🐱 Raising a Feminist Son

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CatParty



Years ago, when my son was not yet two years old, I was asked what I was doing to raise him to believe in gender equality.

With my son still so young, I honestly hadn’t thought much about it. But knowing the question was a worthy one, I decided to stop and take a look.

And guess what? I realized we were doing quite a lot!

From that point on, I became more aware of my role and responsibility as a mother to raise a boy who not only believes in gender equality, but is balanced within himself between the masculine and the feminine.

Over the years, I haven’t shared much about what my husband and I are doing to raise our son with a lens of gender equality. Mostly because I didn’t want to impose my parenting or belief systems on others. But as the conversation has re-emerged through recent events — including the Women’s March, the Harvey Weinstein trial, #OscarsSoWhite and #OscarsSoMale, and the Justice Department’s pushback on Virginia’s ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment — I decided to share some of what we are doing in our home.

I don’t pretend to have a “prescription” for raising a feminist son, or believe that what I do is the best choice for anyone else. I’m also aware that my experience as a heterosexual, white female married mother raising a white male son in, for the most part, privileged circumstances, is just one perspective.

What I do believe is that it’s important that I at least use my voice to share my experience in effort to stimulate new ideas and activate discussion about what’s possible with our boys.

So here goes…

10 Ideas to Raise a Feminist Son

IDEA 1: Value Yourself As a Woman
As the mother, you are the central female figure in your son’s life. He is looking to you as the archetypal woman. How you treat yourself has a huge impact on how your son perceives women. From a young age, he’s observing … Do you trust yourself? Do you speak up for yourself? Do you respect yourself? Do you maintain healthy boundaries? Do you value yourself? What do you do on a daily basis? I believe that the first and most important factor in raising a son to believe in gender equality is you, the mother. This will influence how he sees and values women and girls as he grows up. Valuing and honoring yourself is one of the most important things you can do to raise a boy to believe in gender equality.


IDEA 2: Make Sure Your Husband/Partner Listens To You
When we are talking about gender equality in a male-dominated culture, I believe the way that the husband treats his wife, sees her, listens to her, and values her has a huge impact on their son. Father. Man. Male archetype. How does dad treat mom? How does he value her? How does he interact with her? A mother and father are the archetypal representations of woman and man for a boy. So, how does man treat woman?

My son sees the way my husband values me, listens to me and respects me. He also sees how my husband supports my work — elevating and amplifying women’s voices. My son gets to see all of this, which I believe has had an enormous impact toward his lens of gender equality.

Also important is how my husband see himself. How does he treat himself? How does he talk to himself? How does he talk to and with my son? With so much conversation now about “healthy masculinity” and what it means to be a man, this cannot be ignored. I address this more below.

IDEA 3: Introduce Your Son To Spirituality Beyond Male-Led Religions
This is a big factor, and one that is often overlooked in the conversation about raising boys to believe in gender equality.

The fact is that most of us have grown up in a male-oriented culture with male-oriented religion. This has an obvious effect on how women and girls are seen — both by themselves and by boys and men. In the male-oriented religions with a “Father God,” women and girls are seen as the under class. The religious texts even support the violation, oppression and silencing of women and girls. This no doubt has an imprint on our psyches and allows for the perpetual inequality and human rights abuses of women and girls.

I’m not saying you should change your religion. I’m simply saying that it’s important that boys and girls learn about the existence of religion and spirituality beyond patriarchy. They should have the right to this knowledge as part of their historical and cultural understanding.

My spirituality is based on the Feminine — the Goddess. It is about honoring and valuing woman— the Great Mother — and the female side of the divine. Around our home, we have statues of goddesses — Lakshmi, Saraswati, Tara, Kuan Yin — different representations of the divine feminine.

I start my day with yoga, meditation, prayer, chanting to the goddess, picking goddess oracle cards and visiting my altar that is a devotional to the Divine Feminine. I take time for myself every morning with these practices. My husband has his own morning practice of yoga and meditation. My son observes all of this. He is with us in the room, and sometimes participates with us.

Our son is exposed to patriarchal religion automatically through the heavy presence of churches all around Los Angeles, through the pledge of allegiance he is required to say at public school, through the “In God We Trust” money that he now handles through his cookie selling earnings, through his friends at school, and through the everyday prevalence of patriarchal religion.

I believe the introduction to feminine spirituality and knowledge of religious history before patriarchal religions has had a huge impact on how our son views the world with a lens of gender equality.


IDEA 4: Trade Off The Work At Home That Matters To you
What does my son see mom and dad doing on a daily basis. Is it equal?

When my son was young, my husband and I decided that we would split the morning and evening routines between each other. At night, one parent would give my son a bath, diaper him, dress him in his pajamas, cuddle with him, read to him, sing to him, etc. — and the other person would get some down time to themselves until bedtime kisses. In the morning, the other parent would take the lead. This was a great system to implement early on so neither parent felt like they were doing the lion’s share of the childcare, and also so my son would experience both of us equally in this role.

As for the cooking, my husband takes the lead on that. He loves to cook. It provides him creative space and he loves to provide in that way for me and my son. The standing joke amongst us is that, when I met my husband, I told him that I don’t cook, but I ‘“prepare” food.

Cooking is something that my son and his dad do together. Cook and bake. Bread, pumpkin pie, ginger bread cookies. My son also bakes with me. Our speciality is chocolate chip cookies. We bake them and sell them to neighbors and passersby on our block. We love it. My son gets the opportunity to bake with both of us.

Who does the dishes? We trade off on this. Whoever is doing the evening bedtime routine with my son, the other person is responsible for the dishes and kitchen clean up. This has worked well.

My husband and I also take turns getting up in the morning and being the lead to get our son ready for school. The other parent can spend more time on their morning spiritual practice. And then it changes the next day. Back and forth.

Who does the food shopping? My husband takes the lead on that. As the cook, he likes to shop for our food and make sure we are provisioned. Where I make up for it on my end is that I do the school pick-ups and spend a quality hour with my son — just us — before my husband gets home from work. I love that time with him. This routine works out well for us.

There’s also a lot we like to do together. Teamwork and partnership.

So, my son is not growing up seeing a mom who does all the housework and a dad who goes out and does all of the outside of house work. Dad is doing dishes, making dinner, vacuuming, cleaning, cleaning kitty litter, taking out garbage, etc. Mom is doing these things too. We share house responsibilities and go heavier on the things we like really like to do.

IDEA 5: Show Equality In Your Decision-Making
In our home, there’s not one person who’s the main decision-maker. In other words, there’s no hierarchy. Sometimes I make decisions. Sometimes my husband makes decisions. Sometimes my son makes decisions. Sometimes we make decisions together. Ever hear that old adage “Wait ‘til your father gets home”? That default to dad as the main decision-maker is sure to skew your son’s idea of who holds the authority in the home, and outside of the home, for that matter. So check yourself — who is making decisions in your family?

IDEA 6: Respect Your Son’s Feelings
Filmmaker and first partner of California Jennifer Siebel Newsom made a film a few years ago that followed American boys and young men as they struggled to stay true to themselves while navigating and negotiating America’s narrow definition of masculinity, often referred to as “toxic masculinity” — traditional cultural male norms that are harmful to men, women and society overall. The film, The Mask You Live In, features experts in neuroscience, psychology, sociology, sports, education, and media, and offers empirical evidence of the “boy crisis” and tactics to combat it. If you haven’t seen it already, I highly recommend it.

In our home, we always support my son’s feelings. We make space for him to express himself and communicate with us about how he is feeling. We listen to him and value his feelings. I want to keep nurturing this all through his young adulthood. Too many boys and young men are pressured by the media, their peer group, and even the adults in their lives to disconnect from their emotions. This has very harmful effects on boys, and can lead to things like objectifying and degrading women, and resolving conflicts through violence.

When you honor your son’s feelings, you provide a healthy environment for him and a pathway for gender equality.

IDEA 7: Watch Gender-Balanced Media
My husband and I both work in media. Before giving birth to our son, we were keenly aware of the unhealthy gender stereotypes that media perpetuates — even from the youngest age. If you are not familiar with this, please visit the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media. You will be enlightened.

With this in mind, we didn’t introduce our son to any media until he was about three years old. At that time, we chose educational media that did not perpetuate harmful gender stereotypes. This meant that the media had both strong female and male protagonists, and had fairly equal numbers of female and male secondary characters doing non-harmful gender stereotyped things. When my son was in pre-school, our favorite series was Sid the Science Kid. When he got to kindergarten and first grade, The Magic School Bus and Cat in the Hat were added to the favorites.

My son’s first Disney movie was Moana, which not only has a female lead, but also has a goddess as a major character.

In the first grade, we attended a school event, where unbeknownst to us ahead of time, they played the movie, Spider Man: Into the Spider Verse(a choice made by the “Dad’s Club”). My son watched five minutes of it, then walked away saying it was too scary and violent. I agreed. We’re not into superheroes.

At school, they offer a “superhero” dress up day. My son declines it every time.

My husband and I have been intentional with the media choices, but not forceful. We talked to our son early on about gender stereotypes. He is aware. He now gravitates toward gender-balanced and gender- positive media.

IDEA 8: Keep Guns and Violence Out of His Daily Diet
When my son was just a year old, my husband and I were standing in line at a Target store with my son in my Ergo carrier on my front. The woman in line behind us smiled at my baby, smiled at me, smiled at my husband, and then said with a chuckle looking at me: Just you wait.

In that moment, I wasn’t sure what she was talking about. But then I saw her gesture to what she had on the conveyer belt: Three toy guns. No, not just guns, rifles.

“That’s all my boys ever ask for,” she said.

I gave her a blank stare, turned to the cashier, paid for my baby’s pajamas, and off we went out of the store.

Out in the budding spring of Southern California, my husband and I began to unravel that moment. I felt flustered at the thought of moms across America buying their sons toy rifles. “She doesn’t have to give in to her sons,” my husband said. I agreed. “If her boys later down the road were asking for knives, drugs or alcohol would she be getting those for them too?” I wondered.

I was so incensed by this that I wrote about it in The Huffington Post. I concluded with: “What will I do if and when my little boy asks me for a toy gun?”

“I will say no, we don’t play with guns in our family. We don’t believe in playing games that take people’s life away, even if it is a pretend game. We believe in the value of a human life.”

I am proud to say that six years later, my son has never asked for a gun. In fact, he doesn’t want to have anything to do with guns. When his uncle unknowingly gave him a Star Wars Lego Set for Christmas (we don’t do Star Wars), my son on his own accord immediately threw out the guns that were part of the kit. Then he went ahead and built the spaceship, which he loved.

When he went with his class to see the Nutcracker at the theater, and then received a gift of a Nutcracker holding a a gasket afterwards, he immediately traded his with a friend who had one without a gasket, even though it was slightly broken.

No video games probably goes without saying. The gaming world is one of the most misogonystic and violent industries. If you question this, make sure to re-visit Gamergate.

IDEA 9: Read Books By Both Female And Male Authors
What children read has a huge impact on their psyche and how they see the world. The books they are exposed to says a lot to them about who has authority and who should be listened to in the world. That’s why it’s important to read books with your son by both by female and male authors, and when he’s old enough to read on his own, expose him to both female and male author choices.

One of our favorite series is the The Magic Treehouse, written by Mary Pope Osborne. The protagonists are a brother/sister duo, each with their unique personality and equal power. It’s an adventure series that covers time travel, world cultures, political history, natural science and lots of wonderful magic.

IDEA 10: Be Mindful of Gendered Language
There are so many words in the English language that give favor to men. Not only words like policeman, fireman, postman, etc. — but words like manmade, mankind, human, and history.

My son actually cringes every time he hears the word “history.” “What about herstory?” he says.

He often corrects me when I say history. We are looking for a new word.

Sometimes my husband slips when speaking to me and my son and says, “You guys.” My son says, “No, it’s not you guys. Mommy is not a guy.”

You don’t need to be rigid about it, but be mindful, and help your son do the same.

BONUS: Nurture His Political Awareness & Social Justice Engagement
My husband, son and I marched together this past weekend at the Women’s March in Los Angeles. My son was thrilled. My husband and I have been honest with our son about the political history of gender inequality and women’s rights. He is only seven now, so we don’t go into too too much detail, but we share enough to help him understand the challenges women have faced through the decades and centuries. We also talk with him about the importance of people who are willing to stand up to the status quo that is oppressing people. He is proud to be one of them.

Tonight at dinner, my son, unprompted by any discussion about gender equality, blurted out, “It’s too bad that women and men can’t decide who should have all the power, because the answer is easy. It’s what I always say: Both.”

***

What are you doing in your household? What things have worked for you? What things haven’t worked for you? What questions do you have? Why new ideas do you want to put forth in this conversation? I invite you to share your thoughts in the comments section below. I’d love to get a larger conversation going on this topic. Thanks for reading!

(Edited to add emphasis for a hidden gamergate I didn’t notice lmao)
 
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I feel bad for the western world. Obviously a semi decent looking female specimen indoctrinated by woke ideology that truly minicks a religious cult without God and thousands of years of religious doctrine borne out of some pragmatism.
JMO it's probably worse to be raised by an attractive deranged narcissist than the average potato bitch narc, because at least normal people can easily recognize that some grim-faced, joyless spud is maladjusted.
 
I've called feminism a cult before when the notion wasn't as popular, but this is really taking it to the next level.
 
Why does every spiritual teaching based on the "Divine Feminine" sound like cultic gender woo pushed by feminist fellow travellers to New Age movements?

To echo previous sentiments made in this thread, I have a feeling she doesn't know what any of those Hindu-Buddhist goddesses represent individually, nor can she tell of their character or history. She probably can't even tell apart the Buddhist Tara from the Hindu Tara.
I think the generic "Divine Feminine" is a Jungian archetype, actually... which makes her a Jordan Peterson-tier NAZI!!!
 
That line about "chanting to the goddess every morning" followed by "NO VIDEO GAMES REMEMBER GAMERGATE" has me in full Poe's Law mode questioning whether this is someone truly insane or if I've stumbled upon the first successful female troll.
 
Cant wait for the follow-up article when she starts complaining about how poor mental health issues are dealt with in men when her son inevitably begins costing her shit tons in therapy and pharmaceutical drugging as she claps her hands on her hips and declares "why does my son have low self-esteem? Is this the fault of peer pressure? Better pull him from school."

Which of course will lead her to be shunned because she is disravelling the narrative that feminist son= only good son and she gets cancelled for wrongthink.

Articles like this should not make me upset, seeing as people are beating and murdering their kids as I type but you know what those people dont do? Make internet articles about it for asspats.
 
Cant wait for the follow-up article when she starts complaining about how poor mental health issues are dealt with in men when her son inevitably begins costing her shit tons in therapy and pharmaceutical drugging as she claps her hands on her hips and declares "why does my son have low self-esteem? This must be toxic masculinity. We need to have a long discussion about this."
FTFY.
 
How does it all keep coming back to the Autism Holy War that is Gamergate? Jesus, the horse is beyond pulped at this point.
 
The way to raise a good son is the way to raise any good grown-up, adult human being.

Teach judgment, moderation, confidence, and other virtues, give them heroes and myths to model themselves on (and for some kids to feel betrayed by later so they can try to do better, that's part of growing up).

Declaring huge segments of human experience totally off-limits for your child, and dismantling the whole idea of hero worship, leads to lost boys who hate women way more than the conservative boogeymen this woman probably fears. Everyone recognizes it's important for black kids to have black role models and girls to have female role models or whatever, but people have been hard at work making sure every role model for these upper-middle-class white boys is full cancelled, no takebacksies, no nuance.

They teach their sons that the only legacy of people who look like them is colonialism, death, dominance, and control, and then they'll wonder why eventually they choose to exercise those options.
 
Okay, after shitposting in the morning before work, I've decided to go over this once more and offer my thoughts on each point. Because I'm just a masochist, I guess.

IDEA 1: Value Yourself As a Woman
As the mother, you are the central female figure in your son’s life. He is looking to you as the archetypal woman. How you treat yourself has a huge impact on how your son perceives women. From a young age, he’s observing … Do you trust yourself? Do you speak up for yourself? Do you respect yourself? Do you maintain healthy boundaries? Do you value yourself? What do you do on a daily basis? I believe that the first and most important factor in raising a son to believe in gender equality is you, the mother. This will influence how he sees and values women and girls as he grows up. Valuing and honoring yourself is one of the most important things you can do to raise a boy to believe in gender equality.
Okay, good so far. Self-confidence in yourself, man or woman, is a solid step towards being a good role model.

IDEA 2: Make Sure Your Husband/Partner Listens To You
When we are talking about gender equality in a male-dominated culture, I believe the way that the husband treats his wife, sees her, listens to her, and values her has a huge impact on their son. Father. Man. Male archetype. How does dad treat mom? How does he value her? How does he interact with her? A mother and father are the archetypal representations of woman and man for a boy. So, how does man treat woman?

My son sees the way my husband values me, listens to me and respects me. He also sees how my husband supports my work — elevating and amplifying women’s voices. My son gets to see all of this, which I believe has had an enormous impact toward his lens of gender equality.

Also important is how my husband see himself. How does he treat himself? How does he talk to himself? How does he talk to and with my son? With so much conversation now about “healthy masculinity” and what it means to be a man, this cannot be ignored. I address this more below.
Wow, not even two points in, and I've already got words to say. While it's important that both members in a relationship value and respect one another, this bimbo seems to be making it a priority that women are more-deserving of respect than men. Why exactly are we "elevating" and "amplifying" women's voices when the goal is gender equality? Isn't treating the two genders (because there are only two genders, tee hee) with different standards an inherent INEQUALITY?

I also like how the part about her husband's self-confidence is practically an after-thought, almost like her editor asked her to add it incase someone calls her out on her blatant misandry.

IDEA 3: Introduce Your Son To Spirituality Beyond Male-Led Religions
This is a big factor, and one that is often overlooked in the conversation about raising boys to believe in gender equality.

The fact is that most of us have grown up in a male-oriented culture with male-oriented religion. This has an obvious effect on how women and girls are seen — both by themselves and by boys and men. In the male-oriented religions with a “Father God,” women and girls are seen as the under class. The religious texts even support the violation, oppression and silencing of women and girls. This no doubt has an imprint on our psyches and allows for the perpetual inequality and human rights abuses of women and girls.

I’m not saying you should change your religion. I’m simply saying that it’s important that boys and girls learn about the existence of religion and spirituality beyond patriarchy. They should have the right to this knowledge as part of their historical and cultural understanding.

My spirituality is based on the Feminine — the Goddess. It is about honoring and valuing woman— the Great Mother — and the female side of the divine. Around our home, we have statues of goddesses — Lakshmi, Saraswati, Tara, Kuan Yin — different representations of the divine feminine.

I start my day with yoga, meditation, prayer, chanting to the goddess, picking goddess oracle cards and visiting my altar that is a devotional to the Divine Feminine. I take time for myself every morning with these practices. My husband has his own morning practice of yoga and meditation. My son observes all of this. He is with us in the room, and sometimes participates with us.

Our son is exposed to patriarchal religion automatically through the heavy presence of churches all around Los Angeles, through the pledge of allegiance he is required to say at public school, through the “In God We Trust” money that he now handles through his cookie selling earnings, through his friends at school, and through the everyday prevalence of patriarchal religion.

I believe the introduction to feminine spirituality and knowledge of religious history before patriarchal religions has had a huge impact on how our son views the world with a lens of gender equality.
Ooooh boooy.... Third point, and we've already gone off the deep end.

For those of you who don't know (which, I assume, is all of you), I am a godless heathen. I have numerous criticisms for religious structures and beliefs that I could detail here, but I doubt anyone gives a shit. However, if I were to go to bat for Christianity, then I would make the argument that the reasons Christians love God is because God loves everyone equally. Their relationship with God is like a Father-Son dynamic. What exactly is wrong with having a god as a father-figure? Why can't a male god be loving and nurturing? Why does it have to be about authority? I think that says more about your attitudes about men than it does about spirituality.

The rest of it is just a bunch of spiritual mumbo-jumbo about WAHMEN GOOD MAN BAD, so it's hardly worth addressing.

IDEA 4: Trade Off The Work At Home That Matters To you
What does my son see mom and dad doing on a daily basis. Is it equal?

When my son was young, my husband and I decided that we would split the morning and evening routines between each other. At night, one parent would give my son a bath, diaper him, dress him in his pajamas, cuddle with him, read to him, sing to him, etc. — and the other person would get some down time to themselves until bedtime kisses. In the morning, the other parent would take the lead. This was a great system to implement early on so neither parent felt like they were doing the lion’s share of the childcare, and also so my son would experience both of us equally in this role.

As for the cooking, my husband takes the lead on that. He loves to cook. It provides him creative space and he loves to provide in that way for me and my son. The standing joke amongst us is that, when I met my husband, I told him that I don’t cook, but I ‘“prepare” food.

Cooking is something that my son and his dad do together. Cook and bake. Bread, pumpkin pie, ginger bread cookies. My son also bakes with me. Our speciality is chocolate chip cookies. We bake them and sell them to neighbors and passersby on our block. We love it. My son gets the opportunity to bake with both of us.

Who does the dishes? We trade off on this. Whoever is doing the evening bedtime routine with my son, the other person is responsible for the dishes and kitchen clean up. This has worked well.

My husband and I also take turns getting up in the morning and being the lead to get our son ready for school. The other parent can spend more time on their morning spiritual practice. And then it changes the next day. Back and forth.

Who does the food shopping? My husband takes the lead on that. As the cook, he likes to shop for our food and make sure we are provisioned. Where I make up for it on my end is that I do the school pick-ups and spend a quality hour with my son — just us — before my husband gets home from work. I love that time with him. This routine works out well for us.

There’s also a lot we like to do together. Teamwork and partnership.

So, my son is not growing up seeing a mom who does all the housework and a dad who goes out and does all of the outside of house work. Dad is doing dishes, making dinner, vacuuming, cleaning, cleaning kitty litter, taking out garbage, etc. Mom is doing these things too. We share house responsibilities and go heavier on the things we like really like to do.
Wow, a point arguing in favor of equal labor between parents. That's honestly pretty stunning considering I've already established you as a raging man-hater in the last two points. But for what it's worth, I actually agree with this point. However, I have a inkling that this will be short lived...

IDEA 5: Show Equality In Your Decision-Making
In our home, there’s not one person who’s the main decision-maker. In other words, there’s no hierarchy. Sometimes I make decisions. Sometimes my husband makes decisions. Sometimes my son makes decisions. Sometimes we make decisions together. Ever hear that old adage “Wait ‘til your father gets home”? That default to dad as the main decision-maker is sure to skew your son’s idea of who holds the authority in the home, and outside of the home, for that matter. So check yourself — who is making decisions in your family?
Again, nothing too bad. Although I'd like to address the "Wait 'til your father gets home" bit, because that's making a lot of assumptions. In my family, it was said so that our dad would have a chance to offer his input and whether or not he would like to join us. It wasn't because he was the "default decision maker," but we still valued his input.

IDEA 6: Respect Your Son’s Feelings
Filmmaker and first partner of California Jennifer Siebel Newsom made a film a few years ago that followed American boys and young men as they struggled to stay true to themselves while navigating and negotiating America’s narrow definition of masculinity, often referred to as “toxic masculinity” — traditional cultural male norms that are harmful to men, women and society overall. The film, The Mask You Live In, features experts in neuroscience, psychology, sociology, sports, education, and media, and offers empirical evidence of the “boy crisis” and tactics to combat it. If you haven’t seen it already, I highly recommend it.

In our home, we always support my son’s feelings. We make space for him to express himself and communicate with us about how he is feeling. We listen to him and value his feelings. I want to keep nurturing this all through his young adulthood. Too many boys and young men are pressured by the media, their peer group, and even the adults in their lives to disconnect from their emotions. This has very harmful effects on boys, and can lead to things like objectifying and degrading women, and resolving conflicts through violence.

When you honor your son’s feelings, you provide a healthy environment for him and a pathway for gender equality.
Wow, six points in and you're finally bringing up toxic masculinity? While there's a lot of arguments for and against whether this term has any meaning or not, what I find fascinating is that these individuals never seem to bring up "toxic femininity," even though women are responsible for half of all online harassment. It's almost as if being an asshole is a human quality, rather than strictly a male one.

IDEA 7: Watch Gender-Balanced Media
My husband and I both work in media. Before giving birth to our son, we were keenly aware of the unhealthy gender stereotypes that media perpetuates — even from the youngest age. If you are not familiar with this, please visit the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media. You will be enlightened.

With this in mind, we didn’t introduce our son to any media until he was about three years old. At that time, we chose educational media that did not perpetuate harmful gender stereotypes. This meant that the media had both strong female and male protagonists, and had fairly equal numbers of female and male secondary characters doing non-harmful gender stereotyped things. When my son was in pre-school, our favorite series was Sid the Science Kid. When he got to kindergarten and first grade, The Magic School Bus and Cat in the Hat were added to the favorites.

My son’s first Disney movie was Moana, which not only has a female lead, but also has a goddess as a major character.

In the first grade, we attended a school event, where unbeknownst to us ahead of time, they played the movie, Spider Man: Into the Spider Verse(a choice made by the “Dad’s Club”). My son watched five minutes of it, then walked away saying it was too scary and violent. I agreed. We’re not into superheroes.

At school, they offer a “superhero” dress up day. My son declines it every time.

My husband and I have been intentional with the media choices, but not forceful. We talked to our son early on about gender stereotypes. He is aware. He now gravitates toward gender-balanced and gender- positive media.
What the fu... who the hell cares what gender fictional characters are? They don't even exist! The only thing that should matter is if the story and presentation is well-crafted. When I'm watching a movie or playing a video game, the last thing on my mind is "Is the genital distribution among the cast roughly 50:50?"

Also, I sincerely doubt that your son is rejecting superhero stuff out of his own accord. I have a strong inclination that he's being coached into disliking them. Why's that? Well...

IDEA 8: Keep Guns and Violence Out of His Daily Diet
When my son was just a year old, my husband and I were standing in line at a Target store with my son in my Ergo carrier on my front. The woman in line behind us smiled at my baby, smiled at me, smiled at my husband, and then said with a chuckle looking at me: Just you wait.

In that moment, I wasn’t sure what she was talking about. But then I saw her gesture to what she had on the conveyer belt: Three toy guns. No, not just guns, rifles.

“That’s all my boys ever ask for,” she said.

I gave her a blank stare, turned to the cashier, paid for my baby’s pajamas, and off we went out of the store.

Out in the budding spring of Southern California, my husband and I began to unravel that moment. I felt flustered at the thought of moms across America buying their sons toy rifles. “She doesn’t have to give in to her sons,” my husband said. I agreed. “If her boys later down the road were asking for knives, drugs or alcohol would she be getting those for them too?” I wondered.

I was so incensed by this that I wrote about it in The Huffington Post. I concluded with: “What will I do if and when my little boy asks me for a toy gun?”

“I will say no, we don’t play with guns in our family. We don’t believe in playing games that take people’s life away, even if it is a pretend game. We believe in the value of a human life.”

I am proud to say that six years later, my son has never asked for a gun. In fact, he doesn’t want to have anything to do with guns. When his uncle unknowingly gave him a Star Wars Lego Set for Christmas (we don’t do Star Wars), my son on his own accord immediately threw out the guns that were part of the kit. Then he went ahead and built the spaceship, which he loved.

When he went with his class to see the Nutcracker at the theater, and then received a gift of a Nutcracker holding a a gasket afterwards, he immediately traded his with a friend who had one without a gasket, even though it was slightly broken.

No video games probably goes without saying. The gaming world is one of the most misogonystic and violent industries. If you question this, make sure to re-visit Gamergate.
WHAT? I thought you were all about "respecting" your son's feelings? Now you're going to deny him things he may want simply because of your political ideology? Once again, I have strong doubts that this child is doing this of his own accord. More likely, he's doing these things because he knows he'll get appraisal from you, which is far more sinister.

And why don't you want this kid to understand and use guns? My parents taught me to use firearms from a young age. I was taught to be mindful of how I was using them at all times, which is a life-skill that has translated into my adulthood. Why the fuck wouldn't you want to teach your kid about firearms? Yes, they can be dangerous in the wrong hands, but they're also a valuable self-defense tool. As the old saying goes: "God made man and woman, but Samuel Colt made them equal."

Finally, bringing up Gamergate in 2020? Fucking lol. I love how her rëtarded phrasing makes it sound as if the industry itself is responsible for Gamergate, and not professional victims being attention whores.

IDEA 9: Read Books By Both Female And Male Authors
What children read has a huge impact on their psyche and how they see the world. The books they are exposed to says a lot to them about who has authority and who should be listened to in the world. That’s why it’s important to read books with your son by both by female and male authors, and when he’s old enough to read on his own, expose him to both female and male author choices.

One of our favorite series is the The Magic Treehouse, written by Mary Pope Osborne. The protagonists are a brother/sister duo, each with their unique personality and equal power. It’s an adventure series that covers time travel, world cultures, political history, natural science and lots of wonderful magic.
I've said this in the SJW thread, and I'll say it again: basing your pop-cultural intake on the identity of the author is stupid. I don't care if the author is an American white male cishet or a Japanese lesbian or a Zimbabwean Muslim tranny. If your work piques my interest, I'll check it out and decide if it's good or not. The only quality a work should be judged on is the quality of the work itself, not the race, gender, or sexual inclinations of the person who wrote it.

IDEA 10: Be Mindful of Gendered Language
There are so many words in the English language that give favor to men. Not only words like policeman, fireman, postman, etc. — but words like manmade, mankind, human, and history.

My son actually cringes every time he hears the word “history.” “What about herstory?” he says.

He often corrects me when I say history. We are looking for a new word.

Sometimes my husband slips when speaking to me and my son and says, “You guys.” My son says, “No, it’s not you guys. Mommy is not a guy.”

You don’t need to be rigid about it, but be mindful, and help your son do the same.
Oh my god... if your son actually "cringes" at the word "history," then he's already a fucking basket-case. You ought to be ashamed of yourself for what you've turned him into. I hope for his sake that you're either making this up for clicks, or that this is just a phase that he will grow out of when he reaches maturity.

This is just nonsensical language-policing. Standard SJW modus operandi. If you control the way people speak, you control the way they think. Two plus two equals five.

BONUS: Nurture His Political Awareness & Social Justice Engagement
My husband, son and I marched together this past weekend at the Women’s March in Los Angeles. My son was thrilled. My husband and I have been honest with our son about the political history of gender inequality and women’s rights. He is only seven now, so we don’t go into too too much detail, but we share enough to help him understand the challenges women have faced through the decades and centuries. We also talk with him about the importance of people who are willing to stand up to the status quo that is oppressing people. He is proud to be one of them.

Tonight at dinner, my son, unprompted by any discussion about gender equality, blurted out, “It’s too bad that women and men can’t decide who should have all the power, because the answer is easy. It’s what I always say: Both.”
"...And everyone on the bus clapped."

Jesus tap-dancing Christ, your method of parenting sounds like a fucking nightmare scenario. Only two of these points were anything resembling rational parenting techniques. If I were your teacher, you'd be getting a failing grade for this poor show of what you laughably call a recipe for "gender equality," because your idea of "equality" boils down to "treat women like they're infallible deities whom you must prostrate yourself before at all times." That's not equality, that's just a different kind of inequality, which is no different than the inequality that you claim to be a part of your reality.

In short: "Fuck off."

Sincerely: An Egalitarian.
 
You know, for cases like this one, my views on the concept of reincarnation become even more negative everytime I read something like this. Imagine you had a good (or absolute shit) life and you die, then you come back as a human being in horrible situations such as:
  • Born in Africa to a dirt poor familiy just in time to catch an horrible disease or get drafted as a child soldier.
  • Born in China to an average family just to get killed in your way to school by a failing lampost or a careless driver, later to have people just watch you while you die.
  • Born in India as a two-headed blind freak because your parents are first cousins.
  • Have the luck to be born in the USA to a middle class, suburban family but end up with a crazy mother that cuts your balls and makes you troon out.
And all this without having any recolection of your previous life and unknowingly becoming conscious again, that's hell. If I die, I would want to stay dead if that were the case.
 
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Raising A Masculine Son

IDEA 1: Put Your Husband And Family Before Yourself
IDEA 2: Make Sure Your Listen To Your Husband
IDEA 3: Practice A Religion With Traditional Gender Roles
IDEA 4: Mom Does Housework And Dad Does Outside Work
IDEA 5: Wait Until Father Is Home Before Deciding
IDEA 6: Tell Your Son To Toughen Up
IDEA 7: Bond By Watching Sports With Dad
IDEA 8: Introduce Guns and Self-Defense At A Young Age
IDEA 9: Read Books About Growing Up A Man
IDEA 10: Encourage Gendered Language

BONUS: Discourage Political Awareness
 
I grew up in a religious household. We were not allowed to participate in many activities that most other kids got to, and I had absolutely no qualms about it. Children at a young age will uncritically follow their parents instructions because they very strongly seek the approval of their parents. It's been hardwired through evolution. If his lady is so impressed that her son isn't following the traditional "boy trajectory" and is rejecting violence and toy guns, I would say she lacks an important perspective about her own influence.

For her son, she ins't just making household rules or teaching him how to think differently, she's making him follow a moral system/framework. He's not disregarding toy guns because he's thought about it himself, and come to the conclusion its wrong, he's doing it because he doesn't want to feel guilt for enjoying things his parents disprove of. He's going to develop a complex. As he grows up his testosterone levels are going to increase and that will push him to participate in masculine pastimes, as well as increase his feeling of aggression. He'll feel guilt and shame for these natural feelings.
 
The thing is that all the points (well... some of them) sound ok then her interpretation of them is barmy.

the one about gun violence. Of course no child should be exposed to gun violence. But she doesn’t mean that. She means that shooting tin cans with grandpa under strict supervision is evil, or watching some random kiddies cartoon with laser zappers is evil. That’s just crazy.
And the media thing. Kids do not see stories like adults do. Kids stories, the traditional ones, are often quite dark. Because children want a simple scenario which basically goes : hero is kid, baddy appears, kid in peril, universe functions so that baddy is squished and kiddy is saved. Unless kid is bad and then kid gets it. almost all fairy stories are like this and for good reason - they serve as moral lessons but mainly, children need to be introduced slowly to the idea that a. There are monsters and b. They are vanquishable. Children love simple, rule based stories. They do not give a fuck about gender representation or politics. They want to see thomas the tank engine slack off and get punished for it then learn his lesson and return to being happy.
These people fundamentally misunderstand their job as parents. Raising a girl or a boy, your job is to keep them alive, fed, secure, safe and loved. Then as they grow, to gradually broaden their horizons within safe limits (and those limits expand with age.) part of that is exposure to the world. And your final role is to make yourself unnecessary - to make them functional, decent people who can operate in a complex world. There’s a rather corny saying about giving your kids roots, then wings, but it has truth in.
To make your kid grow up with a baggage of inbuilt guilt and inferiority is just awful. If she was raising a girl to think she was property and submissive she’d be ripped apart by the media - why is it OK to do it to boys?
 
I grew up in a religious household. We were not allowed to participate in many activities that most other kids got to, and I had absolutely no qualms about it. Children at a young age will uncritically follow their parents instructions because they very strongly seek the approval of their parents. It's been hardwired through evolution. If his lady is so impressed that her son isn't following the traditional "boy trajectory" and is rejecting violence and toy guns, I would say she lacks an important perspective about her own influence.

For her son, she ins't just making household rules or teaching him how to think differently, she's making him follow a moral system/framework. He's not disregarding toy guns because he's thought about it himself, and come to the conclusion its wrong, he's doing it because he doesn't want to feel guilt for enjoying things his parents disprove of. He's going to develop a complex. As he grows up his testosterone levels are going to increase and that will push him to participate in masculine pastimes, as well as increase his feeling of aggression. He'll feel guilt and shame for these natural feelings.
And thus a new incel / school shooter / rapist / troon will be born, and she'll take his failure to thrive as proof positive that she didn't fuck him up raise him well hard enough, and will write some screed for some future online feminist rag about how insidious the Patriarchy is and how the only solution to it is to feminism harder. It's really difficult to come back from being conditioned to uncritically seek the approval of authority figures who fundamentally hate and fear you, and it's generally not something you can accomplish by yourself.
 
It's funny cause it started off reasonable in the idea that Mom and dad shouldn't be insufferable cunts to each other to show a healthy relationship, but boy howdy did it start going off the rails as soon as she started mentioning goddamn Oracle cards.

Sorry but no amount of chanting and praying to a goddess is going to keep your son from being bullied into infinity because you have to make everything about you and your crusade.

'HERstory'? That's a punchable offense right there.
 
In the first grade, we attended a school event, where unbeknownst to us ahead of time, they played the movie, Spider Man: Into the Spider Verse(a choice made by the “Dad’s Club”). My son watched five minutes of it, then walked away saying it was too scary and violent. I agreed.
Man, I almost wanna make him watch the opening of Transformers the Movie just to see him freak out! Fuck this lady for raising a pussy.
 
I was looking through her twitter, and I don't think she's completely insane. Her son is going to be just fine. I'd be willing to bet if some troon activist or drag queen starts looking for converts in her sons school, she'll very carefully and discreetly keep him out of reach. It'll be other people kids that get offered up.

I've met activists like her, they and their families are always insulated from the consequences of their actions.

I mean this will probably look good for her son on a college application.

WM.jpg
 
My spirituality is based on the Feminine — the Goddess. It is about honoring and valuing woman— the Great Mother — and the female side of the divine. Around our home, we have statues of goddesses — Lakshmi, Saraswati, Tara, Kuan Yin — different representations of the divine feminine.
Protip: throw away those Hindu idols and just keep Kuan Yin. Kuan Yin is the Chinese Buddhist version of Avalokiteśvara, a Hindu Buddhist deity that starts out male but somehow becomes female as He was exported to various countries.
 
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