What? Did you not expect a 'but' there? Did you think that daughters could never be a menace? Did you think that daughters could never be innocent criminals, pouting away their rosy lips and blinking away their bright eyes to forgiveness? You might be in for a little surprise.
Has your daughter been reading fairy tales and stories about princesses? Has she been religiously following beauty magazines and beauty pageants? Are your daughter's tantrums, conditions, emotional blackmailing episodes, and demands, on the rise?
Take a look at the following scenarios.
Princess Syndrome is a psychological irregularity that hits girls of all ages - toddlers, little girls, teenagers, and young adults. Girls affected by this syndrome are wishful thinkers, who believe they are entitled to nothing but the best of everything. If not corrected in time, these mannerisms could prevail and continue to exist over time. It is not a medical condition, but it does have its own set of causes and symptoms.
The symptoms could be as subtle as pouting, foot-stomping, frowning more often, focusing only on pretty things, and wearing clothes from only certain brands, or they could be as aggressive as self-obsessing, throwing tantrums, bossing around, being narcissistic... the list is long.
However, the three most important characteristics that define Princess Syndrome perfectly are: Girls with an acute sense of entitlement.They just make demands. Not only do they expect that their demands get fulfilled, but they also expect that this should happen without they themselves working towards it. Girls with the highest pride and self-esteem.
They are bossy. These girls are arrogant, and feed their ego with the belief that they are perfect, and that their perfection deserves nothing but the best. Girls with impractical expectations from people and life.
Narcissism. They think the world revolves around them. These girls expect the world around them and the people in it to be perfect, and are disappointed when their expectations are not met.
Princesses? Lovable. Princess Syndrome? As attractive and delightful as it may sound, definitely not lovable!
Girls stand for elegance, poise, cuteness, sweetness, and kindness. They are meant to be adorable, funny, charismatic and gorgeous. Whoever likes girls who are arrogant, unkind, egoistic, pretentious, smug, boastful, and self-centered! Yeah, I didn't think so.
So what do you do? Tell your daughter flat-out that she is not a princess? That she is not meant to be one? That she is just a normal girl who is expected not to dream of a life where fairy tales could be a possibility? Of course not. You don't want her to think that she is not precious. You want to make her believe that she is 'one in a million', but, 'the one' who everybody loves, 'the one' whose presence lights up the room, 'the one' who is adored for her kindness and sweet nature, 'the one' whose aura radiates confidence, yet approachability.
If your daughter has been displaying signs of the Princess Syndrome, fret not. It is in the nature of girls, young and old, to be airy and playful at heart. With the right kind of upbringing and reactions to actions, your girl would turn out to be just the fine princess everybody loves - pretty, yet humble, confident, yet gracious, and beautiful, yet kind.
Fairy tales: Don't let them mislead her!
Sleeping Beauty did nothing but sleep for a hundred years until her Prince Charming came looking for her, kissed her, and woke her up. The two fell in love with each other, got married, and lived happily ever after. Well, apparently.
Cinderella was visited by a fairy Godmother, who just had to swish her magic wand to transform her and her situation, for good.
The lesson here that you teach your daughter is that, someone will reach out for her, but that needn't be the case every time. She will need to take a stand for herself, make her own decisions, be independent, work for herself, and not just wait for a male, father figure, or fairy to fulfill her needs and desires. Although believing in magic is a sign of hope, just sitting there, waiting for magic to happen is completely uncalled-for.
Competence over beauty! Character over appearances!
Vintage fairy tale princesses as well as the modern-day models and actresses, who are 'make-believe perfect beauties' are to blame. Make your little girl understand that superficial beauty does not stay forever. What is needed is competence, character, intelligence, and wisdom. Make sure you teach her well enough that 'knowledge is power'.
The lesson to be learned here is that superficial beauty is not the only kind of beauty. No matter what, you will never succeed in keeping her away from beauty magazines. What you can do is, make sure she knows about women who have accomplished enormous feats at every level, and have been acknowledged and held in the highest regard by the world; irrespective of their physical appearances.
Stop being the dad in shining armor!
Your daughter is bound to face difficulties, go through ups and downs, and face competition at every stage. Shielding her from all these possible negative influences with the intention of keeping her from getting hurt or demoralized will only make her weaker and incompetent. Understand that you will not be there for her always. What happens when she is stuck in a situation where you cannot play the role of SuperDad or SuperMom? Competitions, bad phases, fights, when faced with the right spirit, will make her stronger, instill individuality, develop a positive self-esteem, teach her to be self-sufficient, create a realistic body image, and she will able to stand up for herself. Competitions - she will win some, and of course, she will lose some. Being a sore loser is a symptom of Princess Syndrome.
Teach her to accept her shortcomings and work towards overcoming them. Self-reliance is the biggest lesson you can teach her.
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