girls. A must read for all parents, educators, psychologists and girls themselves."
—Dr. Louann Brizendine, Founder/Director UCSF Women's Mood and Hormone Clinic, and author of The Female Brain and The Male Brain
"Many seemingly disconnected forces in society are placing unfair burdens on girls growing up today, as well as on their parents. Gratefully, Ana Homayoun, poignantly spells out what’s going on, how it’s affecting our girls, and how grownups can help them negotiate the minefields. Everyone who cares about the wellbeing of girls should read The Myth of the Perfect Girl."
—Diane E. Levin, Ph.D., Professor of Education, Wheelock College, and co-author of So Sexy So Soon
Reading Group Guide
INTRODUCTION
In today’s achievement culture, many girls seem to be doing remarkably well – excelling in honors and sports and attending top colleges in ever greater numbers – but beneath the surface, many girls are stressed–out and stretched too thin as they strive to be ”perfect.” In their efforts to juggle schoolwork and extracurriculars, family life and social lives, friends and frenemies, as well as relationships online and IRL (in real life), many girls begin to lose sight of who they really are, and instead work overtime to please their friends, parents, teachers and others.
With honesty, empathy, and a fresh perspective, Ana Homayoun presents advice to empower parents, educators, and girls discover what true success and happiness means to them – and how to work to achieve it. The tips, exercises and interwoven real–life stories provide a starting point to help girls develop their own sense of personal purpose and overall wellness, with transformative results.
ABOUT ANA HOMAYOUN
Since founding Green Ivy Educational Consulting in 2001, Ana has become a nationally recognized innovator of motivational organization and time–management strategies for junior high and high school students. She is the author of two books: The Myth of the Perfect Girl: Helping Our Daughters Find Authentic Success and Happiness in School and Life (2012), and That Crumpled Paper Was Due Last Week: Helping Disorganized and Distracted Boys Succeed in School and Life (2010). She is a frequent presenter to teachers, parents and students at schools around the nation and abroad on how to incorporate organization, time–management and personal purpose into the classroom and school environment.
A CONVERSATION WITH ANA HOMAYOUN
Q: Everyone is asking, ”can women have it all?” From Hanna Rosin’s The End of Men to Anne–Marie Slaughter’s front–page Atlantic article, the topic is unavoidable ––but there’s still no definitive answer. Why might girls struggle in a world where they’re told they can ”have it all” but aren’t told what ”all” is?
Girls are growing up in a modern world where they’re told women can achieve anything and have it all. Magazines and media portray women with high–powered jobs, loving families, peak physical fitness levels and a perfectly furnished and well–kept home, and it all seems to be easily within reach. While there’s certainly no shortage of amazingly successful and strong female role models who have accomplished amazing things, there are often trade–offs that are not actively spoken of or recognized. As a result, there becomes an overwhelming pressure that lurks beneath the surface—and can be one of the reasons why so many girls are struggling with rates of anxiety despite increasing academic success in school and financial success in the workplace as young adults (where women in their 20s make more than the male counterparts).
The Myth of the Perfect Girl introduces the problem of our current achievement culture, which has led us to inadvertently send the message to our girls that perfection is the new norm; the expectation. When girls struggle or fail to live up to this impossible ideal, stress and insecurity set in. The Myth of the Perfect Girl introduces ways for parents and other role models to help promote healthy patterns of success for their girls and to finally debunk the myth of the need (and ability) to have it all.
Q: Isn’t ambition a good thing? Sheryl Sandberg famously notes that the achievement gap won’t close until there is a closing of the ambition gap. What are some ways we can promote strategies for overall wellness without decreasing or dampening ambition?
There is nothing wrong with ambition that is balanced - and there are many who argue girls and young women stop themselves short of great accomplishments. On the flip side, though, this increased focus on achievement, accomplishment and ambition has created a scenario where many girls feel as though nothing they do is ever good enough. By all means, girls should be ambitious. But it’s a marathon, not a sprint. And right now, many of them are sprinting through school, following the rules and expectations of others instead of developing their own version of success, and end up burnt out in school, college and young adulthood. And, much of that burn out is what is resulting in the challenges we are seeing outside of the classroom with compensatory behaviors and mental health challenges.Q: In your book The Myth of the Perfect Girl, you talk about how many girls tend to be “filling–the–box” which leaves them feeling empty and overwhelmed. What does that mean?
We often hear the phrase think outside the box used to describe the notion of thinking beyond rote and normal everyday expectations. Filling the box is the metaphor I use to describe the opposite movement: girls’ tendency to be compliant to others’ expectations rather than creating and pursuing their own version of personal success and fulfillment. The image of filling someone else’s box, rather than building and creating one’s own, is a way of capturing how many girls and young women accept the structures of achievement and definitions of success form outside themselves. Girls can easily become more apt to find and measure their self–worth through external validation than through internal reflection.
Q: What do parents sometimes do unconsciously (or consciously!) that promotes this detrimental box–filling behavior?
I truly believe that the vast majority of parents really want whatever is best for their children, and that many times the over–parenting or over–reacting is a result of misplaced fear and anxiety. Parents stress out other parents - I see it all the time in my office and on the road when I visit schools and talk to parents all around the country and abroad. But, in combination with the emphasis on standardized tests and numbers based achievement, we’ve created a society of shaming around education. It is no longer okay to make the natural mistakes that should be part of the learning process—there is NO room for mistakes. I always wince when I hear a parent say something like, “Janie’s getting her biology test back today and we’re gets a good score!” Or the parent goes online and checks the grade without their daughter’s knowledge. Or go through the girl’s backpack to find tests and quizzes rather than asking their daughter directly. Many times, the parent will say, “Oh, my daughter won’t tell me so I have to do this” but the greater question is, “Why is she ashamed when she does poorly on a test?”
We need to reframe the learning experience to be about actual learning - from experiences as well as from material. Understanding that it isn’t the short–term results, but the long–term efforts that make the most marked difference can be a first step in reducing the school induced shaming that often leads to box–filling behavior.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS