Mothers teach their daughters to be nice and polite. Showing rudeness, getting into a fight – such behaviour is not beautiful for a girl. But by instilling good manners, parents deprive their daughter of self-defence skills. Whether she will be able to resist male violence in the future – few people think about it.

Unfortunately, most modern women have been taught that it is necessary to hide and suppress feelings that do not look ‘feminine’. And from generation to generation, mothers pass on this norm to their daughters – to ‘act nice’, to be nice, thus depriving them of the ability to defend themselves.

In the world of girls, ‘being nice’ means ‘not being strong.’ But by requiring daughters to remain ‘nice’ and behave politely to everyone, mothers take away their weapons with which to respond to an abuser. Sometimes they don’t even give them the strength to speak back.

WHAT OBEDIENCE RISKS IN THE FUTURE

Here are a few possible scenes from the future.

WHAT MESSAGES MOTHERS LEAVE FOR THEIR DAUGHTERS

44% of women in America have been sexually harassed at least once in their lifetime and one in five, or 20%, are raped. In most cases, it’s not a maniac or serial offender who commits the violence, but someone they’ve known before.

When that moment comes, you won’t be there for them. The only thing that will help is the advice you gave before, the things you taught them as a child. And it’s usually not about how important it is to protect yourself, but how to be comfortable. Here are some examples.

1. ‘Don’t be so shy – hug your uncle.’

Message: a good girl is obliged to show sympathy, she does not dispose of her own body. To not show sympathy to someone who demands it is to behave rudely.

Lesson learnt: don’t trust yourself and your sense of antipathy. To be accepted and approved of, be prepared to agree to show sympathy without hesitation, even if the person is unpleasant to you.

2. ‘He didn’t mean to hurt you, he was just playing. Be a good girl and give him your toys.’

Message: a good girl expects only good things from others and sees only good things, despite what they do and how they act. You need to ignore aggression from anyone and continue to be nice and alert.

Lesson learned: learn to ignore threats and find excuses for aggressive behaviour towards you. Forget how you want to respond to the offender and respond to rudeness and violence only with kindness.

3. ‘You’re not angry with him, are you? You’re just upset.’

The message: good girls don’t get angry. They suppress anger and experience more decent feelings – like sadness. Anger points to the offender. Anger demands justice. Sadness leaves the victim to fend for themselves…..

Lesson learnt: someone else’s comfort is always more important than your own and how you feel. Suppress anger before you even realise it so that everyone around you feels good.

WHAT ELSE MOTHERS NEED TO KEEP IN MIND

Let me ask you a few more questions.

Why are mothers so blind to the destructive messages they send to their daughters?

We should all remember at least two important phrases to say to girls from childhood:

‘If you tell me you don’t feel comfortable around someone – whether it’s a family friend or a relative – I will always listen to you and take it seriously. Your safety is more important to me than anything else.