scarlethiney -> RE: rehabilitating the term "princess" .. (12/26/2008 7:19:25 PM)
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ORIGINAL: softness I struggle with this term ... I understand it means different things to different people ... If someone called me "princess" I would feel I was being chastised in some way. One of my closest friends, on the otherhand, has it used as the most precious and loving pet name in her relationship. When she hears it .. she blossoms ... when I hear it ... generally I cringe. To put it in perspective for you; I have a dog bowl engraved with the word "Princess" and I used to eat dog food from it when I was displeasing. To me princess has so many negative connotations: spoiled, upity, demanding, ego-centric, lazy, indulged, toppy, loud, self important, immature, ... I get an image of some red faced screaming child stamping her foot, tossing her crown at a passing footman and stomping off into the palace grounds. I am aware that to be called princess can be something intensely loving and is often a pet name of choice within Daddy/daughter relationships, something of which I have no experience having always been in very different sorts of dynamic. Recently I was given a very interesting (though imperfect) book called "Princessa: Machiavelli for women". Simply put it uses the precepts and advice given in Machiavelli's The Prince (a guide to 15th century statesmanship), twists them slightly and explains how to apply them in modern society to getting what you need in life and love but while still being 100% a woman. Embracing your feminine strengths, weakness, skills and vulnerabilities about going into the world not as a woman playing a man's game and being disadvantaged, but as a woman creating her own game, her own rules, and winning. It's very much of its age and, like The Rules, not advisable to treat it like a Bible. The person lending me the book calls me princess ... and watches me flinch at the name. I was challenged to see a new way of looking at myself, and asked to imagine a very different type of princess to the ones I had previously encountered. I have seen that other way, but only as an idea not a reality... I still shudder at the word because the thought of becoming a pampered, indulged foot stamping thing was ingrained as something abhorent, I would now adore to see a woman I respected behave as, and be called a princess - in the most positive of ways. so .... my dear reader - When you think of the term princess ... what do you *really* think?
- If you were/are called princess is it serious? sarcastic? ironic? loving? How do you react to being called it?
- If you have a negative view of the term Princess ... can you imagine a positive meaning? how does that princess behave?
- anybody read The Princessa .. care to make any comments about the ideas contained therein?
I have heard the term used both ways. I have seen it mostly as a positive, loving term to mean someone special and treasured. Someone kind and respectful, cheery and a supporter of those less fortunate. I suppose when I think of the "good" version of princess it reminds me of Princess Diana and how loving and kind she was. I have been called princess, pet, love, and all are positive affirmations of my worth and appeal. I have never had the term princess applied to me in a negative way. In the negative it seems to be applied to someone lacking in manners, not expected to be responsible in any way, someone selfish and egotistical. I have not read the book yet but I agree it does sound interesting. scarlet
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