I’m gonna start this post by saying that, yes, I watched the
VMAs and, yes, I know that I’m thirty years old and, yes, I know that you are
way too grown up for that (despite your lingering obsession with Twilight), but
I’m about forty years away from filling up my DVR with reruns of NOVA, so in
the mean time, I’ll cringe along with the rest of the cool kids.
And cringe I did. Because even though I still enjoy watching
the antics of Generation Whippersnapper, I am in my third earthly decade, and
there’s a lot that I simply don’t understand about kids these days. For
example, teddy bears. When I was an adolescent, if you still carried around a
teddy bear, you were vilified as a “baby,” but apparently these days you can
tote Mr. Cuddleface around with you until you die as long as you’re grinding on
him.
And who knew that foam fingers could be so evocative. This
whole time, we’ve been wasting them at sporting events (WASTING!), when what we
really should have been doing is tying our hair into tiny giraffe horns and
using them to spank Jason Seaver’s married son.
Now, I’m all for artistic expression and experimentation,
but I’m too old to understand the merit in pointless raunchiness. However, I do see
the danger in it. My son’s first crush was Hannah Montana. He was only a year
and half old, but when the first hints of “You get the limo out front…” came on
the TV, he was mesmerized. He literally could not look away from her blonde wig
and sparkly scarves. And I shudder to think that he would not have been able to
look away from the same girl’s gyrations and crotch thrusts if I’d been daft
enough to let him watch MTV.
And, Molly! Oh lord, my sweet baby girl. I can only imagine
her as an impressionable thirteen year old watching her idol on TV and wanting
to emulate every tongue extension and twerk. Because when you start as a tween
queen, your fan base at 20 will still largely be made up of little girls. And
despite your best attempts to prove your womanhood and of-ageness, a display
like what I saw on Sunday night only affirms your status as a misguided child.
Which makes me incredibly sad because it shows that there
has been no real direction in your life, that all the fame, money, praise has
led to nowhere but delusion and an I-can-do-no-wrong mindset. So I guess I owe
Miley Cyrus a huge thank you, for reminding me of the job that I have ahead of
me. That it will take serious effort and persistence to raise self-aware,
responsible, reasonable children and to help them transition into respectable
adults.
And they will stumble, they will twerk (actually, I’m really
hoping that Suttie won’t twerk, but I’m sure he’ll do some crotch thrusts along
the way), they will act out and dress poorly, but God help me if I let them do
it on an international stage. And there’s no way in heaven or hell that I’m
going to sit idly by and applaud them for it. No, I’ll simply be waiting
at home with a switch.
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