- Jan 21, 2007
- 4,901
- 6,233
This thread really hits a major pet-peeve of mine, so I think I'm going to rant, and then make my exit from this thread.
Athletes do not belong to their fans (or to the parents of their fans). Each athlete is their own person, free to do what they enjoy and make their own decisions, just like the rest of us. It happens that what they enjoy doing (in this case gymnastics) happens to draw a lot of fans, but when they leave the floor they're their own person, doing their own thing, for their own reasons, and it's nobody else's business but their own.
Concern for the examples set for your kid is fine, but it does not give you (and this is a general and hypothetical "you;" I'm not directing this at any particular person) the right to pass judgement on what they do when they're off the floor. It's almost always phrased as "well she has the right to, but I sure hope my kids don't....." or "well she has the right to, but if I were her mother, surely she would never...." or something else equally condescending and judgemental. Prefacing it by stating she has the right to doesn't make it any less condescending or judgemental, nor does the fact that the subject of your judgement is on the internet. Once she steps off the floor, you have no right to pass judgement on what she does.
Imagine your kid at 18 years old. Whether that's in the past, present or future, imagine it for a moment. Now imagine a bunch of complete strangers sitting around passing that sort of judgement on what your kid wears, and what sort of pictures your kid takes, and how many, and so on. To say it would be creepy is an understatement. If they were to dress it up as concern for your kid or for their kid, that would not make it any less creepy.
Miley Cyrus is an oft-used point of comparison lately, but you know what? The same applies to Miley. When she first became a Disney icon, she was too young to even sign her own contracts. She spent the next few years doing being a wholesome Disneypop icon, presumably because that's what she (and her parents) decided for her when she was young. But now that she's an adult, she is under absolutely zero obligation to spend the rest of her life still being that wholesome little Disneypop icon. She's her own person, doing her own thing, for her own reasons. It makes absolutely zero difference whether or not you approve of her decisions or her reasons for making them. She does not belong to her fans, and she does not belong to the parents of her fans.
Furthermore, every generation has lamented "kids these days," and prophesized that the world would go to hell when this generation of kids grew up and had to take the reigns. And yet with very few exceptions, every generation of kids seems to grow up to live longer, happier, and healthier lives than the previous one.
Athletes do not belong to their fans (or to the parents of their fans). Each athlete is their own person, free to do what they enjoy and make their own decisions, just like the rest of us. It happens that what they enjoy doing (in this case gymnastics) happens to draw a lot of fans, but when they leave the floor they're their own person, doing their own thing, for their own reasons, and it's nobody else's business but their own.
Concern for the examples set for your kid is fine, but it does not give you (and this is a general and hypothetical "you;" I'm not directing this at any particular person) the right to pass judgement on what they do when they're off the floor. It's almost always phrased as "well she has the right to, but I sure hope my kids don't....." or "well she has the right to, but if I were her mother, surely she would never...." or something else equally condescending and judgemental. Prefacing it by stating she has the right to doesn't make it any less condescending or judgemental, nor does the fact that the subject of your judgement is on the internet. Once she steps off the floor, you have no right to pass judgement on what she does.
Imagine your kid at 18 years old. Whether that's in the past, present or future, imagine it for a moment. Now imagine a bunch of complete strangers sitting around passing that sort of judgement on what your kid wears, and what sort of pictures your kid takes, and how many, and so on. To say it would be creepy is an understatement. If they were to dress it up as concern for your kid or for their kid, that would not make it any less creepy.
Miley Cyrus is an oft-used point of comparison lately, but you know what? The same applies to Miley. When she first became a Disney icon, she was too young to even sign her own contracts. She spent the next few years doing being a wholesome Disneypop icon, presumably because that's what she (and her parents) decided for her when she was young. But now that she's an adult, she is under absolutely zero obligation to spend the rest of her life still being that wholesome little Disneypop icon. She's her own person, doing her own thing, for her own reasons. It makes absolutely zero difference whether or not you approve of her decisions or her reasons for making them. She does not belong to her fans, and she does not belong to the parents of her fans.
Furthermore, every generation has lamented "kids these days," and prophesized that the world would go to hell when this generation of kids grew up and had to take the reigns. And yet with very few exceptions, every generation of kids seems to grow up to live longer, happier, and healthier lives than the previous one.
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