The World Our Girls Live In

When I am working with teenage girls, I often find myself picturing my daughter. My work has become more personal.
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It's how it should be. Innocence, sincerity, simple. I watch my daughter and her friend do each other's hair. They are 8 and 9 years old. They haven't discovered that this classic game of "salon" is a primer for beauty. To them, it's just two girls doing each other's hair. It's just what girls do at a sleepover. There's no competition -- no judgment -- no jealousy. I listen to them giggle. They squabble at times, but it always gets resolved.

Instead of soaking in every minute of this, I find myself thinking about my work as a counselor. Imagining their life in five years. Picturing them sitting in my office, hiding. Terrified to go out in the hallway and face their peers. Feeling alone and embarrassed, they blame themselves. They look to me to make it better. Pleading with me to give them the words to help them face it -- face the cruel world our teenage girls live in.

I leave that world for a minute. The one in which girls are left to always wonder where they stand, constantly questioning who is on their side. The one in which they spend most of their time looking behind themselves rather than in front. The world that scares them, but doesn't let them talk about being afraid.

I come back to the world that's in front of me. The one that shows the opposite. No fear -- no insecurities. These girls aren't wondering where they stand with each other. They are safe to share their feelings. There are no repercussions to their honesty. No worrying that what they say will end up out there for others to see. They trust each other. They have no reason not to.

They still admire and compliment each other. I watch them lift each other up, rather than tear each other down.

They don't yet know about Snapchat or Instagram.

They don't retweet pictures or share Facebook posts that are intended to cause harm.

They don't know about sexting.

"Backstabbing" is still a word they would ask for the definition of. It's not part of their vocabulary.

They have yet to experience the fallout from their reputation being ruined at the stroke of a key.

They don't know about cutting their skin to feel something other than the pain they already have.

They don't know about suicide. Thoughts of despair, desperation, and hopelessness have yet to invade their minds.

They still believe their body belongs to them and only them.

They opt in because doubt is not the first thing they think about.

They believe in themselves. Their place in this world is still defined by them. They are confident in their abilities.

They know how to say NO and set boundaries. Their value and belief in who they are still empowers them to ask for what they need.

They have a voice. They still feel free to use it.

Their mantra is: I am a girl. I am smart and strong. I can do anything.

When I am working with teenage girls, I often find myself picturing my daughter. My work has become more personal. I look at these girls who have sat across from me for 15 years, and can't help but think of them as my own.

There are many days when I work relentlessly to get them to see their beauty, their worth. I sit knee-to-knee with them, hoping they will see what I see when I look at them.

They are our students, daughters, sisters, and nieces. They are perfect in so many ways.

They feel imperfect in so many ways.

Part of me wonders where they learn this. When do they start doubting who they are and start believing the words of others?

On those days when I am feeling discouraged, I look at them and extend my hand. Tell them that I don't have the answer. Sometimes we just sit there, both of us knowing that there is nothing we can do to change the outcome. The damage has already been done.

It is in those moments that they have to start believing in themselves again. Remember what it was like to be an 8-year-old girl brushing her friend's hair. Feel the security that came as a result of simple friendships. Trust that there are still relationships that can be like that. Believe that they are enough. Tell themselves that they are worthy, valuable, beautiful, able, and incredible.

Tonight while I write this, I hear them in the next room. My daughter and her friend giggling. Whispering secrets so that I don't hear them. I sneak over and look through the small crack in the doorway. Huddled under the mound of blankets, they are free. Free to speak their minds. Safe from judgment, lies, and cruelty.

I see the faint sign of light. They have a flashlight with them. The silhouette of a diary is obvious through the covers. They are writing in it. Their words speak of a world in which girls are strong, kind, able, enough, confident, and happy. What I read restores my faith in the world that our girls grow up in. We CAN help them make it different.

***

I'm not sure if the words I read are from that night, but I copy them down anyway. They are simple. They need to be shared. I know exactly who needs to see them.

Read them, I tell her. This girl who sits across from me, who has lost who she is. "I am a girl. I am silly, smart, good at ballet and the monkey bars, and a good friend. I have a kind smile. I like myself," she reads.

For the first time in a while, I see her smile. A single tear escapes her eye as she says to me, "I want to feel like that again." There it is, I tell myself. Hope.

___________________
Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-DONTCUT for the S.A.F.E. Alternatives hotline.

If you -- or someone you know -- need help, please call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. If you are outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention for a database of international resources.

Also on HuffPost:

7 Things To Know About Babies
They Have A Sense Of Self-Control(01 of06)
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A 2014 study published in the journal Cognitive Development looked at 150 15-month-olds. The babies watched an adult demonstrate how to use several noise-making toys. Then, a second adult entered the room and angrily scolded the first for making so much noise.

After the demonstration, the babies were welcome to play with the toys, but for half of them, the angry second adult left the room or turned away, while the latter half remained under that adult's gaze.

Babies in the former group did not hesitate to start playing with the toys, but the ones in the second group generally waited a little bit and then played with the toys differently than they'd seen in the demonstration. This indicated that they were trying to adjust their actions to avoid the anger of the second adult -- therefore, they are able to resist their impulses and show self-control.
Foreign Languages Sound … Well, Foreign To Them(02 of06)
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Mere hours after their birth, babies can sense the difference between sounds in their native language and a foreign one.

Researchers in Sweden and Washington state studied 40 newborns wearing pacifiers that were wired to a computer. When the babies heard sounds from foreign languages, they sucked the pacifiers for much longer than when they heard their native tongue -- this indicates that they could differentiate between the two.

According to researcher Patricia Kuhl, "The vowel sounds in [the mother's] speech are the loudest units and the fetus locks onto them."
They’re Tuned In To Each Other’s Emotions(03 of06)
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By the time they reach 5 months, babies are able to sense each other's feelings.

In a BYU 2013 study, 20 5-month-old babies and 20 3.5-month-old babies sat in front of two monitors, which showed a video of a smiling baby and a video of a frowning baby. Then the scientists played two audio recordings: one of happy baby and one of a sad baby.

Upon hearing the the sounds of the happy baby, the 5-month-olds looked at the monitor with the smiling baby, and when they heard the sad baby audio, they turned to the frowning baby video. The 3.5-month old babies were less successful in matching these sounds and images.
Their Ears Register More Words From Mom Than Dad(04 of06)
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A recent study published in Pediatrics found that infants react more to words from moms than from dads. All 33 babies in the study wore sound-recording vests which revealed that they heard three times more words from moms than from dads.

A researcher from the study, Dr. Betty Vohr, told Time that "a possible explanation is that the pitch of mother’s voice or its proximity is more stimulating for babies."
They Have The Ability To Learn Sign Language(05 of06)
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Although babies generally don't start speaking their first few words until 12 months old and still have a limited vocabulary by age 2, they have the ability to develop an impressive mastery of sign language from the age of 6 months.

After noticing that the children of his deaf friends were communicating with their families with sign language from a very early age, Dr. Joseph Garcia founded the "Sign With Your Baby" program in which instructors teach parents and babies American Sign Language.
And, They Can Read Lips(06 of06)
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A 2012 study showed that babies read people's lips when they're learning to talk.

Researchers at Florida Atlantic University observed almost 180 babies at ages 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 months and studied their behavior when they saw videos of adults speaking. The experiment showed that when babies are about 6 months old, they stop looking into adults’ eyes and start focusing on their lips to learn how to make sounds.

So next time you’re in the presence of a lip-reading baby, you might want to be a little more mindful about what you say.

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