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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    I didn't give birth to any girls, so I don't know too many of them that are in their 20s (like my sons). So this is a random, tiny sample.

    The girls I do know seem way different than the girl I was. When I was a teenager, you could either be a tomboy or a girly-girl. Everyone wanted me to be a girly-girl, but I was a tomboy through and through. Most of the tomboys I knew were not the most attractive girls, either. But the girls I know today--so many of them athletic and not afraid of sweat--and yet still putting on the make-up and dressing up for the prom. Still interested in the clothes and all that other stuff. But they get their sweat on and compete in sports and I think it's AWESOME.

    They're post-Title IX girls, who grew up knowing the sports were there in (somewhat) equal measure, so it's a fact of life for them. I was in junior high when Title IX went into effect. I remember when my cousins played half-court basketball in high school. These girls don't even know half-court existed.

    They are SO lucky. (But don't tell Phyllis Schlafley.)

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
    Posts
    359
    I never really thought of it as offensive I guess. I was online buying my second Terry saddle and I saw the RLAG line and looked at the shirts and I guess it's the emblem I didn't like. See if they did it like the "Life Is Good" with a girl on it on a mtn bike, wouldn't it be more appealing? That is my opinion I guess.

    FWIW I ride a pink bike. The frame is the only pink on it. It's a tribute to 2 women, and now a third since I bought the bike, that had breast cancer. One of the three died so it means more to me. Pink to me is strength. It's that hidden strength that men will never be able to understand. It's a quiet yet powerful strength and like someone said, it's better if they made things that were sort of secretive like the strength that women hold. I had two women behind me in a car in NYC laughing at me and then passed me and said "ugly bike" as it was on the back of my Jeep. I don't have much to say about that other than: clueless.

    As for the girl connotation, I find it a phrase that those you feel close to can use. If a guy that I didn't know called me a girl, I would probably be a little taken aback. If one of my riding buddies from the LBS called me a girl, I wouldn't blink. I even used it in a thread on Jeni's race report. Jeni, I hope I didn't offend you!!!

    Riding like a girl, to me, means you can pick through the best rock garden and ride a good line. It means you aren't a nutbar and ride sensibly. To me, it means I can power up hills and usually pass guys cross country. It also means that when a group of us get lost, I'm the one that tries to keep them all chipper while I figure out how to get out of the woods. It also means I'm usually the one with more water, an extra tube and a power bar that someone always seems to need by the end of a long ride.

    I agree it's kinda cutsie. And I had to laugh when someone posted about pedicures. I work in a very male dominated field and wear no jewelry, no make up. But pull off those "sock guy Beaver socks" and there are some of the best pedicured feet and sometimes a toe ring to boot. I think to me, it *could* mean that girls have the best of both worlds: a strong rider and we clean up nice

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    the dry side
    Posts
    4,365
    Quote Originally Posted by TahoeDirtGirl View Post

    Riding like a girl, to me, means you can pick through the best rock garden and ride a good line. It means you aren't a nutbar and ride sensibly. To me, it means I can power up hills and usually pass guys cross country. It also means that when a group of us get lost, I'm the one that tries to keep them all chipper while I figure out how to get out of the woods. It also means I'm usually the one with more water, an extra tube and a power bar that someone always seems to need by the end of a long ride.

    LOL, why is it that we girls usually have a better stocked camel back?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
    Posts
    359
    Quote Originally Posted by Tuckervill View Post

    They're post-Title IX girls, who grew up knowing the sports were there in (somewhat) equal measure, so it's a fact of life for them. I was in junior high when Title IX went into effect. I remember when my cousins played half-court basketball in high school. These girls don't even know half-court existed.

    They are SO lucky. (But don't tell Phyllis Schlafley.)

    Karen
    I had to do another post for this. Title IX changed the landscape for us. I remember trying to find athletic wear when I was in high school. Forget it. Jogbra was the first athletic bra I bought and I STILL HAVE IT from 1989. I think we tend to forget that it wasn't that long ago that we were limited in both high school and college sports. Now we can actually get something with RLAG on it, forget it, you wouldn't have found this 20 years ago.

 

 

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