Amy Scripps

Archive for the ‘teen girls’ Category

Long Before BFF Acronym, Girls Pledged to Love Forever

In teen girls on October 4, 2011 at 8:56 pm

A favorite theme in children’s and young adult literature is childhood best-friendship so intense that it inspires a ritual or oath to commemorate it. This undying sentiment has been distilled into the texting acronym ‘BFF,’ bestowed on that one and only friend who has earned ‘forever’ status. While some girls may attempt to have more than one BFF, technically by calling someone ‘best’ you are designating an exclusivity only one soul mate can earn.

Authors celebrate the bond of best friends, exploring various ways that children and teens pledge their undying devotion. “Blood Sisters” mingle blood, either by pressing bleeding forefingers together or drinking wine with blood dripped into it. Oaths to meet again in the distant future have a romantic flair matched only by sworn promises  ‘never to forget’ an adventure, as platonic soul mates Tess and Lisa vow in Cinnamon Girls. One of the things I love about their friendship is that it is not encumbered by the murky motivations of seeking validation or sexual pleasure that sullies the girls’ relationships with Andy and Tucker. Friendship asks only that the BFF be trustworthy. Or, if the BFF totally f**ks up, as humans and especially teens are wont to do, the friend must promptly ‘fess up. Almost any failing can be forgiven as long as you are rigorously honest.

Of course modern parents dread that BFF status may be set in stone via a tattoo that their child will have to have painfully lasered off in the future.

No matter how you show the depth of your bond with a female friend, it is my hope that you will remember that feeling forever, keeping the final ‘F” in your BFF pledge for a lifetime. After all, boys come and go but blood sisters are forever.

Teens Love the late 70s/early 80s

In teen girls on November 21, 2009 at 7:14 pm

Cinnamon Girls is set in 1979, and it’s an era in music, fashion & culture that fascinates teens. The upcoming Joan Jett movie The Runaways, targeting teens & starring Twilight/New Moon leading ladies Kristen Stewart & Dakota Fanning, is set around 1979. Mentions of the biopic are all over the teen Twitter surrounding New Moon (see previous post.) Michael Jackson’s music from the late 70s/early 80s is experiencing a huge resurgence among teens, as are recording artists from the era like Aerosmith & the Ramones, as evidenced by the surge in song sales & vintage tees bearing band album art & logos. When I went to see David Byrne recently, whom I discovered as a high schooler in the late 70s, the audience was filled with parents my age accompanied by teens. Many parents can testify to their teens’ love of the music & culture of their youth.

In many ways, the late 70′s were a more innocent time, before laptops, texting and even, for the most part, the Walkman. (It came out in 1979, an event chronicled in Cinnamon Girls as a signal of the end of an era.) Was it a better time in America? I don’t know – discuss it with your teen…

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