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Angel S wrote:I think women focus more on the technique and we tend to not get aggressive until we're a bit more comfortable with what we're trying to execute. I notice that men do the opposite; they'll go in charging first & worry about skill later.
ElizabethPangerl wrote:We all have different opportunities growing up. I got into and won my share of fistfights as a little kid, but by age ten or so I knew I would encounter rather severe parental discipline if I didn't act like more demurely on the surface. I was afraid of being in fights not because of any opponent, but of my mother's reaction afterward - even if I won.
I'm in my late twenties and my mother isn't aware of my involvement in ARMA. She thinks my husband and I go to history conventions (partially true) on our anniversaries and that the three wasters in our kitchen are all his.
I do wish I hadn't supressed my aggression for as long as I have. It feels awfully good to be nurturing it again. Strength and reticence are issues, but flexibility is not. My mother pulled me away from fistfights and put me into dance classes.
Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote:I think parents who keep their daughters from learning to fight and or play with the boys are doing them a great disservice. It not only impacts the development of girls but also that of boys too.
Randall Pleasant wrote:Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote:I think parents who keep their daughters from learning to fight and or play with the boys are doing them a great disservice. It not only impacts the development of girls but also that of boys too.
Sunday
I fully agree. We let our daughter play with whoever she wanted to play with and, within reason, we let her fight her own fights. Of course we teach her that fighting is not a socially good way to solve personal issues but we never tell her that she can't defend herself. At age thirdteen she is just as happy to play football in the mud as she is to go shopping at the mall. But more importantly, she has the will to stand up for herself and the a good sense of when to make a stand and when not to make a stand, be it in regard to other kids, teachers, her parents, etc. Treating her as an equal is not optional amoung her friends regardless of gender.
By the way, I love your name. My daughter's name is Shileah Augustina Elisabeth Pleasant. Her name was originally longer but her mother, who didn't even have a middle name, made me cut it down to a "manageable" size. I am sure some of my female ancestors will refuse to speak to me in the after-life for my lack of respect.
Nigel Plum wrote:Well we've got some other drills too
Richard Strey wrote:Nigel Plum wrote:Well we've got some other drills too
Please do tell. We have a training-camp for us little masochists coming up and I could need some more ideas to spice up the days. As if an hour cross-country running before breakfast, six hours of regular training plus theory plus circuit-training to warm-down wasn't enough.
Richard Strey wrote:Nigel Plum wrote:Well we've got some other drills too
Please do tell. We have a training-camp for us little masochists coming up and I could need some more ideas to spice up the days. As if an hour cross-country running before breakfast, six hours of regular training plus theory plus circuit-training to warm-down wasn't enough.
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