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"At a young age, if girls learn to value bravery like boys do, they're going to be so good at it." (Photo: POPROTSKIY ALEXEY)

10 Ways to Raise Brave Girls

Bestselling author Caroline Paul鈥檚 new book, 'The Gutsy Girl,' is a how-to guide for parents to push through the anxiety and let their kids take acceptable risks outdoors

Published: 
Climber little girl exercises in gym. Climber girl sitting on artificial boulders in pose of frog
(Photo: POPROTSKIY ALEXEY)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

The other day my seven-year-old daughter, Pippa, and I rode the flow trail at our local mountain bike park. We鈥檇 heard it was smooth and gentle enough for kids and she was desperate to try it, so even though it was her first day on a fat bike, and the sign at the top read 鈥淭echnical Trail: Advanced Riders Only,鈥 I said yes. Before we started, I coached her on the basics of downhill mountain biking: keep your weight back, your pedals level, and feather the brakes. Then she pushed off, shrieking with glee as she rolled over the first loamy whoop-de-woo.

I rode behind Pippa, watching her handle her bike with confidence, control, and joy. If there鈥檚 any sweeter sound than a little girl oohing and ahhing as she banks through turns and up and over dusty berms, I don鈥檛 know what it is. Still there were moments when I had to bite my tongue and resist the urge to scream Careful! or Slow Down!, half expecting to come around a corner and find her endo-edin the dirt.听The desire to protect our children from harm is innate and reflexive and, at times, all-consuming. As I like to joke to my husband, mothers鈥 worry is what keeps the human race alive. But too much can be limiting and, especially for girls, potentially detrimental to their development.听

A few days earlier I鈥檇 spoken by phone with Caroline Paul, whose op-ed in the New York Times Sunday Review last month, 鈥溾澨齱ent viral. Paul is the author of the bestselling new book The听Gutsy Girl:听Escapades for Your Life of Epic 国产吃瓜黑料, which is part high-energy how-to guide, part hilarious memoir, and part interactive adventure journal designed to help girls of all ages build confidence, pluck, and bravery by venturing outside.

鈥淚 want to gird girls with life lessons of bravery and resilience before puberty, before the real pressures kick in: to be liked at all costs, to look pretty, to be perfect.鈥

Paul, 52, was one of the first female firefighters in San Francisco in 1989. One of the first things she tells me during a phone call is that most parents, often without realizing it, treat girls differently than boys. 鈥淓ven the most progressive, open-minded parents caution them more, saying, Be careful. Oh, no you shouldn鈥檛. Or, Watch out!鈥 she says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a sense that our daughters need more protection than sons, which is ironic, because before age 11, girls are ahead of boys physically and emotionally. My twin sister and I could beat every boy in class until seventh grade. Until then, we were the same as boys. And we break the same as boys.鈥

It鈥檚 never too early鈥攐r late鈥攖o raise girls to be fearless and adventuresome. 鈥淚 want to gird girls with life lessons of bravery and resilience before puberty, before the real pressures kick in: to be liked at all costs, to look pretty, to be perfect,鈥 says Paul, whose own madcap childhood escapades included trying to set the Guinness World Record for crawling when she was 13 years old. (The distance to beat was 12 miles; nearly hypothermic, she quit at mile eight.) 鈥淕oing outdoors gives you confidence and self-esteem to handle the teenage years, and it carries into womanhood, too,鈥 Paul says. 鈥淣ature doesn鈥檛 care what you look like or if you鈥檙e popular or nice. What it cares about is if you鈥檙e a good team player.鈥

The most awesome part of the awesome message of Gutsy Girl? 鈥淏ravery is learned,鈥 Paul says. Build it into our girls鈥 hearts, brains and bodies now and we鈥檒l raise a new generation of badass female forces. Here are ten ways to teach our girls and ourselves.

1. Adjust Your Attitude

My two girls have been game and outgoing from the get-go, but I knew I might be unwittingly sending mixed messages about fearfulness and danger, so I inventoried my recent behavior for signs of gender bias: Would I have encouraged my daughters to hit ski jumps faster and launch higher if they were sons? Doubtful. I have no problem shouting at their ski buddies, who are boys, to slow down if I think they鈥檙e out of control (yeah, I鈥檓 that mom). If they had Y chromosomes would I let them play unsupervised in the sandy arroyo near our house, collecting iron with little magnets, without checking to make sure they were safe from strangers every ten minutes? Possibly. Take stock of your own prejudices in different scenarios and ask yourself honestly if, now, knowing what you do about girls鈥 capabilities, you really need to hover so closely while she hauls off across the monkey bars. Would you do the same with your son?

2. Talk About Fear

鈥淓motions are complicated,鈥 explains Paul, 鈥渁nd as girls, we areacculturated very early to fear. But here鈥檚 the thing: the rush of fear feels a lot like excitement. Sometimes they鈥檙e听just feeling exhilarated when they're faced with a steep hill on their bike. Girls need tools to understand the emotions as they grow up.鈥 We should encourage girls to go outside听their comfort zone, Paul says. 鈥淲hen they are scared, say 鈥極K, you鈥檙e scared. What else are you feeling?鈥 Then let them name their feelings: excitement, confidence, et cetra. Talk to them about their skill level so they can put fear in its place and go forward. I really think that if you give them guidance, fear won鈥檛 stop them.鈥

3. Practice Bravery

As Eleanor Roosevelt once famously said, 鈥淒o something every day that scares you.鈥 Give equal or greater air time to bravery. 鈥淏ravery is an emotion that鈥檚 unfamiliar for girls. It鈥檚 considered the purview of boys and men,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淣o one questions a mother鈥檚 courage to protect her kids, but it鈥檚 so odd that we don鈥檛 attribute bravery to women otherwise. At a young age, if girls learn to value bravery like boys do, they鈥檙e going to be so good at it.鈥 Paul suggests encouraging your girl to practice five acts of 鈥渕icrobravery鈥 each week, like picking up that icky spider on the kitchen counter. And when your daughter does something gutsy, name that too. Repeat after me: 鈥渢hat was brave!鈥

4. Break It Down

If your girl has a goal that intimidates her鈥攍ike climbing a tree when she鈥檚 scared of heights鈥攕how her how to break it down into smaller steps. 鈥淎 lot of girls are focused on perfection,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that all or nothing thing. But you don鈥檛 have to be perfect.鈥 If you get to the top of a steep hill on your bikes and your daughter balks, stop for a moment to ask her, 鈥淲hat do you think we should do about this?鈥 Break it down into shorter, more approachable chunks and pretty soon she鈥檒l be flying down the hill from top to bottom in one go. 鈥淔eeling scared is good,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淎fter all, the bravest person is the one who feels afraid and does it anyway.鈥

5.听Find Role Models

鈥淚 actually grew up very shy and kind of a scaredy cat,鈥 Paul says. 鈥淚 read a lot. Which is where I got a lot of my role models. Most of them were men, like explorer Ned Gillette.鈥 Ditch the princess phase by pointing your girls to books with strong female characters, so they can identify their own role models. The pages of Gutsy Girl听are filled Girl Heroes, including teen rock climber Brooke Raboutou and round-the-world explorer Nellie Bly. Says Paul, 鈥淚 rarely talk about them being the best women. They are the best in the world.鈥

6. Give Them a Long Leash

When Paul was 13, she read a story about building a milk carton boat in National Geographic鈥攁nd then spent months making her own. She never would have collected enough cartons if she was bouncing from piano lessons to soccer to gymnastics every day after school, like so many schoolchildren these days. 鈥淵ou have to give kids free time to dream up and do their own adventures,鈥 she says. This starts with letting them out the door on their own, an increasingly controversial parenting move of late. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e protecting kids when don鈥檛 let them go outside on their own. We鈥檙e simply putting a bubble on them until they rebel. And then when they do, they have very little of the expertise we should have been giving them. It鈥檚 about giving them the right information so they can make good decisions.鈥澨

7. But Not So Long鈥

As a child and young adult growing up with her twin sister in rural Connecticut, Paul was constantly hatching crazy new adventures. Sometimes a little too crazy. Once she got suckedinto a thunderhead while paragliding in Brazil; another time she nearly lost a partner in a crevasse on Denali.鈥淚 learned that being reckless is not being an adventurer,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 being stupid. Being an adventurer is all about assessing risk and understanding your own comfort zone.鈥 Teach your girls to be aware of the inherent risks in their sports, clear-eyed about their own skills, and humble in the face of natural forces greater than themselves. Then you can back off and really let them rip.听

8. Stick It Out听

To be truly gutsy, girls don鈥檛 have to be the best. They just have be determined. 鈥淚鈥檓 not being coy when I say that I鈥檓 not that highly skilled,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淏ut what my sister and I are is super dogged. We have a belief if you are motivated enough, you can actually do it. Girls often think you鈥檙e born with a talent or you鈥檙e not, and if you鈥檙e not, you better not try it. But that was never something we thought.鈥 Instead, they got savvy and came up with two guiding strategies in life: 听鈥淥ne, find a niche where nobody else is,鈥濃攃ase in point, Paul鈥檚 brief stint on the U.S.A. National Luge Team鈥斺渁nd two, be determined.鈥

9. Failing Is Cool, Too听

Paul bailed on her world record crawling attempt, but it鈥檚 still the raddest, most inspiring story in her book. Not because she and a friend dragged themselves for eight miles along her high school track while the boys鈥 lacrosse team jogged by (鈥淭o say that we were embarrassed does not come close to describing the mortification we felt.鈥) But because at age 13, she came up with the hair-brained idea and was intrepid enough to try. 鈥淔ailure is having a resurgence,鈥 Paul says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 inevitable and a way of moving forward.鈥 She writes, 鈥淎nne and I had failed but we had also dreamed big, which is much better than dreaming small and succeeding. Setting a world record is magnificent. But you know what? Failing to set one is pretty impressive, too.鈥

10. Let the Boys in on It, Too

Finally, don鈥檛 discriminate. 鈥淏oys should read this book, too,鈥 says Paul. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l like it because it鈥檚 about adventure. And they need to see that girls are kick-ass.鈥

Lead Photo: POPROTSKIY ALEXEY

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