Description: A Letter from Steve Dear Reader, ItâÂÂs amazing what you learn about yourself. Twenty years ago, when we were expecting our second child, friends naturally asked what we were hoping for, a boy or a girl. I always said I didnâ We already had a boy of seven, and we were very eager simply to have another child.àààWe had planned on having a homebirth, but it ended as an emergency caesarianâÂÂthatâÂÂs what we do every time in our family! Then from ShaaronâÂÂs belly the medical team pulled a slippery bundle, and somebody said, âÂÂWell done, youâÂÂve got a little girl!â And laughing. And jumping around. I hadnâ That was all those years ago, and the feeling hasnâÂÂt gone away.àààDaughters evoke such strong feelings in usâÂÂprotectiveness, awe, hope, and fear, but mostly just a fierce love and a wish to give them the best possible life. * ààààààà* ààààààà* It wasnâÂÂt a choice so much as a missionâÂÂback then, boys were a disaster zone, and urgently in need of help. I wrote the worldâÂÂs top-selling book on raising boys, with a simple message that they needed to be strongly loved and firmly taught how to be good men, that they needed positive role models, and that their energy wasnâÂÂt a bad thing. àààBack then, girls were doing fine. Then, in the mid-2000s, that started to change. We began to see a sudden and marked plunge in girlsâ mental health, first in the United States but quickly spreading across the world. Problems such as eating disorders and self-harm, which had once been extremely rare, were now happening in every school and on almost every street. But more than this, the average girl, everygirl, was stressed and depressed in a way we hadnâÂÂt seen before. àààGirls arenâÂÂt born hating their own bodies. They arenâÂÂt born angry at life. Something was happening in the culture that was poisoning girlsâ spirits. It seemed to come on as they entered their teens, but it was creeping up on them younger and younger. In response, a worldwide movement sprang upâÂÂof girl advocates, therapists, and researchersâÂÂto try to mobilise parents and the community. Many of these people were my friends, and together we saw the need for a simple parent-friendly book to help get girlhood back on track. àààRaising strong girls starts far, far back, when they are tiny or toddlers, or just in elementary school. We have to love them well, and we have to fight the big world, too, since the predators that want to bring our daughters down are everywhere; they wear suits and make good money and have no conscience at all. The choices we make in the way we raise our daughters can help keep their spirits alive and their self-belief strong, even when the world sends a very different message.àààGirlhood is a quest, a journey of gathering the wisdom needed to be a woman. We are our daughtersâ guides on that quest. We need good maps, good stories, and clear eyes. What could be more awesome than to see your daughter standing tall, wise, and strong at twenty-five or forty, and knowing that you helped to make her so. And what could be more worthwhile than to fight for a world that is open for all young girls, wherever they are born, to be able to realise their dreams.àààWarmly, Steve Biddulph
Price: 15.84 USD
Location: East Hanover, New Jersey
End Time: 2024-12-31T11:38:10.000Z
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All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
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EAN: 9781607745754
UPC: 9781607745754
ISBN: 9781607745754
MPN: N/A
Book Title: Raising Girls : How to Help Your Daughter Grow Up Happy, Healthy, and Strong
Number of Pages: 224 Pages
Language: English
Publisher: Potter/Ten SPEED/Harmony/Rodale
Item Height: 0.6 in
Publication Year: 2014
Topic: Children's Studies, Parenting / General, Life Stages / Adolescence
Illustrator: Yes
Genre: Family & Relationships, Social Science
Item Weight: 7.6 Oz
Item Length: 8.4 in
Author: Steve Biddulph
Item Width: 5.5 in
Format: Trade Paperback