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  • I read once: Children serve as mirrors of their parents

  • forgotten selves.

  • I basically wanted to please everyone.

  • That was my motto from a very early age.

  • I’m a good girl.

  • I’m a very good girl.

  • I was bornAsya”.

  • In Russian it sounds a little more likeAsh-a”.

  • I was pretty much the model Soviet childwell behaved,

  • polite, kind, obedient, check, check, check.

  • In Riga, children were taught to be part of a group.

  • In America, I felt very much alone, different

  • and not accepted.

  • I picked up the language very quickly.

  • I picked up the culture very quickly,

  • and I just really wanted to be a regular, American girl.

  • They knew about blow jobs.

  • They knew about dark lip liner and giant hoops.

  • And I was like this little immigrant girl

  • who hadn’t started shaving her legs yet.

  • I was not allowed to wear makeup, but I, at some point,

  • had stolen my mom’s, like, little tiny chunk of a lip liner

  • that she had lying around at the bottom of a bag.

  • We had a pretty early bedtime, but I would sneak my Walkman

  • and I would listen to Z-100’s “Love Phones.”

  • I was learning about a world that was larger than my own,

  • and I kind of grasped what I had

  • to do to fit in, to be cool.

  • I told my parents, I’m changing my name.

  • I’m not going to be Asya anymore.

  • I shaved my legs.

  • I wanted to be noticed and I wanted to be pretty.

  • I just wanted to be wanted.

  • In high school, I was known as the new, exotic girl.

  • And I kept thinking to myself, if they only knew.

  • When male attention first came my way, I ate it up

  • and I also defined myself by it.

  • I still didn’t know how to displease.

  • I really didn’t know how to say no, definitely not

  • with any kind of strength.

  • I took these flowers, these dumb, blue flowers as I went

  • up to his very dingy room.

  • All I remember is crying, having my clothes taken off,

  • and then him asking me if I wanted

  • to order Chinese food in bed.

  • I cried.

  • I said, “God, that was dumb of me and so slutty.

  • This is so embarrassing.”

  • And then I put it away for over a decade.

  • Eventually I stopped being a rag doll.

  • Of course, then I gave birth to one daughter followed

  • by a second daughter.

  • I realized that in order to raise strong women,

  • I had to become a strong woman myself.

  • I need to make sure that they have a better sense of self

  • than I had.

  • I didn’t have friends in this country.

  • I felt very much rejected.

  • So one of the constant conversations

  • were having is about inclusivity.

  • How can we be kind to the people that need it the most?

  • I think of myself as a defender of my daughters

  • little spirits.

  • And I know that even though our world is changing,

  • it is going to chip away at this inner strength that

  • already exists.

  • So my job is to help preserve that strength

  • and teach them to have faith in it.

  • These little freedoms throughout their childhood

  • are going to teach them to listen

  • to their own inner voice, and they

  • will know that they are as worthy as anyone

  • else of making their own decisions.

  • And if theyre not the most polite girls on the block,

  • I don’t give a [expletive].

I read once: Children serve as mirrors of their parents

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A2 US

我為什麼要把女兒培養成強壯的人,而不是聽話的人? (Why I’ll Raise My Daughters to Be Strong, Not Obedient | Conception Season 2)

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    Amy.Lin posted on 2021/01/14
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