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Monday 7 January 2013

Role Models Can Save Troubled Generations Says Expert Steve Biddulph, Author Of Raising Boys Turns His Attention To Girls.


Difficult age: Aunties can help steer girls through the 'toxic' influences of advertising and celebrity, a best-selling psychologist has claimed, in an age where youngsters' lives are in a 'catastrophic' state of crisis. Posed by model

An 'aunties army' is needed to combat the epidemic of eating disorders and self-harming among young girls, a leading child psychologist has warned.
Steve Biddulph, author of the ground-breaking 1998 book Raising Boys, has become more concerned about today’s girls – and believes aunts should help bring up their nieces to increase the positive female role models in their lives.
In his previous work, Biddulph said boys were seen as a ‘disaster area’ compared to girls.

He said parents should delay their sons starting formal education and suggested an increase in single-sex classes in co-educational schools to help them reach their full potential.
But today, he argues, girls are giving greater cause for concern.


Biddulph says young girls are in a ‘catastrophic’ state of crisis because of the ‘toxic’ influences of advertising, celebrity and pornography which pressurise them to grow up too quickly.
In his new book, Raising Girls, he writes: ‘To understand our daughters, we have to realise that their childhood is not like ours. To put it bluntly, our 18 is their 14. Our 14 is their ten.

‘Never before has girlhood been under such a sustained assault, ranging through  everything from diet ads,  alcohol marketing and fashion pressures, to the inroads  of hard pornography into teenage bedrooms.’
He adds: ‘About five years ago . . . we began to see a sudden and marked plunge in girls’ mental health.
‘Problems such as eating disorders and self-harm, which once had been extremely rare, were now happening in every classroom and every street.   But more than this, the  average girl was stressed and depressed in a way we hadn’t seen before.’
However, he argues the ‘enormous pain and confusion’ that girls experience can be eased by increasing the number of women in their lives – other than their mothers – who can act as mentors.
Biddulph said parents and relatives are not supporting girls in the way they did in the past. He added: ‘We haven’t put enough adult time and care around our daughters, or taught them well enough.’

Biddulph’s new book is due to be published later this month and follows the success of Raising Boys, which has sold 3million copies worldwide.

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