My daughter Maya recently turned 4, and Sweet Baby Moses, I thought I'd drown in the pink.
Her party netted her puzzles, markers, books -- and a mother lode of "girl" items: a pair of Cinderella mules, a Disney Princess purse (complete with sunglasses and faux camera, which emits such phrases as "you're pretty as a picture!"), a "lipstick," brush and mirror set, not one but two fairy dresses, and three arts-n-crafts sets that are, it goes without saying, pink. The tissue paper? Pink. The gift bags? You know it.
It's not that I begrudge the child her girly things. Her wardrobe is full of flowers and butterflies, and she lives for her dolls. Indeed, we were made aware very early that she could make a "baby" out of anything -- down to and including rocks -- and we've been happy to provide her with any number of cuddly creatures, humanoid and other.
It's just that, for four years, her father and I have held at bay the combined forces of the Disney juggernaut and the relentless American effort to turn little girls into mini-women, and pink has come to symbolize it all for me.
And so, bags and bags of gifts and hand-me-downs have been hand-me-downed further because they were tainted with pink. The girl's poor grandmothers are now afraid to give her anything that falls anywhere on the rose-to-blush continuum -- "but it's coral!" my sainted mother once protested when I announced (ill-naturedly) that her gift would be returned.
As we sat among the rosy/bubble-gum-y leavings of the present-opening, I asked my 8-year-old son: What does a princess do? Understandably, he was a bit bemused, so after a moment I said, "Pretty much just sit there, right?"
To which he replied: "And look beautiful. I guess."
There's the rub.