I second that Mimitabby - I have experienced the same with my son and my daughters. I now just love and embrace that fact that they are different. There are sociological study after sociological study out there about the differences in men and women, boys and girls.
I think one of the best examples that I can give personally relates to bike riding. I had been riding seriously all summer - about 70 miles a week some weeks. I had a new bike, all carbon frame, had been watching my cadence, keeping it up in the 80-90 range and had been pleased with a 19ish mph speed average.
Enter husband, who is physically active on an intermittent basis. He wanted to go on a ride with me so he slapped some flat pedals on my old bike (not a carbon frame bike), slipped on some sneakers and a helmet (and of course his clothes) and off we went. It was his second time on this bike and our first time riding together on bikes other that mountain bikes. He kicked my _utt. He was faster, stronger, and had to put out less effort on the ride. The only difference was that I had more stamina when we got into the ride about 15 miles because I was conditioned.
I love the fact that we are different.
What I don't love is when we sale girls and women short on things without giving them a try at different things or giving them a push here and there to try something new. My dad was great in respect to this. He had me changing brake pads, oil, radiators, and alternator belts on my cars in high school. I once stood in the bed of a truck on the edge in a field and using the back side of an axe (we didn't have a sledgehammer) and hammered in a whole line of field fence posts for a pasture. Must have put in 50-60 posts in a week.
Same for boys - don't sale them short either. They can learn to do things that are typical for females.
The more diverse we are with skills, the better off we all are.
My $.02



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