A Lesson On How Fu**ed Up Society Is
A lesson on how fu**ed up society is.
Yesterday was the first day back to school for both my girls.
My first thought was βYes!! Quiet, I can work in peace! πβ
So I had a bath to regroup (as you do!)
Then as I got out the the bath and was just enjoying some downtime, high school rang.
My eldest, was being put in isolation for the rest of the day because βher skirt is too short. It needs to be close to the knee as it states in the uniform code of conductβ
Sheβd been in school for one hour.
Sheβs 5β6 ish, 12 years old and has the waist of a 7 year old.
I went to school to pick her up, because if sheβs being put into isolation, she may as well come home, and I asked to speak to someone to find out what was going on and why it was a problem.
When I asked IF the length of her skirt directly affects her education and ability to learn, I was told βYes.β
When pressed on HOW it directly affects her education and ability to learn, I was told itβs because of the school policy.
Didnβt answer my question, so I explained.
Her education and ability to learn is purely based on what comes out of her teachers mouth, and what plants itself between her ears and the level of understanding she has around that particular lesson or subject. So, again, HOW does the length of her skirt directly affect her receiving an education, and/or her ability to learn??
βSchool policy dictates that if uniform doesnβt abide by the policies, the students are put into isolation for the dayβ
So really, itβs the school policy that affects her receiving an education, based on some arbitrary idea of how close to the knee her skirt is. NOT, in fact, the length of her skirt.
This went on for a while with every answer to every question being βschool policyβ and βcode of conductβ blah blah blah
They were clutching at straws and trying to fob me off with the preapproved excuses (βthemβs the rulesβ) that people donβt usually question and/or that they never expect to need to say, let alone push further.
Then it hit me.
βWhen you put these policies in place, and adhere to them in the way in which youβre trying to do right now, youβre doing two things.
Firstly, youβre just blindly following the rules cos theyβre the rules so thatβs what it is. EVEN THOUGH you canβt back it up or have any valid justification for having the rules.
Secondly, and this is a big one; youβre discriminating against girls wearing skirts. Weβve already established girls wearing trousers and boys donβt have anything like this to deal with. So youβre discriminating SPECIFICALLY against girls who wear skirts.
Youβre also judging these children by what theyβre wearing, and in some cases punishing certain children based on how their clothes fit, just like this, which is impeding a childβs ability to receive an education – the whole reason they come to school. (Itβs the law, theyβre expected to receive an education)
Furthermore, youβre SUBCONSCIOUSLY teaching over a thousand adolescents EVERY YEAR that itβs not just acceptable, but EXPECTED, itβs NORMAL, NATURAL, to judge someone by what theyβre wearing or how their clothes fit. Youβre also teaching them, subconsciously, that itβs perfectly acceptable to PUNISH someone based on what theyβre wearing without any rhyme or reason.
This is where kids learn to judge. This is when some kids start to get singled out, thatβs when bullying starts and becomes acceptable. This is how youβre teaching these adolescent minds, and βpreparing them for the futureβ where they will carry these lessons deep within them.
Girls are already body conscious, girls who wear skirts will be even more conscious of what theyβre wearing, because everyone else believes itβs OK to judge them by their appearance. This moves further into the societal psyche, where people (not just girls wearing skirts) start to get ostracised, marginalised, attacked. Itβs also the belief system that itβs not only OK to judge girls, but also punish them based on what theyβre wearing that fundamentally underpins RAPE CULTURE and why when a woman gets raped people ask βwhat was she wearing? How short was her skirt?β because CHILDREN in schools, just like this one, with rules just like this one are being taught that thatβs OK. Itβs normal. Itβs acceptable. Itβs expected for people to think and behave that way.
Thatβs how it is.
Thatβs how itβs always been.
And then, to pile this pressure onto a child whoβs spent YEARS being bullied for the way she looks; sheβs too tall, too slim, too muscular, too strong, too blonde, wears glasses and the rest – youβre adding onto this that her waistband is too low, her shirt too fitted, her skirt hem too high… her legs too long? Whatβs next? Her breasts? Is that really acceptable for a system, an establishment, an institution thatβs meant to be preparing our children to move out and live in the real world? In modern day society?β
The member of staff I was speaking to looked at me dumbfounded, so I posed another question… βthe dress youβre wearing; is that considered an acceptable length?β It was to her knees. She said yes.
I stood up. Iβm 5β10, a good 4-6 inches taller than she was.
I asked if I were to wear her dress would it still be an acceptable length? She didnβt answer. Her face had all the shame and guilt and the βfuck, sheβs got meβ of the βnoβ written all over it.
Then I pointed out 3 members of staff all wearing shorter skirts than my daughter. Whereβs their code of conduct?
How come what theyβre wearing isnβt considered inappropriate?
Should they be setting an example?
Today I realised just how deeply engrained this all is.
How a lot of the things that people are shouting about, wanting to make/see HUGE changes on are deeply embedded into our school systems.
How unless you tick a certain box a certain way, or look a certain way, fit a certain way. behave a certain way, this is just normal.
All for the sake of subjects and lessons that are graded on papers. But the real lessons; the HOW TO BE A GOOD HUMAN BEING AND NOT A TOTAL ASSHOLE lessons arenβt even considered. Theyβre barely even an afterthought. βBecause theyβre the rulesβ
This isnβt just about my daughter, or her school. Itβs a much larger issue. We see articles about girls being sent home from school because of their clothes all the time.
And this isnβt a childβs issue, itβs not even a parents issue.
Parents can only buy whatβs available for purchase.
If thereβs really a problem with the clothing, itβs time to take it up with the manufacturers. Not me.
And more importantly if these girls feel comfortable wearing these clothes, and they donβt pose any real threat or harm, whatβs the problem?
Itβs not the girls clothes that need to be changed. Itβs the antiquated belief systems and βthatβs how it is because thatβs how itβs always been. Itβs normalβ
But hereβs the thing; Times change. Thoughts change. Should policyβs not change too?
Should they not grow alongside humanity? Become more accepting? More inclusive?
Through this, Iβve learned a lot about myself and whatβs been screwing me up for the past 33.5 years.
I know a lot of what it is screwing my kid up too.
She doesnβt just have schoolwork to struggle with; she has to make sure her works in order, and she doesnβt put her hand up too much in class, or ask too many questions so as to not be βdisruptiveβ.
Sheβs always got to be aware of her clothes and if theyβre in accordance to bullshit policies that leave her open to scrutiny and punishment.
She has bullies to deal with, peer pressure, and trying to make sure she sticks within the vague lines of codes of conduct that have no valid reasoning or solid basis.
Itβs rules for the sake of rules. And βbecause theyβre the rulesβ as the reason.
Bleurgh! I hate it.
It makes me feel sick.
It makes my daughter cry every fucking week.
It makes me angry.
And it makes my beautiful daughter apologise for her own existence on average every 32.6 seconds (seriously, sometimes all I hear her say is βsorryβ)
Yesterday didnβt go the way I planned.
It turned into a nightmare.
It took me 11 hours to calm down.
I wasnβt calm at school.
I was the Raging Bitch Mum who wanted to tear someoneβs head off because my kid was only allowed to school for ONE fucking hour, all because of a skirt.
But itβs not really because of a skirt.
Or itβs not now…
This is so much more than being about βjust a skirtβ
Credit https://www.facebook.com/debbie.bradley.5074
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