i’ve been trying to write a blog post about this topic for a
really long time, but nothing really came to me very organically. i wouldn’t
consider myself a “friends” type of person. i allow very few people into the
safe and trusting parts of my life. i see a distinct difference between friends
and acquaintances and an even larger one between people i consider to be
friends and best friends.
this all seems very elementary when i write it out, but, for
my life, it is very true. some not so great things happened to me at a very
young age that quickly taught me who to trust and what to trust them with.
i would never have considered myself a “girl’s girl.”
girlfriends rarely appealed to me in high school. as long as i had a boyfriend
and my mom, i was set with the people i needed in my life to support me.
so, considering that, after reading this
article about 5 things we “get wrong” about GIRLS retaliating to this
article that talks about why GIRLS is bad for women, i decided to put all
(and save just two) of my sense in about how and why i love GIRLS so much. and
why i think i am (now) a GIRLS girl’s girl.
probably about a year ago, i was talking about GIRLS with a
few coworkers. the other girls who had seen the show liked it, and one guy who
had seen it didn’t like it. like many who dislike the show, he wasn’t crazy
about lena dunham being naked.
like most (if not all) women, i have always battled with my
weight and my perception of the number on the scale. i always thought i was the
fat kid growing up, and a lot of that negative body perception has followed me
into my adult life.
like many, i battled eating disorders. after an ex-boyfriend
told me his mom said she was surprised he was dating “a normal sized girl
instead of a thin girl” (at 17, i was a size 2) i lost about ten pounds in four
weeks on what i told myself was an “apple diet.” i didn’t eat breakfast, had an
apple (sometimes peanut butter) for lunch, and ate half of whatever ended up on
my plate for dinner.
this is fucked up, and it makes me sad to know that i am not
the only one who went through something like this.
seeing lena dunham naked on tv made me feel better about
myself. if she can be confident in her body, so can i. seeing the weird things
about her nakedness helped me accept the weird things about my nakedness.
i think it’s especially interesting when emma woolf, the
author of the anti-GIRLS article, talks about when two women share a bathtub.
while it is true that i haven’t shared a bathtub in a long time, i do a lot of
weird shit with my girlfriends.
on top of painfully relaying, dissecting and analyzing our
love lives constantly, we talk about gruesome, dirty and embarrassing things
about being women. we can talk about good sex, bad sex and the lack of sex in
our lives. we can talk about the messed up relationships we have with our
parents. sometimes these conversations happen glamorously at a bar over $1
beer, but most of the time they happen sprawled out in the hallway between our
classes or in the middle of a three mile run.
and i think it’s interesting that people feel the need to
criticize the relationships they see on GIRLS. just because you don’t spend
your time with your friends in bathtubs doesn’t mean a relationship that finds
itself in a bathtub is more or less realistic than yours. there is no such
thing as a realistic or normal relationship.
the criticism of GIRLS’ sex is also something that really
gets to me. the more i learn about sex (about 90% of it NOT being from
experience), the more i’ve realized that it is weird. different people like
different things, and, from what i’ve gathered, there is little rhyme or
reason. lena dunham’s sex is more realistic than most of the other sex i’ve
seen in other shows and movies.
while there are some valid criticisms to be made about
GIRLS, very few of them can be made from seeing only two episodes of the show.
as a writer and a confused 20-something, i find myself
relating to hannah horvath constantly. while the situations we find ourselves
in are generally unalike (i’ve never wore neon mesh without a bra), the
feelings we find ourselves having are often very similar. hannah horvath
somehow validates how fucked up my life seems at times. as in, someone wrote an
entire HBO series about how shitty and great it is to be me, and now i get to
watch it unfold on tv.
and although i’m happy that hannah has found some love from
adam, i hope they break up. there. i said it.
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