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growing up “the good girl”: reflections after reading The Second Sex

Growing up, I was taught to be “the good girl.” Quiet, polite, unambitious. To smile when uncomfortable, to avoid rocking the boat. Reading Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex made me realize these lessons weren’t just about manners — they were rules designed to shape and control women’s lives. De Beauvoir wrote, “One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.” That hit me deeply. It’s not biology but the social expectations that mold us into who we are — or who we are allowed to be. I remember countless times being told to soften my voice, to “not be too much,” as if my natural self was a problem. It wasn’t just family — schools, media, even friends played their part. This book helped me see those invisible chains and question the roles I’d unconsciously accepted. It’s a reminder that personal freedom begins by recognizing the societal scripts we’ve been handed — and then deciding which ones to rewrite. #Entertainment #Books #FeministPages #TheSecondSex

 growing up “the good girl”: reflections after reading The Second Sex
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how a simple phrase in the handmaid’s tale shook my understanding of freedom

There’s a moment in The Handmaid’s Tale where Offred repeats: “Nolite te bastardes carborundorum.” It’s fake Latin, but it means “Don’t let the bastards grind you down.” When I first read it, I smiled. It felt like a secret rebellion — a tiny spark in a dark place. But then I realized those “bastards” aren’t always obvious. They’re the quiet dismissals at work, the sideways glances in family dinners, the constant microaggressions that wear you down bit by bit. Being told you’re “too sensitive” or “overreacting” is part of it. Last year, at a holiday party, my cousin joked, “Women are just better at complaining.” Everyone laughed. No one said a word. It hurt. I stayed silent. That phrase reminded me that resistance isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s simply holding on to your voice when the world tries to silence it. Freedom isn’t just laws or rights. It’s the everyday battles — the small moments when you decide, “I will not back down.” And that’s where freedom lives. #Entertainment #Books #FeministPages #MargaretAtwood #TheHandmaidsTale

how a simple phrase in the handmaid’s tale shook my understanding of freedom
Tag: FeministPages | zests.ai