Monday, February 6, 2017

Internalized Misogyny of the "Cool Girl"

“Men always say that as the defining compliment, don’t they? She’s a cool girl. Being the Cool Girl means I am a hot, brilliant, funny woman who adores football, poker, dirty jokes, and burping, who plays video games, drinks cheap beer, loves threesomes and anal sex, and jams hot dogs and hamburgers into her mouth like she’s hosting the world’s biggest culinary gang bang while somehow maintaining a size 2, because Cool Girls are above all hot. Hot and understanding. Cool Girls never get angry; they only smile in a chagrined, loving manner and let their men do whatever they want. Go ahead, shit on me, I don’t mind, I’m the Cool Girl."                          


                                                                -Amy Dunne (Gone Girl)

Cool girls eat whatever they want and stay skinny.

Cool girls never get angry.

If you're hot enough, you don't have to be cool.


If you've seen the movie Gone Girl, you know that being the cool girl didn't work out too well for the main character, Amy. Her husband cheated on her with a "younger, bouncier cool girl." You'll also already know that it didn't work out too well for him, but I digress. Being the cool girl never really works out well for anyone. Being the cool girl involves not being like "other girls," which implies that there is something wrong with women in general. It's a kind of internalized misogyny. It perpetuates a myriad of stereotypes of women being full of drama and psycho and catty and high-maintenance. Being a cool girl is just being a guy in a hot girl's body. Being the cool girl involves silently standing by when guys call other girls sluts or say that all girls are crazy. Being a cool girl means being something that you are not and being passive. Cool girls don't have all those annoying feelings that other girls have.

The cool girl persona is perpetuated by both men and women. I will hear guys discuss things like how annoying it is that girls take so many pictures trying to get the perfect picture, yet those same guys will criticize a photo of a girl for being unattractive. How is a girl supposed to win? A cool girl would never care about what she looks like, but she always looks perfect. The trick to being a cool girl is to always look and act perfect with the air that you don't care and aren't trying. Cool girls know the secret, that there is no such thing as the cool girl in real life, because we all have feelings.

Middle school and high school girls seem to be especially vulnerable to the cool girl message. These girls are trying to figure out who they are and how to be accepted, and they are constantly bombarded with contradictory messages. This is a time that girls should learn to be assertive, but society is telling them to "Be cool. Be chill. You don't want people to think you're a psycho like other girls, right?" Everywhere you turn there are messages telling women what to look like and how to act. The problem is pervasive. It's not to say that women aren't cool. There are a lot of women out there who love sports or video games or have a lot of male friends. There is nothing wrong with this. The problem with the cool girl stereotype lies in the idea that there is something wrong with most girls. It also lies in the idea that cool girls don't get angry, but that's not being cool. That's just being a doormat.

The first step to combating this harmful cool girl image is to tell young girls that it is okay to be themselves. Encourage them to have female friendships. Teach them that it is okay to have feelings. Tell them that they don't have to be cool and chill all the time in order for people to like them. Be a role model who speaks kindly of other women and others in general. Teach girls that it is healthy to be assertive. Encourage girls to speak up when they hear guys or other girls perpetuating negative stereotypes about women. Other than being role models and encouraging young girls to be assertive, another thing that might help girls is a mindfulness practice. Mindfulness is a nonjudgmental awareness of what is happening in the present moment such as thoughts, feelings, and sensations. I've always been an advocate for yoga and meditation in schools. These mindful activities build confidence and provide clarity, especially in a confusing time like middle school. Meditation and yoga have been shown to decrease stress, promote positive body image, and increase self-confidence. Mindfulness gives girls the opportunity to slow down and be able to differentiate the messages of how they "should feel," and experience how they are actually feeling in that moment. A mindfulness practice is beneficial to everyone, but would be especially helpful to girls. I added a few links below to resources for beginning a mindfulness practice.

What do you think of the cool girl stereotype? Do you think this impossible standard causes stress for young girls? I challenge you to try one of the mindfulness exercises in the links below and notice if you feel differently after. If you don't have much time, the first one, "Leaves on a Stream," is just over 5 minutes. To begin a mindfulness practice, all it takes is 5 minutes a day. After trying a mindfulness exercise, let me know in the comments how you think a mindfulness practice could be helpful to young girls facing the pressures of society. Thanks for reading!

Mindfulness Resources:
Leaves on a Stream

10 Minute Mindful Breathing Exercise

10 Minute Yoga Sequence

Mindful Body Scan Exercise