Yesterday I attended a family celebration in honor of my little niece’s First Holy Communion. The guest of honor, my niece, is in the second grade and is a beautiful, vibrant child—blond hair, blue eyes with a sprinkle of freckles across her nose. In her white Communion dress, she looked like a little angel.
It was a sunny day and a pleasant get-together. Most of the guests had left when my niece and her friend, another little girl, wanted to put on a “show” for those of us who remained. We, of course, agreed to be the audience.
With a video clip from the Internet providing the music, the girls sang and danced to the song Beggin’ On Your Knees by Victoria Justice.
I was horrified.
Victoria Justice
Victoria Justice is 18 years old. She has been performing since the age of 10, and has acted in several TV shows on Nickelodeon. Without a doubt, she is a beautiful, talented singer and dancer. But she is also selling sex to little girls.
Here’s the video of Beggin’ On Your Knees.
The video is slick, obviously packaged by entertainment executives and corporate bigwigs to appeal to tweens—and younger. It’s set on a seaside amusement pier, with the actors playing arcade games and going on rides. The performers, of course, represent a nice multicultural mix—I’m sure the money men don’t want to miss any marketing opportunities.
So Victoria Justice sings about her relationship with some guy, and how he cheats on her. The chorus goes like this:
and One day i’ll have you begging on your knees for me
yeah, One day i’ll have you crawling like a centipede
You mess with me?
And mess with her!
So I’ll make sure you get what you deserve
yeah, One day you’ll be begging on your knees for me
So my little niece, who a few hours earlier was angelic in her white Communion dress, was shaking her body and crawling on the floor as she sang along to Beggin’ On Your Knees.
She, of course, had no idea what the words meant. But the messages are there for anyone to see: Girls achieve success by attracting good-looking boyfriends. Good-looking boyfriends cheat on their girlfriends. When cheating happens, girls take revenge.
Gee—when I was my niece’s age, I watched Shirley Temple sing Animal Crackers in My Soup.
Cheerleaders
This isn’t the first time I was struck by the blatant sexual messages being communicated to young girls. A few months ago, friends were in Atlantic City to watch their daughter perform in a big cheerleading competition. They invited my husband and I to join them.
This girl is a senior in high school and has been cheerleading since she was young. Approximately 3,000 girls were participating in this competition, ranging from high school age to girls my niece’s age—or younger.
As I walked around Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, I could not believe my eyes. All of the girls, down to the youngest ones, were parading around in cheerleading costumes that featured off-the-shoulder tops, bare midriffs and extremely short skirts. They all wore heavy make-up. They were all being taught to strut, show what they’ve got, and smile.
Abusive dating
I, in the meantime, am preparing to talk to another group of high school students about Sociopaths and Abusive Dating Relationships.
Part of my message is that sociopaths use sex to trap their victims. If you’re lonely, you are vulnerable. And when you have sex, you form a psychological bond that makes it difficult to get away if the person turns out to be an abuser. This is how domestic violence starts.
Yet according to the constant bombardment of messages directed towards young girls, their success depends on how sexy they are, and whether they can attract a hot boyfriend. Any girl without a boyfriend, therefore, will feel lonely, and will be vulnerable to the abuse of a sociopath.
So how do I compete with overwhelming, lifelong marketing? How do I tell these high school students that sex may get them in trouble when they’ve been fed a steady diet of “sex sells” since they were little kids?
Girls are being brainwashed by marketers out to make a buck. I don’t even know how parents can protect their kids from the onslaught—they’d have to raise their daughters in a cocoon. As a result, so many little girls are probably ripe to become the next generation of victims of sociopaths.
Have you looked into C G Jung’s archetypes? Alot in common with Joseph Cambell’s idea’s about myth.
I love stories and myths… I’m a symbolist in nature. I went to paint and drawing weekend school since my 5 until my 20s. And while my style is expressionist, it is also very symbolic. I always loved watching fairytale movies to then think on the motives and what they were trying to tell or teach. Though I do not believe chakras truly physically exist, they have high symbolic value for me. My meditations are filled with it. And through the exploration of the psyche’s symbols in a meditative state, I’ve done years of dream translations on sites for my pleasure. My own dreams have become very much attuned because of it. Another symbol system that I love is that of Tarot, because of its archetype use. I have a rational explanation why Tarot always works. For me it is simply because of serendipity: coincidences + making them meaningful -> works. I’ve actually painted my own fool card last year on a big canvas, with lots of symbolism in it. And while Crowley was a Total Creep, he, but especially the painter made a great symbolic set of cards, one I like over that of Waite (too much in the face for me).
The first couple of days after the break-up I used the Tarot a couple of times… not with regards to stupid questions like “Will we get back together?”, but with questions such as “What is going on within me about my ex-relationship” and “How can I make the best of it?” The spreads I got were actually very hopeful, soothing ones, and they helped me to go from day to day at first in the way that was the best for my own healing.
Darwinmom, I read the Tarot, too, and do dream interp. Yes I love analyzing symbols. I used to paint, but haven’t in years. Last night I dreamed about Oxy. I was having a convo with her about back/white thinking. LOL
Have you read Jung? You sound like someone who would really get it.
I like the Waite deck. I started out with a new-agey deck about 22 years ago, then went to Rider-Waite. My daughter bought me a new deck last year, and I can’t remember the name of it….after the Waite deck, it is second in popularity…French in origin, I believe.
I don’t like it at all. Still have to look everything up in the book, cause I don’t immediately recognize the meanings from the pictures I’m so familiar with. I need a new Waite deck.
My favorite card is the High Preistess. Also love the Magician and the moon.
Hehe, then you might get my fool card:
A baby upside down still in the womb that is a golden primal egg, with eyes closed and a smile on his face. The umbilical cord is twisted around into a heart in front of it. He has 2 small horns like Dyonisus. At his head, but at the bottom of the card is a lotus flower coming out of the primal ocean. At the right jumps up a salmon. At the left a crocodile, and out of its mouth rises a phoenix. Above the phoenix flies a white dove towards the egg, as a messenger. A black crow crows on the opposite side on the top left, perched on a vineyard twig with leaf and blue grapes. The “fool” sleeps on a golden upside triangle with leapord motif. The solar plexus chakra symbol is painted over the baby, but at the height of his feet, along with the Egyptian symbol of the winged sun. I have to add the cobra heads still with that.
My personal cards numerologically are the Magician (will), the Wheel of Fortune (crazy times with lots of happening and experiencing, often not ending with happy ever after) and the Sun (my happy self, totally pleased with the life opportunities to grow further).
Wow. I would need some time to think through all those symbols. I wish I could see your painting. One of the first things I thought of was the upside-downess of the infant/fool. with a smile on his face…reminded me of the hanged man, the only card in the deck that is upside down. That card is about surrender and sacrifice.
Yes, the hanged man is part of the stage for the fool to reach the world. I kinda see the hanged man as one who’s been forced by life to stop, as if time stops, and re-experience how it is to have no ground, no reality to make any plans on or apply his will.
The fool is the stage where everything is still possible. He has not chosen any path yet, but he can feel excitement at what may come to fruit. Things may turn out wrong, things may turn out really well. The fool is ungrounded, as much as the hanged man, because the fool has not yet taken a real step on whichever path that is possible. The ego is but starting to be born or rising. Therefore the fool has no will yet (the Magician is), just like the hanged man is incapable of applying his will.
The hanged man too has his one leg in a triangle… there’s much symbolism behind that, but most plainly it’s the next closest sleeping posture to the foetus one.
OMG – a California mother is injecting her 8 year old daughter with Botox so she won’t have wrinkles in beauty pageants!
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/mom-year-daughter-botox-young-young/story?id=13580804
Thanks Oxy for the tip!
Yea, Donna, and fortunately I think I am NOT the only one who considers this CHILD ABUSE and malpractice by who ever is supplying her this drug to do this with.
I saw the interview on GMA and then last night on our local news they were talking about how people were up in arms as well and then I saw another news (print) article about it….These “beauty contests” for babies I think are HORRIBLE TO START WITH, but this is over the freaking top! Jon Benet Ramsey was Bad enough dressed up and made up like a little tart to please her parents’ egos but commmmmmmeee on, when is America, the world, gonna wake up to this form of abuse?